Wordlers, happy Friday! Hopefully, you made it, with streaks intact. You can find the Wordle answer at the bottom of the post, but if you want to try and work it out yourself first, you will find a few clues as well as general Wordle tips, strategies, and info.
Wordle was bought by the New York Times in a seven-figure deal after being created by engineer Josh Wardle as a gift for his partner.
Try the battle Royale-style Squabble, the maddeningly fun music game Heardle, the several-at-once variant like Dordle and Quordle and so on, or find new.
If you're looking for it, here is the April 7 Wordle. We do this every day.
You want to lock in at least two vowels, as well as a couple of more common letters, so you can start on the more obscure guys. We have a lot of options for you to try.
There was more than one possible Wordle answer for some people last week.
It is not getting harder. We have been playing it on easy mode and here is how to switch to hard mode.
One day not doing it for you anymore? Do you want to practice? The archive of past Wordles can be played.
It can be used as both a word and a letter.
Did you miss a day? The Wordle answer and hints are here.
Nope! All five letters appeared at the same time.
E! That is probably not the letter you need help with.
Here it is.
Ready?
It is.
SCARE.
Another one of these. Most of the letters are common in your first two guesses. There are still five options for what it could be, and you can easily guess at them.
If you guess a word that has at least one of the possible letters in it, you can rule it out or in. There are no five-letter words you can make with H, P, T, N, and C alone. PINCH would tell you a lot.
You should see you tomorrow for more brain-twisters.