Wordle
The game is a wholesome, brief distraction—in an ideal world, exactly what social media would exist for.

Wordle, a game hosted on the website of creator Josh Wardle, is simple: The object is to guess a five-letter word using no more than six attempts. Once a guess is entered, the computer highlights the letters that appear in the solution. A correctly placed letter is shaded green. That's it! Most puzzles take just a few minutes to solve.
So why has this straightforward game taken social media by storm? In mid-December, Wardle made it easier for players to share their scores without revealing the answers, creating considerable competition. It's rewarding to win in four guesses—two, even more so. Entire Twitter threads are dedicated to furious debates over the ideal starter word. (This reviewer prefers stare; adieu is annoyingly popular among the unwashed masses.) There's only one puzzle each day, so Wordle should never prompt complaints about screen addiction. It's a wholesome, brief distraction—in an ideal world, exactly what social media would exist for.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"Wordle, a game hosted on the website of creator Josh Wardle"
Not anymore! Now it's hosted at NYTimes.com. And you know what our allies at the Times did? They made it so slave — despite unambiguously being a valid 5-letter English word — is no longer an allowable guess!
Of course conservatives pounced on this as a particularly ludicrous example of progressive hypersensitivity to racially problematic language. But I maintain NYT is on the right side of history here.
#BlackLivesMatter
Do they flag "fraud"?
Having a "starter word" is a crutch. Change your first guess every day.
I would never use adieu, because of what the French did.
Imagine being a proud part of a culture addicted to a game that makes being addicted to Wheel Of Fortune look intelligent, rewarding, and sophisticated. Kudos to Wardle and the NYT for getting rich off you retards.
"A strange game. The only winning move is not to play."
"How about a nice game of chess?"
"Later. Let's play Global Thermonuclear War."
The more unfortunate side of this...I see at least one video or article posted per day about how difficult the game is since NYT took over. You have to try very hard not to get it, its honestly a feat to miss if you have an appropriate* high school education and some ability to reason. The equivalent of making a "game" that you have to hit the broad side of a barn from 10 feet away. The fact that our population openly complains about how hard this game is gives me little hope for the future.
I stopped being astounded after hearing people talk about how playing Sodoku to improved their math skills.
Some people's math skills are pretty terrible.
I have no actually played Sudoku since I was a kid, it always just felt boring/easy. But I am assuming the sad commentary is that there is no actual math (IIRC just a puzzle who's pieces happen to be numbers)
Let’s celebrate another time waster!
I'm sure the fun-hating puritans above never watch TV, or listen to music, or read for pleasure. If you're not working 24/7 you're a drain on society!
No. No. I listen to music. Well, not music per say. Between Tweets, I hit the random button and try to guess the first 5 notes. Listening to whole songs is for people with way too much time on their hands.
Also, I've gotten really good at guessing the first five words of any given book without cracking the cover. But there's only some 150,000 words in the English language, I'm just working my way up to the 1 in 26 guessing game.
Next try to guess who the bad guys are in a movie just by reviewing the cast list.
Master Mind ... but letters.
I don't give a crap about Wordle one way or the pother, but this is stupid: "in an ideal world, exactly what social media would exist for." Really? What an F'n waste that would be.
Except for the "wholesome" part.
I haven't played Wordle, but I would start with:
ATONE
Since it has the 5 most common letters. (ETAON)
One odd thing is the entire Wordle word list can be seen if you just view the JavaScript in the page source. The distribution of letters in the Wordle list is close to ETAON, but slightly different.
But ETAON is from natural language use counting. Every time the word "the" appears in a sentence, that runs up the number of times "t", "h", and "e" are used in ordinary English text, which is valuable if you're a 19th Century printer doing typesetting, but isn't directly relevant when you're trying to find letters in what is always a single five-letter word.
The mathematical analysis of a list of 8,000 5-letter Scrabble-valid words showed that S and R beat out T and N; the guy who did that suggested "AROSE".
Another analysis based on the Wordle source code discovered that for Wordle, T and L were more common than S (EAROTILS...), probably because Scrabble allows four-letter-plus-S words while Wordle doesn't.
However, that latter analysis went on and ran code to determine that if you value letters-in-the-right-place twice as much as letters-found-at-all, the word that does best is "SOARE" (an old world for a young hawk), which is the same set as "AROSE" but more likely to put letters in the right place. This guy then recommended "LINTY" as the "SOARE didn't hit anything, now what?" word.
Is it 'rebus?'
Never played before but assuming the r and s are correct letters in the correct place, and the e and u are correct letters in the wrong place, and the b hasn't been tried but seems to fit.
A rebus is a kind of puzzle or code that substitutes letters and words for pictures.
I kinda miss Minesweeper