Welcome to the weekend, and to a new Wordle! Working it out all by yourself is the ideal, of course, but if you get stuck and start to get nervous about your streak, we've got some tips and hints to help you figure out the solution.
If you prefer to cut to the chase, you'll soon be able to skip to the very end of this article for the answer to the June 11 Wordle,#357. In the meantime, scroll down for a few tips, subtle clues, and strategies to assist you.
Wordlewas created and developed by former Reddit engineer Josh Wardle as a gift for his partner, but soon went mega-viral. Thousands of people around the globe now play this game each day, and fans have even created alternate Wordle versions inspired by the original. This includes battle royale format Squabble, music identification game Heardle, and variations like Dordleand Quordlethat make you guess multiple words at once.
In fact, the word puzzle game has proved so popular that the New York Times eventually bought it, and TikTok creators livestream themselves playing.
Not the day you're after? Here's the Wordleanswer for June 10.
We have some ideas to help you pick the perfect first move (or as close to perfect as you can get without just magically guessing the exact right word). Such tips include choosing a word with at least two different vowels in it, plus a few common consonants such as S, T, R, or N.
SEE ALSO: Best cheap VPNs: Stay anonymous online without going brokeWhile you could once play the entire archive of past puzzles, the archive was taken down at the request of the New York Times, according to the site.
If you've been finding Wordletoo easy, there is a Hard Mode you can enable to give yourself more of a challenge. But unless you activate this mode, we can assure you that Wordle isn't getting harder.
The whole point of Wordleis that everyone's solving the same puzzle, with the same answer, no matter where you are in the world. However, occasionally the puzzle game will accept two different correct solutions on the same day, in apparent defiance of Wordlelaw.
This aberration is due to changes the New York Timesmade after it acquired Wordleearlier this year.
Duck, duck...
The letter 'E.'
OK...
Ready?
The answer is...
GOOSE.
Reporting by Caitlin Welsh, Amanda Yeo and Adam Rosenberg contributed to this article.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to today's Wordle.
Topics Wordle
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