What’s in a wordle? It’s become quite the rage on Twitter

It’s quick. It’s addictive. And yet it doesn’t allow instant gratification. That’s probably why Wordle is such a fascinating rage of the moment online. It’s that one game I look forward to when I wake up. Previously it was Twitter (before it turned into a game of death and destruction) and now it’s Wordle.

It all began when I started seeing colorful boxes appear on my twitter timeline. Wordle? What’s a wordle? I attempted playing and magnificently lost. I began paying attention. Attention. Something that is so coveted and so rare in the day of multiple apps and multiple screens vying for your eyeballs. But wordle has it. And how. There is even a twitter account that tracks the top stats on Twitter.

Like any internet sensation, it has inspired its own set of memes.

It’s also gotten political. US Senator Kirsten Gillibrand also used the Wordle format to make a point

So what’s so great about the game itself that has so many addicted? Perhaps it is the quality of the game itself. It’s short and fleeting but also challenging and like most word puzzles, makes you dig deep into your vocabulary.

Created by Josh Wardle, a software engineer from Brooklyn, it was released in October 2020 but within a few months of its release there are over 300,000 players who are happily addicted to the word game.

You simply have to guess a five lettered word within six tries. A gray tile says the word is not included in the right word. A yellow tile says that the word is there but misplaced in your guess. And the green tile says the word is right where it belongs. You can share your results spoiler free online and there’s a new word every day.

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