The New York Times is kicking off 2026 by releasing a new two-player game called Crossplay, a brainteaser designed for friendly competition and social connection.
Zoe Bell, the executive producer of games at The New York Times, announced exclusively on TODAY Dec. 29 that Crossplay will join favorites like Wordle and Connections beginning in January 2026 and will have its own app.
The game features players taking turns building words off one another to earn points. It’s another chance for players to show off their puzzle prowess in friendly competition and get their names on the NYT’s leaderboard.
“It’s a two-player, board/word game where you build off your opponent,” Bell said on TODAY. “I’m playing in our friends-and-family beta with my dad and little sister, who’s crushing. They love it, and I really love it and am excited for it to come out.”
Crossplay is currently in beta testing in a few markets, including Canada and New Zealand, but will officially roll out in the U.S. in January. Players can pre-register for the Crossplay app beginning Dec. 29 to get the game automatically when it’s released.
Bell noted the time it takes to develop games that get released by The New York Times by sharing that Crossplay was first pitched about three years ago.
“Every game has an editor, a real person behind it who is writing the puzzle for that day,” Bell said. “We have testers who play through and give us feedback, and then it finally gets out. And so we’re always trying to give like the most human-centered puzzles.”
The new game joins a lineup that has become a cornerstone of The New York Times offerings. Players solved 11.2 billion puzzles in 2025 across the various games, led by 4.2 billion in Wordle, Bell also revealed on TODAY.
Crossplay follows the release of the game Pips in August. The first original logic puzzle from the Times was solved 612 million times after its release, according to Bell. The game involves players dragging and dropping dominoes to satisfy specific conditions on the game board.
