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New York Times Officially Ends Digits Beta

Giving you the digits for the Digits!

Digits Game from the New York Times Image Source: New York Times

The New York Times’ Digits Beta has officially ended as of August 8, meaning there’s no more puzzles to complete or calculations to figure out. The final answers, as well as an explanation as to how the game worked, remain below.

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Why Was Digits Ended By The NYT?

We don’t know. There’s not been a reason for Digits being ended. Presumably, it’s because it didn’t catch fire in the same manner that Wordle did.

Whatever the reasons, we had a lot of fun playing Digits over its lifespan and hope you had fun too. Players accessing the game are now told it’s no longer available and directed to other games in the NYT’s library.

Digits Beta NYT
Image Credit: NYT via Twinfinite

Final Digits Answers (August 7, 2023)

Here are the answers and calculations to the 08/7/23 Digits puzzle:

TargetCalculations
5510 + 11 = 11
2 + 3 = 5
11 x 5 = 55
17325 x 7 = 175
11 – 9 = 2
175 – 2 = 173
2463 x 4 = 12
12 x 20 = 240
240 + 6 = 246
32820 + 15 = 35
35 + 6 = 41
41 x 8 = 328
42423 x 19 = 437
9 + 3 = 12
25 – 12 = 13
437 – 13 = 424

How Digits Worked

Compared to some simpler games, like Wordle, Digits looks complex and even intimidating. It’s really simple though. Each challenge consists of five puzzles to solve. A puzzle is a target number, with players given six integers to get to the target number. The numbers can be added, subtracted, multiplied and divided, but only to reach other integers. There’s no decimals, negatives or fractions allowed.

The target numbers get incrementally higher (and therefore more challenging). The first is between 50-100, the second 100-200 and so on, with the final challenge usually being between 400-500. Typically, the challenges can be solved in two, three or four moves. Some take five but these are quite rare.

Players are rewarded with stars as they play. Getting the target perfectly earns players three stars in that puzzle; getting within ten of the target grants two stars; and getting within twenty five grants one star. With five puzzles released each day, there’s 15 stars up for grabs.

If you’re pining for more daily puzzles, check out our Jumble, Waffle and Globle daily answer guides. They’re all still going, unlike Digits.

About the author

Joe Craven

Joe is a writer and publisher based in England. He loves history, video games and football. As you read this, he's probably reading about an obscure war, playing a video game or moaning about Leeds United.

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