

Guess four five-letter words at once within nine attempts
Use colour clues to plan smarter, not faster
Today’s puzzle blends logic, patterns, and repeated letters
Quordle is back with another exciting word puzzle. The game introduces players to a complex grid, where they have to solve four five-letter words within nine guesses. Every attempt affects all four terms; hence, each choice is far more consequential.
The nature of the game is actually what sets Quordle apart. The player must carefully study letter patterns across all four boards, weighing risk against reward with every word entered.
At its core, Quordle echoes one important truth: accuracy is more valuable than speed. There’s no ticking clock, only thoughtful deduction against probability. Each daily puzzle becomes a quiet contest of reasoning where patience mostly wins.
To understand the hints and solutions for any given day, it helps to know how Quordle’s colour system works:
Green tiles indicate letters in the right place
Yellow tiles represent letters that are in the word but in the wrong place
Grey tiles indicate the letter does not appear in the word at all
Quordle does have practice puzzles, because the difficulty is overwhelming for a first-time player. It’s highly recommended to solve them before attempting the daily challenge.
Below are today’s clues, mapped to each position on the grid:
Word 1 (Top Left): To give someone an activity to do as an assignment; a part of something whole
Word 2 (Top Right): Loath or reluctant to clearly express one’s thoughts
Word 3 (Bottom Left): Rock band ___ 182
Word 4 (Bottom Right): Common term for a baby rabbit
Additional Hints:
Two of the four words contain repeated letters.
Today’s answers start with A, C, B, and B
Ready to show the answers? Here’s how today’s grid comes together:
ALLOT – To assign or distribute
CAGEY – Reluctant to discuss thoughts openly
BLINK – As in the band Blink-182
BUNNY – Common term for a baby rabbit
Quordle remains one of the ultimate daily workouts of logic, vocabulary, and strategic thinking. Sometimes, it’s solved in as few as two guesses; other times, it requires every last one. There’s always a way to solve it by thinking several moves ahead. Missed today’s challenge? Don’t worry. Tomorrow’s puzzle will bring four new words for you to solve.