

Four simultaneous grids turn every guess into a high-stakes deduction challenge daily test.
Greens confirm precision while yellows demand memory, reshaping strategy with each move carefully.
Today’s solutions reward calm sequencing, balanced starters, and a disciplined letter elimination approach always.
If Quordle has been sitting on your to-play list, here’s the quickest way to find out about some clues. The puzzle gives you four five-letter words at once and just nine attempts to crack them.
Every guess runs across all four grids simultaneously, so a well-chosen word can reveal multiple clues in one move, while a random stab can drain your chances fast.
The smartest opening is a balanced starter word loaded with common vowels and high-frequency consonants. That single entry appears on all four boards and immediately begins to map the possibilities.
A green tile signals the correct letter in the correct position.
A yellow tile means the letter belongs in the word but sits in the wrong spot.
From there, the game becomes a careful exercise in deduction. Each guess should either introduce new letters or eliminate unlikely combinations. Practice mode helps refine your starting strategy and gives you a feel for how different letter patterns shape the daily puzzle.
Word 1 (top left): A room that uses dry heat to make you sweat
Word 2 (top right): To grip tightly
Word 3 (bottom left): One’s competitor
Word 4 (bottom right): The bird that’s said to catch the worm
Extra clues:
One word contains repeated letters
The starting letters are S, C, R, and E
SAUNA – A heated room designed to induce sweating and relaxation.
CLASP – To hold something firmly in your hand.
RIVAL – A person or group competing against another.
EARLY – The one who gets the worm, according to the proverb.
Today’s grid stays rooted in familiar vocabulary, but the overlap of shared letters can still trip up rushed guesses. Quordle continues to reward disciplined play, track your yellows, protect your remaining attempts, and let each move narrow the field.
Tomorrow’s puzzle will once again test how efficiently you read the board.