GAME #82
Your goal is to guess a hidden five-letter word in six tries or fewer. Type any valid word using the on-screen keyboard or your physical keyboard and press Enter to submit your guess.
After each guess the tiles change colour. A green tile means that letter is in the word and in exactly the right position. A yellow tile means the letter is in the word but needs to move to a different spot. A grey tile means that letter does not appear in the word at all.
Use the colour feedback from each row to guide your next guess. If you get a green letter keep it in the same position. If you get a yellow letter try it somewhere else. If you get a grey letter avoid using it again.
A good opening word covers several common vowels and consonants so you gather as much information as possible right away. From there it is all about reading the clues and thinking carefully about which words still fit. Solve it within six guesses and you win.
Type any valid five-letter word as your first guess and hit Enter. The tiles will flip and reveal colours telling you which letters are correct and in the right place, which letters are in the word but misplaced, and which letters are not in the word at all. Use that information to make a smarter second guess and keep narrowing it down. You have six guesses in total to find the hidden word. Most experienced players start with a word that covers common vowels and consonants to gather as much information as possible on the first go.
Yes! On WordGames.net you can play in English, German, Spanish, Portuguese, and French. Each language uses its own dedicated word list drawn from everyday vocabulary, so the difficulty feels consistent no matter which language you choose. Switching languages is a great way to keep the game feeling fresh and to challenge yourself with vocabulary you might not encounter every day.
As many times as you like. Unlike the original Wordle which limits you to one puzzle per day, our version generates a new word each game so you can keep playing whenever you want. There is no cooldown and no daily limit. If you are trying to improve your average score, playing multiple rounds back to back is a great way to sharpen your strategy.
Your guess must be a real five-letter word that exists in our dictionary for the chosen language. You cannot submit a random string of letters. If a word is not accepted it simply means it is not in our word list, so try a different word. Proper nouns, abbreviations, and very obscure terms are generally excluded to keep the game accessible and fair for everyone.
Wordle is a daily word puzzle that gives you six attempts to guess a hidden five-letter word. After each guess the tiles change colour to show you how close you are. Green means the letter is in the right spot, yellow means the letter is in the word but in the wrong position, and grey means the letter does not appear in the word at all. Six guesses, one word, and a whole lot of thinking.
On WordGames.net our Wordle clone lets you play as many times as you like without waiting for tomorrow's puzzle. You can also switch between English, German, Spanish, Portuguese, and French, so every session is a fresh challenge. The word list is carefully curated to keep things fair, avoiding obscure words that would leave anyone stumped.
What makes Wordle so compelling is how much it rewards logical thinking. Each guess is an opportunity to gather information, and the best players approach it almost like a puzzle within a puzzle. Whether you solve it in two guesses or squeak through on the sixth, the satisfaction never gets old.
Wordle was created by software engineer Josh Wardle as a personal gift for his partner, who loved word games. He built it in 2021 and initially shared it with just his family. Within months the game had spread across the internet almost entirely through word of mouth, going from a few dozen players to millions in a matter of weeks.
A key part of Wordle's viral success was its signature shareable grid of coloured squares. Players could post their results on social media without giving away the answer, sparking curiosity in everyone who saw it. That mechanic turned every player into an ambassador for the game without any advertising at all.
In January 2022 the New York Times purchased Wordle for a reported seven-figure sum and integrated it into their games section. The original free version remained free after the acquisition, and the game continues to reach millions of players every single day. Few games have ever risen so fast or captured a global audience so completely.