Japan is an amazing country. Raw fish, beautifully presented on rice, a flourishing animation industry, video games bursting at the seams, and apparently a lot of electronics brands. There are so many brands it’s hard to keep and answer today’s clue in the NYT Mini Crossword.
“Japanese electronics brand” Oct. 25 NYT Mini Crossword hints
- Hint 1: It ends with the letter “O.”
- Hint 2: Definitely not Seiko.
- Hint 3: It starts with the letter “C.”
- Hint 4: Known for mobile phones, digital cameras, digital watches, and more.
Stop right there. I’m about to reveal the answer.
“Japanese electronics brand” NYT Mini Crossword answer
Did you get it? The solution for the “Japanese electronics brand” clue on the Oct. 25 NYT Mini Crossword is “CASIO.” There are plenty of Japanese electronics brands, but only so many are five letters long. Founded in 1946, the Japanese company introduced the first compact electronic calculator to the world. Thanks, Casio!
“Japanese electronics brand” clue difficulty rating
I didn’t have much trouble with this clue, but I can imagine why you might have struggled to come up with the answer. There are almost countless Japanese electronics brands, and Casio isn’t exactly the first to come to mind. I’m actually wearing a Casio watch right now, so that probably helped (seriously, it’s green). I’m giving this NYT Mini Crossword clue a three out of five on the difficulty rating scale.
All Oct. 25 NYT Mini Crossword clues and answers
Across
- 1A Horse’s foot — HOOF
- 5A More than enough — AMPLE
- 7A Like movies listed on Rotten Tomatoes — RATED
- 8A Recoiled (from) — SHIED
- 9A What you can make dance by putting a little boogie in it, in an old joke — HANKY
Down
- 1D Like some criticism and winter weather — HARSH
- 2D Nebraka’s largest city — OMAHA
- 3D Agree to receive promotional emails, say — OPTIN
- 4D On __ (super stylish, in 2010s slang) — FLEEK
- 6D Swirl, as water — EDDY
Games like the NYT Mini Crossword
Fancy playing another word game after finishing the NYT Mini? Check out the LA Times and the Washington Post for something similar. If you want to play something else entirely, Strands and Spelling Bee are both great alternatives.