

Understand how Quordle works and apply its colour-coded rules to solve all four grids at once.
Explore today’s hints, get the meanings of each answer, and compare them with your guesses.
Improve your puzzle-solving instincts with stronger word pattern recognition and smarter strategies.
If you’re new to the world of daily word puzzles, Quordle is probably the challenging upgrade you never knew you needed. Frequently referred to as Wordle’s tougher variant, Quordle amplifies the difficulty level by asking players to solve four five-letter words simultaneously. With only nine attempts to crack them all, it’s a test of vocabulary, logic, and multitasking.
The rules are the same as those with which many have grown familiar through Wordle. You start by typing any five-letter word. Every guess is applied to four different grids simultaneously. Letters that fall in the right place turn green, while letters in the word that aren’t in the correct position turn yellow.
Letters that aren’t part of the word don’t highlight at all. This makes each guess a little more calculated because you’re trying to keep track of clues in four puzzles simultaneously.
It also has a practice mode for beginners, which is an excellent place to experiment with starting words, vowel-heavy guesses, or elimination strategies ahead of attempting the daily puzzle.
Here are the clues to help you through today’s challenge:
Word 1 (Top Left): A sudden charge from a besieged place; also a nickname for the Salvation Army.
Word 2 (Top Right): To behave amorously in a playful or light-hearted way.
Word 3 (Bottom Left): One who arranges things for others; also heard in the phrase “____ upper,” referring to a house needing major renovation.
Word 4 (Bottom Right): Tied up securely; also, to make large jumps.
One of the words has repeated letters.
These words start with S, F, F, and B.
SALLY: A sudden attack from a defensive position, especially during a siege; also an old nickname for the Salvation Army.
FLIRT: To act playfully or romantically towards somebody to show one’s interest in them.
FIXER: A person who arranges, organises, or solves things for others. In ‘fixer-upper,’ it describes a house needing extensive renovation.
BOUND: Tied up firmly, or to leap forward in large jumps.
Quordle has continued to impress fans with the clever clues and layered difficulties that go with it. The game seamlessly intertwines patterns, vocabulary, and logic into a well-rounded challenge that hones your thinking with every attempt. Keep practicing, revisit the hints when you need a nudge, and check back tomorrow for a fresh round of brain-teasing words.