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LinkedIn Pinpoint Answer for March 5, 2026

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LinkedIn Pinpoint Answer for 674

⭐ Today's Premium Puzzle
674

LINKEDIN PINPOINT CLUES

March 5, 2026

1

Parks

2

Courtrooms

3

Piano lounges

4

Bus stops

5

Stadiums (for team substitutes)

Clue Meanings Explained

1

For each clue, we need to look at what these places actually are to see how the connection starts to form.

2

Parks

Public green spaces designed for recreation, relaxation, and nature appreciation within a community or city.

3

Courtrooms

Formal legal settings where judicial proceedings take place, presided over by a judge or magistrate.

4

Piano lounges

Sophisticated entertainment venues or bars centered around a live pianist performing on a grand or upright piano.

5

Bus stops

Designated roadside locations where commuters wait for public transit vehicles to arrive and depart.

6

Stadiums (for team substitutes)

Large-scale sports venues, specifically referring to the sideline area where players who are not currently in the game must wait.

Hey there, fellow puzzle enthusiasts! If you jumped into today’s LinkedIn Pinpoint, you probably realized pretty quickly that the game was testing your ability to bridge the gap between physical objects and metaphorical language. Pinpoint is all about finding that one golden thread that ties five seemingly unrelated locations or concepts together. Today, that thread was "Places with benches," and it was a clever journey through various settings of public life. Let’s break down exactly why these clues worked and how a pro-level solver would have navigated the mental maze to get to the finish line.

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The Solve: A Tale of Wrong Turns

When I first saw the word Parks, my mind went in a dozen different directions. I thought about "Nature," "Trees," or maybe even "Recreation." It’s a very broad starting point, and honestly, you can’t solve a Pinpoint on the first clue without a lucky guess. I briefly considered "Swings," but that felt too specific to a playground.

Then the second clue, Courtrooms, popped up, and that’s where the "Aha!" moment usually starts to simmer. At first glance, a park and a courtroom have almost nothing in common. One is for fun; the other is for serious legal matters. However, I started thinking about the terminology used in law. The judge sits at "the bench." I looked back at Parks—what do people sit on there? Benches. It was a strong lead, but I wasn't 100% sold yet because "the bench" in a courtroom is a figurative term for the office of the judge, while a park bench is just a piece of wood and metal.

The third clue, Piano lounges, was the clincher. If you’ve ever seen a piano, you know the player doesn't sit in a standard chair; they sit on a long, rectangular piano bench. This confirmed the pattern. We weren't looking for "Legal systems" or "Nature"; we were looking for a specific piece of furniture that appears in very different contexts.

By the time Bus stops appeared as the fourth clue, it was a total victory lap. Almost every bus stop in the world is equipped with a bench for waiting passengers. It fit the "seating" theme perfectly.

Finally, Stadiums (for team substitutes) arrived to remove any shadow of a doubt. In sports, the area where the "subs" sit is universally referred to as "the bench." Even if they are sitting on high-tech heated chairs in a modern stadium, the terminology remains the same. I felt confident typing in the answer because the logic held up across literal furniture (parks/bus stops), specialized furniture (pianos), and professional terminology (courts/sports).

Lessons Learned From Today's Pinpoint Solution

1

Think Beyond the Literal: This puzzle taught us that a "bench" isn't always just a seat in a park. It can be a position of authority (Courtrooms) or a status in a game (Stadiums). Always look for words that have multiple meanings or professional jargon associated with them.

2

Identify the "Waiting" Factor: Three of the clues (Parks, Bus stops, Stadiums) involve people waiting or resting. When you see a "waiting" theme, look for the infrastructure that supports it—like benches, rows, or kiosks.

3

Parentheticals are Key: When Pinpoint gives you a clue with parentheses, like "Stadiums (for team substitutes)," it’s a massive hint. It’s narrowing your focus so you don't think about the field, the lights, or the fans, but specifically where those specific people sit.

4

Bridge the Gap Between Formal and Informal: This puzzle successfully linked a very formal setting (Courtrooms) with a very casual one (Parks). If your initial guess only fits "casual" things, try to find a word that elevates the concept to fit the "formal" clues.

Expert Q&A

Q

Why was the answer "Places with benches" instead of just "Seating"?

While all these places have seating, "bench" is a specific term that applies uniquely to each. A judge doesn't sit in a "chair" in legal terms; they sit on "the bench." Similarly, athletes aren't "chair-warmers"; they are "bench-warmers." The word "bench" is the specific linguistic link that "seating" lacks.

Q

Is the "bench" in a courtroom an actual bench?

Historically, yes. The term comes from the literal long wooden seats that judges used to sit on. In modern times, it usually refers to the large, elevated desk area where the judge sits, but the traditional name has stuck for centuries.

Q

Do all piano lounges have benches?

Technically, a pianist could use a stool, but the "piano bench" is the standard piece of equipment designed to allow the player to shift their weight and reach the full range of the keys. In the context of a puzzle, it's the most iconic association for piano seating.

Q

Why are substitute players in stadiums called "the bench"?

It dates back to early sports history when the extra players literally sat on a long wooden bench on