New week, new day, new Wordle! But if your brain is still stuck in Sunday mode, we've got some clues and the solution to help you out, as we do every day.
If you just want today's word, you can jump straight to the end of this article for October 24's Wordle solution, for puzzle #492. If you'd rather work through it yourself, keep reading for some tips, tricks, and clues.
SEE ALSO: Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for October 23 SEE ALSO: Look to the future! October 25's clues and solution are here.Wordlewas initially created by engineer Josh Wardle as a gift for his partner, though it quickly spread until it became an international phenomenon. Thousands of players across the globe tackle Wordleeach day, with some fans even having created alternate versions of the daily word puzzle game. These include battle royale format Squabble, music identification game Heardle, and variations like Dordleand Quordlethat make you guess multiple words at once.
The popularity of Wordleeven reached such heights that the New York Times bought it earlier this year, while TikTok creators live-stream themselves playing it.
The goal of Wordleis to have fun, and there's no right way to have fun. Just choose whatever starting word feels right to you, and don't let anyone shame you for it. However, if you want to take a more strategic approach, we have a few ideas to help you pick a word that will spark joy. One tip is to select a word that includes at least two different vowels, plus some common consonants like S, T, R, or N.
The entire archive of past Wordles used to be available for anyone to play in glorious days gone by. Unfortunately it has since been taken down, with the website's creator stating it was done at the request of the New York Times.
If you're finding Wordle too easy, you can try enabling its Hard Mode to give your brain a tougher challenge. But Wordleisn't getting any harder by itself — it's the same difficulty that it's always been.
Wordle is a fun, collective experience specifically because everyone's solving for the same word every day. Occasionally, though, Wordlehas accepted two different solutions as correct on the same day. This is because the New York Timesmade changes to the Wordleword list after acquiring it, and sometimes swaps out words from the original list. To ensure you're getting the right answer every day, refresh your browser before you play — the site will save your streak.
You don't want it to be yours.
Not today!
The letter... T.
SEE ALSO: Wordle-obsessed? These are the best word games to play IRL.Get your guesses in — it's the last call before we reveal the answer to today's Wordle!
Are you ready?
The solution to Wordle #492 is...
FAULT.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to today's Wordle.
Topics Wordle
Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for November 12'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 15The ultimate PS5 and Xbox Series X accessories gift guideApple limits AirDrop to 10 minutes in ChinaAmazon Clinic launches ahead of reported mass layoffsWhatsApp beta lets you use the same account on multiple phonesElon Musk's $8 Twitter Blue hasn't made very much money so far'Sonic Frontiers' isn't super colorblindBrienne of Tarth writing about Jaime Lannister's legacy gets the meme treatmentThe 10 best Disney+ dramas to stir your emotionsPrincess Diana's revenge dress in 'The Crown' Season 5: Let's talk about it.How Roe v. Wade reversal is impacting dating and sex livesInside the online communities where straight guys help other straight guys get offTheresa May resigned and the internet wants the Downing Street sound engineer to replace herElizabeth Warren has a plan to fix everything, even our sad love livesWordle today: Here's the answer, hints for November 10Kevin Conroy, the iconic voice of Batman, has died at age 66Theresa May resigned and the internet wants the Downing Street sound engineer to replace herTwitter employees who replied to one of Elon Musk's tweets were firedFacebook shareholders try and fail to limit Mark Zuckerberg's power The Bird Master by Yoshiharu Tsuge On the Timeless Music of McCoy Tyner by Craig Morgan Teicher The Other Billy Collins by Anthony Madrid Jonathan Escoffery Wins Plimpton Prize; Leigh Newman Wins Terry Southern Prize by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Menace, Machines, and Muhammad Ali by The Paris Review The Silurian Hypothesis by Rich Cohen 197,539 B.C. by Jeffrey Yang The Artist’s Hypothesis by The Paris Review The Paris Review Crossword by Adrienne Raphel Redux: Knowing It Would End by The Paris Review A Poem Is Not a Frontal Assault: An Interview with Jane Hirshfield by Ilya Kaminsky Keeping the Fear at Bay by John Freeman Announcing Our New Publisher, Mona Simpson by The Paris Review Inside Jack Youngerman’s Studio by Cornelia Channing On Minor Feelings by Cathy Park Hong Alasdair Gray, the Man and the Work by Rodge Glass What Men Have Told Me by Adrienne Miller Literary Paper Dolls: Sula by Julia Berick and Jenny Kroik Whiting Awards 2020: Andrea Lawlor, Fiction Redux: I Lost the Time of Day about Three Weeks Ago by The Paris Review
2.8343s , 10134.359375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1996 Archives】,Defense Information Network