Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Times’ puzzle tops 400,000 subscriber­s

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The New York Times’ online puzzle offering has surpassed 400,000 paying subscriber­s, roughly double the number from two years ago.

In June 2016, the Times had 212,000 online crossword subscriber­s. Last June, it had 306,000, according to the company. The paper stopped breaking out the number in quarterly results last year.

The puzzles are part of the Times’ push to rely more on subscripti­ons and less on advertisin­g, which is increasing­ly dominated by Facebook and Google. Subscripti­on revenue accounted for almost twothirds of the Times’ revenue last quarter.

A crossword subscripti­on costs $6.95 a month or $39.95 a year and includes online access to a daily puzzle, 24 years of archives and the ability to save work on one device and resume it on another. More expensive Times subscripti­ons include access to the puzzles, but about 60 percent of crossword subscriber­s don’t pay for the Times’ news product.

Puzzles are still a small part of Times’ overall business. In the first quarter, subscripti­on sales from the crossword and cooking products totaled $4.84 million, a fraction of the company’s $414 million in overall revenue.

The Times had 2.33 million digital news subscriber­s at the end of the last quarter, while Crossword and Cooking products had 453,000.

The crossword growth is due largely to the offering on Android devices, miniature puzzles — like a grid of 9 by 9 — and new games, such as Spelling Bee, which asks players to spell words from a collection of letters.

While many games are computer-generated these days, Times’ puzzles are created by hand by several people. The team includes Will Shortz, the closest thing to a crossword celebrity, who has edited puzzles at the newspaper since 1993. Anyone can submit a puzzle to the Times, which gets between 70 and 80 submission­s a week from the public. Last year, an 11-year-old had a puzzle accepted.

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