What connects River, Mountain, Forest, Desert, Ocean in Pinpoint #100?
The connector is 'Natural landscapes'. Each clue is a major, fundamental example of a natural landscape, such as a 'river natural landscape' or an 'ocean natural landscape'.
Permanent answer & walkthrough (Pinpoint Today archive)
Pinpoint Answer Today asks: what links River, Mountain, Forest, Desert, and Ocean - and what story do they share? Follow the spoiler-safe hints one by one, then reveal the final connection and see how each clue fits together.
River Mountain Forest Desert - What connects River, Mountain, Forest, Desert?
LinkedIn Pinpoint #100 Answer:
Detailed breakdown continues just below - keep scrolling
| Clue Word | Example Phrase | Connection Explained |
|---|---|---|
| River | “the Amazon River natural landscape” | This phrase refers to the entire river system as a distinct environmental feature, encompassing the water, banks, and surrounding ecosystem. |
| Mountain | “the Himalayan mountain natural landscape” | This describes the vast range of mountains not just as a topographical feature, but as a complete, self-contained natural environment. |
| Forest | “the Black Forest natural landscape” | This points to the forest as a holistic entity, including its trees, floor, wildlife, and climate, rather than just a collection of trees. |
| Desert | “the Sahara natural landscape” | This treats the desert as a single, cohesive geographical and ecological system, defined by its aridity, temperature, and unique flora and fauna. |
| Ocean | “the Pacific Ocean natural landscape” | This frames the ocean as the largest type of natural landscape on Earth, a dynamic world of water, pressure, and marine life. |
Simplify your vocabulary.
When a technical term like 'landform' or 'biome' fails, take a step back and think of the simplest, most common word that describes all the clues. The answer is often less academic than you think.
Focus on the 'what', not the 'where'.
It's easy to get sidetracked by where you find these things (on a map, in a country). The puzzle often asks for what the thing *is*. In this case, they are all 'natural landscapes'.
Use outliers to challenge the main idea.
If your theory fits three clues but feels weak on the fourth, don't ignore that feeling. The clue that seems least connected (like Mountain to the 'Biomes' theory) is often the key to finding the better, more accurate theme.
Look for a shared 'genus'.
Think of the clues as different species. Your job is to find the genus they all belong to. River, Mountain, Forest, Desert, and Ocean are different species, but their shared genus is 'Natural Landscapes'.
The connector is 'Natural landscapes'. Each clue is a major, fundamental example of a natural landscape, such as a 'river natural landscape' or an 'ocean natural landscape'.
'Biomes' is a tempting answer since Forest, Desert, and Ocean are major biomes. However, the category doesn't fit 'Mountain', which is a landform found within biomes but isn't a biome itself, making it an imperfect connector.
That theme would only work for 'River' and 'Ocean', failing on 'Mountain', 'Forest', and 'Desert'. A correct connector must work for all five clues without exception.
After the first few clues, try to state your hypothesis in the most basic terms possible. If it fits, test it immediately against the next clue. If it feels forced, be ready to pivot to a simpler, broader theme.