
Agreed. I got "MOULD" on my third guess, then tried "WOULD", but it turned out to be "COULD". How was that anything but luck?Andyp":2wwpb8rt said:Gill":2wwpb8rt said:Andyp":2wwpb8rt said:It is all down to luck.
I disagree. It's about your knowledge of how words, especially five-letter words, are constructed.
3rd guess COLLY
4th guess COOLY
5th guess COBLE
I disagree.
All acceptable words, all showing a knowledge of how 5 letter words are constructed, all with correct 1st, 2nd and 4th letters, all wrong. Maybe I know too many less common words (colly was a guess but coble I knew was a boat). There is a element of luck and perhaps being in synch with Mr Wardle, I clearly am not.

Andyp":xkl1hpvn said:How many words are there ending with those 4 letters.?
Peri":3ufpg28w said:Anyone remember this?
AndyT":10c0y21u said:Peri":10c0y21u said:Anyone remember this?
Yes, but I also remember it as a pencil and paper game before it needed a box of plastic bits!
Yes. Not least because I always wondered which Bond film he was the villain from. But mainly owing to the tiny plastic pegs going everywhere but in the box.Peri":2jefpxxp said:Anyone remember this?

AndyT":3lyto2ti said:In amongst all the other news yesterday there was an announcement that the New York Times has bought Wordle for a "low seven figure sum."
Josh Wardle has tweeted that it won't be hidden behind their paywall but will be available for everyone and that our stats will be preserved.
Uh-huh. Very tempted to try "SCORE" as my first word today, but only because "KERCHING" wouldn't fit. Mind you, even a "low seven figure sum" may have been a bit steep, as I suspect this thing's popularity will run its natural course pretty soon.BBC News":3lyto2ti said:The newspaper publisher said the game would initially remain free to play.
Well, if you're using the first word you said you were, I stopped counting the possible words you might have chosen for the second guess after the first ten. So yes, you did indeed.Gill":3lyto2ti said:Sorry. I suppose I got lucky. :lol:

The newspaper publisher said the game would initially remain free to play.
Asked whether he planned to make money from it, he (MR Wardle) said: "I don't understand why something can't just be fun.
"I don't have to charge people money for this and ideally would like to keep it that way."