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I work with many people who pay for the subscription to play the games
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I don't have numbers in front of me, but yes, NYT has basically said exactly that. Their games portfolio is a major driver of digital subscriptions.
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I wouldn't be surprised to learn their recipes also drive a decent amount of revenue too. Their physical cookbooks are top notch (big fan of their no recipe recipe cookbook).
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Their recipe and cocktail repository is excellent. It's a large part while I'm a subscriber.
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I'm really confused. What is a "no recipe recipe cookbook"?
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It's this one:

https://www.amazon.com/York-Times-Cooking-No-Recipe-Recipes/...

Basically tells you have to make various dishes saying without specific amounts and just going more on feel and what tastes good.

I love this tip about adding anchovies to pasta sauce to get a very rich flavor on the cheap.

Honestly like to think of it as the "stoned but competent" cookbook because the directions are quite easy to follow and come out tasty :)

Also the material they used for the "flexible" edition is really nice to use as you cook.

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There's a joke in the news industry that the NYT is a games company with a loss-making news organization attached to it as a side-project.
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Like Harvard is a hedge fund with a school as a side project.
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They have a games-only subscription option: https://www.nytimes.com/subscription/games/
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Their recently shipped scrabble clone is excellent! One of the cleanest scrabble / words-with-friends implementations I've played.
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Yeah I'm hooked on it for the moment. The previous games are entertaining once a day, and we share results amongst our family for fun, but the Crossplay game is a lot of fun head-to-head.
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I'm not sure about all of the ones they host, but for the crossword app you need to subscribe for full access.
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The modern NYT has been described as a games company that occasionally engages in journalism
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Who has described them this way?
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I mean, why not? Sometimes it seems to me that airlines make their money not on flights but on branded Credit Cards.
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