LinkedIn Pinpoint #674 Answer & Analysis 

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What connects Parks, Courtrooms, Piano lounges, Bus stops and Stadiums (for team substitutes) in LinkedIn Pinpoint 674 — and why? We've got you covered! Try the hints first — you might crack it before the reveal.

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Puzzle Number

674

Date

2026-03-04

LinkedIn Pinpoint 674 Clues & Answer
Pinpoint 674 Clues:

💡 Hover (desktop) or tap (mobile) each clue to see how it connects to the answer

#1
Parks
#2
Courtrooms
#3
Piano lounges
#4
Bus stops
#5
Stadiums (for team substitutes)
Pinpoint 674 Answer:
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🪑 LinkedIn Pinpoint 674 Answer — Parks, Courtrooms, Piano lounges, Bus stops, Stadiums (for team substitutes)

Published: March 4, 2026 · Answer: Places with benches

I went down a completely wrong path with this one — "places where you wait." Parks, you wait around. Courtrooms, you wait for your case. Bus stops, obviously waiting. It fit three out of five.

But "Piano lounges"? You don't really wait at a piano lounge. You go there to enjoy music and drinks. And stadiums for team substitutes — that's the bench where substitute players sit, not a waiting area.

The substitutes hint was my breakthrough. "(for team substitutes)" — in sports, we literally call it "the bench." Players are "benched." That's a physical bench.

Park benches. Courtroom benches (where the judge sits — "the bench" is even legal terminology for the judiciary itself). Piano lounge benches where pianists sit. Bus stop benches where commuters rest. Stadium benches for substitute players.

They're all places with actual, physical benches. Not metaphorical, not abstract — real benches you can sit on.

I felt clever for my "waiting places" theory, but it was solving a different puzzle. The actual answer is more concrete and more satisfying. Sometimes Pinpoint is literal, and that's okay.

✅ Pinpoint 674 Answer

Places with benches

ClueFull PhraseWhat It Means
ParksPark benchesPublic green spaces that typically contain benches for visitors to sit, relax, and enjoy the surroundings
CourtroomsCourtroom benchLegal venues where benches are provided for jurors, spectators, and sometimes defendants during court proceedings
Piano loungesPiano benchElegant entertainment spaces often furnished with benches or long seating arrangements for guests to enjoy live piano music
Bus stopsBus stop benchPublic transportation waiting areas that commonly feature benches for passengers to sit while waiting for buses
Stadiums (for team substitutes)Players' benchSports arenas where team benches are provided on the sidelines for substitute players and coaching staff during games

🏟️ What This Puzzle Taught Me

  1. Parenthetical clues refine the answer. "(for team substitutes)" tells you it's not about stadium seats for fans — it's about the players' bench on the sidelines. Without that hint, "Stadiums" could point in a dozen directions. Parentheticals narrow broad clues to a specific object; always process them before guessing.
  2. Abstract theories lose to concrete ones. My "places where you wait" theory fit three clues but broke on "Piano lounges" — you don't wait there, you enjoy yourself. "Places with benches" fits all five because it's about a physical object, not a vague concept. When choosing between an abstract and a concrete answer, go concrete — Pinpoint prefers tangible things.
  3. Legal jargon doubles as furniture. "The bench" in a courtroom means both the judge's authority AND the literal furniture they sit behind. This dual meaning almost tripped me up — I was thinking about legal proceedings, not furniture. When a clue lives in a specialized field (law, sports, music), check if the key term also has a plain, physical meaning.

FAQ

Q1: Why do judges say "approach the bench"? "The bench" in legal contexts refers to the judge's elevated desk/platform. The term comes from the Old English and Old French "banc," meaning a long seat. "Approach the bench" means lawyers should come forward for a private sidebar conversation.

Q2: Why is it called "being benched" in sports? When a player is "benched," they're removed from active play and sent to sit on the substitutes' bench. The term has been used in American sports since the early 1900s and has extended into everyday language to mean being sidelined from any activity.

Q3: When were public park benches first introduced? Public park benches became common in European cities during the 19th century, coinciding with the urban parks movement. London's Hyde Park and New York's Central Park (opened 1858) were among the first to feature dedicated public seating.

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