LinkedIn Tango Hints and Answers — June 15, 2026

Our Tango solver reveals today's answer cell by cell, row by row, or column by column. Get hints without spoiling the whole board.

By Praveen L | Puzzle #615 · 6×6
= × × = × = × = = × × =

Click any cell to reveal whether it's a sun or moon.
Click a row/column button to reveal an entire line.

Reveal by Row

Reveal by Column

  • Fill the grid with suns and moons.
  • Each row and column must have exactly 3 of each.
  • No more than 2 identical symbols can be adjacent.
  • = means cells must match; × means they must differ.
  • Use the puzzle picker to view a different day's puzzle.

How the Tango Solver Works

Our Tango solver gives you today's answer and hints for the daily LinkedIn Tango puzzle. Click any cell to reveal whether it should be a sun or moon. If you'd rather work with a larger chunk, click a row or column button to reveal an entire line at once. Reveal All shows the complete solution, and Clear All resets the board if you want a fresh start.

The cell-by-cell approach is the most useful when you're stuck on one specific placement. Confirm a single cell, then use that answer to work out the rest of the row or column yourself. That keeps the puzzle intact while getting you past the sticking point.

Use the puzzle picker to pull up any previous day and view its solution. The archive includes every past Tango puzzle.

What Is LinkedIn Tango?

Tango is a daily logic puzzle on LinkedIn. You fill a 6x6 grid with suns and moons, following three rules: each row and column must have exactly three of each symbol, no more than two identical symbols can sit next to each other (horizontally or vertically), and constraint markers between certain cells tell you whether those cells must match (=) or differ (x).

The game is inspired by binary puzzles like Takuzu (also called Binairo). LinkedIn's version adds the = and x constraint markers, which give you fixed starting points that pure Takuzu puzzles don't have. Difficulty increases through the week, with Monday puzzles being the easiest.

A new puzzle drops every day at midnight Pacific Time. Tango is one of seven daily games LinkedIn currently offers. If you play the others, we have solver tools for Crossclimb, Queens, Pinpoint, Zip, Mini Sudoku, and Patches.

Tips for Solving Tango

Start with the constraint markers. The = and x symbols between cells immediately tell you relationships between those cells. Combined with the adjacency rule, a single constraint marker often determines both cells right away.

The adjacency rule is your most powerful tool. If two identical symbols sit next to each other, the cells on either side must be the opposite symbol. Look for these pairs first, because they cascade into other placements quickly.

Count as you go. If a row or column already has three suns (or three moons), every remaining empty cell in that line must be the other symbol. This is especially useful in the later stages of a puzzle when most cells are filled.

Watch for forced gaps. If two cells of the same symbol are separated by one empty cell, that empty cell must be the opposite symbol. Otherwise you'd create three in a row, which breaks the adjacency rule.

If you're stuck and the logic isn't clicking, use the solver to reveal one cell in the row giving you trouble. One confirmed placement often opens up the rest of the line.

Frequently Asked Questions

Tango is a daily logic puzzle on LinkedIn. You fill a 6x6 grid with suns and moons so that each row and column has exactly three of each symbol, no more than two identical symbols are adjacent, and constraint markers (= for match, x for differ) between certain cells are satisfied. A new puzzle is released every day at midnight Pacific Time.

Fill every cell in the 6x6 grid with a sun or moon. Each row and column must contain exactly 3 suns and 3 moons. No more than 2 identical symbols can sit next to each other horizontally or vertically. Some cell pairs have constraint markers: = means both cells must hold the same symbol, and x means they must hold different symbols. Start with the constraint markers and adjacency pairs, then count symbols per line to fill the rest.

Tango has three core rules. First, every cell must be filled with a sun or moon. Second, each row and column must contain exactly 3 suns and 3 moons. Third, no more than 2 identical symbols can be adjacent horizontally or vertically. Additionally, constraint markers between certain cells must be respected: = means the cells match, and x means they differ.

The solver lets you reveal the answer at your own pace. Click any cell to see whether it should be a sun or moon. Click a row or column button to reveal an entire line. Use Reveal All for the complete solution, or Clear All to reset the board. The puzzle picker lets you look up answers from previous days.

All LinkedIn Games, including Tango, reset daily at midnight Pacific Time (PT). All players worldwide receive the same puzzle at the same time. If you're in a different time zone, the new puzzle may appear during your morning rather than at midnight local time.

The = symbol between two cells means both cells must contain the same symbol (both suns or both moons). The x symbol means the two cells must contain different symbols (one sun and one moon). These constraint markers appear between specific cell pairs and provide fixed clues to help you solve the puzzle.

Tango is inspired by Takuzu (also called Binairo or binary puzzle), but LinkedIn's version adds constraint markers (= and x) between certain cell pairs. Traditional Takuzu only uses balance and adjacency rules. The constraint markers give you additional fixed starting points that pure Takuzu puzzles don't have.

Use the puzzle picker on our Tango solver tool to view answers from the last few days. The picker shows the three most recent puzzles so you can catch up on any you missed.

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