
Welcome to Quordle! A game that increased the difficulty levels of word-puzzles. For the daily wordsmith, it’s just another amazing challenge.
For newcomers, Qourdle is a word guessing game with a color-coded feedback mechanism. Try to input a four-letter word. The game will either display:
Green: Perfect letter placement
Yellow: Perfect letter, but wrong placement
Grey: Letters and words do not exist, just for today.
The colors are simple to assess the accuracy of the letter and their placement.
First word starts with T (top-left).
Second word starts with E (top-right).
Third word starts with B (bottom-left).
Fourth word starts with R (bottom-right).
2 vowels are in the first word (top-left).
2 vowels are in the second word (top-right).
1 vowel is in the third word (bottom-left).
2 vowels are in the fourth word (bottom-right).
No repeating letters in the first word.
No repeating letters in the second word.
No repeating letters in the third word.
2 repeating letters in the fourth word.
First word (top-left): In a moment, very quickly.
Second word (top-right): A number before nine.
Third word (bottom-left): To expel gas suddenly from the stomach through the mouth.
Fourth word (bottom-right): More developed form, referring to fruits.
Solution ahead. The above hints teased some answers. Below hints will guide to the complete answers. Here are today’s answer for the Quordle:
TRICE
EIGHT
BELCH
RIPER
Information gathering is the key to Quordle. Start the game like a chess match. Vowels are the best pieces. Move ahead with words like “AUDIO”, “ADIEU”, or “RAISE” to map the letter landscape. The best part of vowel-rich words is that they also offer elimination strategies.
Elimination gaming strategy narrows down the option for unused words. If the above vowels reveal less, try high-frequency consonants like “STARE”, “TRACE”, or “STREN” to quickly identify useful letters in the puzzle.
Qourdle has now become quite popular as a great word game challenge. Wordle inspired David Mah to conceptualize Quordle. Later, Freddie Meyer refined the traditional one-grid puzzle into its current quadrupled format for more complex word-solving experiences.
For daily players, this passion project turned into a cognitive workout for:
Vocabulary retrieval system
Expanding neural capacity for pattern recognition
Testing working memory capacity
Developing logic skills games based on deduction