Today's LinkedIn Pinpoint opens with two very common objects: Window and Door. My immediate thought was that the connection would be about things found in a house. But the puzzle then throws a wrench in that theory with Painting, which certainly fits the theme, but feels like a deliberate misdirection.
It broadens the scope just enough to make you question the initial 'home' category, pushing you to think more about the fundamental structure of each item rather than its location or function.
My first instinct when I saw 'Window' and 'Door' was to go with a location-based theme.
I tried thinking about 'Things in a house'.
It felt solid.
Then, 'Painting' appeared, which didn't break the theory, but it did make it feel a little too obvious, a classic Pinpoint trick.
I started looking for a different angle, something more abstract.
My next thought was 'Things you can open'.
Window, Door, and Painting (if you're opening your mind to it) all sort of fit.
But I knew this was a stretch and wouldn't hold up if the next clues were tricky.
Then came 'Bicycle'.
That was the moment my 'Things in a house' and 'Things you open' theories completely collapsed.
A Bicycle is neither typically indoors nor opened.
This clue forced a major reset.
I started looking at the words themselves and their physical attributes.
I stared at the list: Window, Door, Painting, Bicycle.
What do they all physically have?
They have an outer border that defines their shape.
I focused on the word 'frame'.
That felt like the key.
I guessed 'Things with frames' just before 'Glasses' was revealed.
When it popped up as the fifth clue, I knew I had it.
The feeling of that final clue confirming my late-breaking theory was incredibly satisfying.
- Window → Picture Window: A large, framed pane of glass in a wall.
- Door → Door frame: The structure that surrounds and supports a Door.
- Painting → Picture frame: The decorative border that encloses and protects a Painting.
- Bicycle → Bike frame: The main component to which all other parts are attached.
- Glasses → Eyeglass frames: The structure that holds the lenses in front of a person's eyes.
Once the 'frames' idea clicked, the entire board made perfect sense.
It wasn't about function or location, but about a core structural element.
It was a great reminder that the most physical, obvious connection is often the one hiding in plain sight.
My first attempt to solve this board was to categorize the clues by location.
'Window' and 'Door' immediately screamed 'Things in a House'.
When 'Painting' appeared, it still fit, making me more confident in this simple but effective theory.
However, the theory felt too easy, a common Pinpoint tactic.
I knew a curveball was coming.
The curveball was 'Bicycle'.
This clue completely invalidated the 'household items' theory and forced a total mental reset.
I abandoned the idea of location and started looking at the physical nature of the items themselves.
What structural element do a Window, a Door, a Painting, and a Bicycle all share?
I realized they all have a 'frame'—a border or structure that defines and supports them.
I submitted 'Things with frames' and felt a surge of satisfaction when the final clue, 'Glasses', was revealed, as it fit the theme perfectly.
This puzzle was a great lesson in pivoting from a narrative theme to a structural one.
In today's Pinpoint, the seemingly random items Window, Door, Painting, Bicycle, and Glasses are all united by the connector 'Things with frames'.
This solution required shifting from a location-based theory to a structural one.