movie characters
The final clue specifying 'but not Darth Vader' eliminates a broad category like 'movie characters'.
Once Anakin (but not Darth Vader) lands, the final answer explains the board more cleanly than movie characters.
Permanent Pinpoint answer & analysis (Pinpoint Today archive)
Published on 05/04/2026
Updated on 05/05/2026
This Pinpoint answer guide asks what shared idea links Mace, Luke, Obi-Wan, Yoda, and Anakin (but not Darth Vader). Follow the spoiler-safe hints one by one, then see how each clue clicks into the final answer.
Hover (desktop) or tap (mobile) each clue before you reveal the Pinpoint answer
Detailed Pinpoint answer breakdown continues just below - keep scrolling
Puzzle check-in
Save your solve status on this device. Checked in: 0 puzzles.
At first, the clues felt like they could be any character from the Star Wars movies. Luke and Anakin are obvious names, but Mace and Yoda felt less direct. I considered a broad category like 'movie characters' or even just 'names'.
But then the last clue threw a wrench into that idea: 'Anakin (but not Darth Vader)'.
That made me rethink everything.
It wasn't just any Star Wars character; it had to be something more specific.
Then it hit me: Jedi.
Mace Windu, Luke Skywalker, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Yoda, and Anakin Skywalker before he became Darth Vader.
The answer is names of Jedi in the Star Wars films.
The exclusion of Darth Vader was the key to narrowing down the category.
Without that clue, the puzzle would have been much broader and less satisfying.
Now it's clear how all of the clues fit together perfectly.
A sharp reminder that exclusions can be just as important as inclusions when solving puzzles.
Names of Jedi in the Star Wars films
movie characters
The final clue specifying 'but not Darth Vader' eliminates a broad category like 'movie characters'.
Once Anakin (but not Darth Vader) lands, the final answer explains the board more cleanly than movie characters.
fictional heroes
fictional heroes feels plausible early on, but it falls apart once anakin (but not Darth Vader) demands a more exact reading.
Once Anakin (but not Darth Vader) lands, the final answer explains the board more cleanly than fictional heroes.
Obi-Wan, Yoda, Anakin (but not Darth Vader) keep confirming the same answer, so the board reads like one exact set instead of a broad bucket.
Why the answer is tighter: one concrete category with members that stay at the same level of specificity as Names of Jedi in the Star Wars films.
| Clue | Early read | Resolved read | Why it works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mace | movie characters | "Mace Windu" | Mace Windu is a Jedi Master within the Star Wars universe. |
| Luke | movie characters | "Luke Skywalker" | Luke Skywalker is one of the most iconic Jedi in the Star Wars saga. |
| Obi-Wan | movie characters | "Obi-Wan Kenobi" | Obi-Wan Kenobi is a central Jedi figure, acting as a mentor. |
| Yoda | movie characters | "Master Yoda" | Yoda is the ancient and wise Grand Master of the Jedi Order. |
| Anakin (but not Darth Vader) | movie characters | "Anakin Skywalker" | Anakin Skywalker, before his fall to the dark side, was a powerful Jedi. |
"Mace" and "Luke" can look like they belong to different categories at first
"Mace" and "Luke" both fit several loose themes, so it is often better to wait for a more specific word before locking in a category.
"Anakin (but not Darth Vader)" anchors a shared category board with one concrete theme
anakin (but not Darth Vader) is what organizes this board. Once one clue produces a precise natural reading, re-check the earlier clues under that same frame.
Mace, Luke, Obi-Wan, Yoda, and Anakin all need the Jedi frame
Pay attention to exclusions: the Anakin clue points to a Jedi name, while Darth Vader would pull the board into a different identity.
The answer is "Names of Jedi in the Star Wars films" because that reading explains the full set cleanly, including the final clue.
The connection is that all 5 clues point back to one specific category instead of a loose umbrella theme. Anakin (but not Darth Vader) is what keeps the category reading precise instead of broad.
Anakin (but not Darth Vader) is the turning clue because "Anakin Skywalker" makes the shared category frame explicit. It also makes Mace read cleanly as "Mace Windu". The clues all point to a specific type of character within a very large fictional universe, and one clue needs careful parsing.
"Mace" reads as "Mace Windu" under the same answer, so it supports the category instead of pulling toward a broader guess.