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NYT Strands #786 reveals a sharp-eyed Attention, attention! challenge

No clock, no pressure—just pure wordplay. Can you spot WATCH, OBSERVE, and EYEBALL hidden in today's grid?

The image shows a poster with the text "j-1s support NYC Marathon" and a logo of the New York City...
The image shows a poster with the text "j-1s support NYC Marathon" and a logo of the New York City Marathon. The poster is likely advertising the event, which is taking place on Sunday, November 6th.

NYT Strands #786 reveals a sharp-eyed Attention, attention! challenge

If you're looking for hints and answers for Strands for Tuesday, April 28, 2026, read on-I'll share some clues and tips, and finally the solution to the puzzle with the theme "Attention, attention!"

For an easy way to come back to our Strands hints every day, bookmark this page. You can also find our past hints there as well, in case you want to know what you missed in a previous puzzle. (If you play Wordle or Connections, check out our hints for those games, too.)

Below, I'll give you some oblique hints at today's Strands answers. And farther down the page, I'll reveal the spangram and the answers. Scroll slowly and take just the hints you need!

The way a teacher looks at their students when trying to deter them from cheating during an exam.

BEWARE: Spoilers follow for today's Strands puzzle!

We're about to give away the answers to today's Strands puzzle.

Today's spangram is LIKEAHAWK.

The theme words today are: WATCH, OBSERVE, BEHOLD, WITNESS, MONITOR, EYEBALL.

Here's what the board looks like when the puzzle is solved:

I'll start looking for words related to getting someone's attention, I guess? Not much to go on here.

I see WAVE, which certainly seems like a way to get someone's attention, but it's not a theme word. Neither are WAVED or WAVER.

WATCH is a hit, though.

YELL is not a hit.

BEHOLD is in the upper right.

WITNESS is in the bottom left.

I see HAWK below BEHOLD, but it's not a theme word. Oh, it's part of the phrase LIKEAHAWK, which is a simile to describe watching something with great intensity.

OBSERVE is below WATCH.

MONITOR is below the spangram.

Lastly, EYEBALL.

Strands #786 "Attention, attention!"

You can find the Strands game on the New York Times website and in the NYT Games app.

When you start playing, you'll see a game board with an assortment of letters, flanked by a clue that gives a hint at the board's theme-this will be a phrase, like "Better with age." Your job is to find the hidden words within the board that reflect the puzzle's theme.

A crossword crossed with a word search

The most important word to find is the "spangram," a word that more explicitly states the puzzle's theme. (For example, the spangram for the puzzle with the theme "Better with age" is FERMENTED, which describes products that are, you guessed it, better with age.) The spangram will span the entire game board, either from left to right or top to bottom (hence the name). When you find the spangram, it will be highlighted in yellow. Solving the spangram usually makes the rest of the puzzle much easier to complete.

In Strands, words can travel any direction (up, down, left, right, and diagonal), and you will only use each letter once. There is only one correct solution. When you correctly identify one of the puzzle's words (for example, KOMBUCHA, MISO, or KIMCHI), it will be highlighted in blue.

If you are struggling to solve the puzzle, you can submit any non-theme words you see (as long as they are four letters or more) to receive credit toward a single hint. If you submit three non-theme words, the "Hint" button will be clickable; if you click it, all of the letters in one of the theme words will be highlighted for you. You will still have to link these highlighted letters in the right order to form one of the theme words. If there is already a hint on the board and you use another hint before solving for that word, that word's letter order will be revealed.

How to win Strands

Unlike Connections and Wordle, you cannot fail Strands. When you submit guesses, you will either correctly identify an answer, receive credit toward a hint, or the text will shake back and forth, indicating that the word you submitted is too short or not valid. You can't run out of guesses, and there is no time limit.

You win when you've correctly used all the letters on the board, meaning that you have identified the spangram and all of the theme words. Like other NYT games, upon solving the puzzle, you will see a shareable card that indicates how you performed that day: blue dots * indicate theme words you found, the yellow dotindicates when you found the spangram, and a lightbulb ** indicates words that you received a hint for.

Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to yesterday's Strands.

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