New week, new day, new Wordle! We're here to help you with some subtle clues. A friendly reminder, in case you missed the recent rule change: The New York Times has added a new word list and updated the rules, so now plurals ending in S or ES will never be the solution.
If you'd rather have the answer to today's Wordledelivered straight, skip to the end of this article for December 5's solution revealed. Alternatively, if you prefer to do the work yourself, keep scrolling for tips, clues, and strategies to offer you a helping hand.
SEE ALSO: Best 'Wordle' starting word? Step up your game today.Wordlewas originally created by engineer Josh Wardle as a gift for his partner, but soon spread internationally. Thousands of people around the globe now play this game each day, and fans have even created alternate Wordle versions inspired by the original. This includes battle royale Squabble, music identification game Heardle, and variations like Dordleand Quordlethat make you guess multiple words at once.
In fact, the word puzzle game has proved so popular that the New York Times eventually bought it, and TikTok creators livestream themselves playing.
Unlike a maths equation, there is no single correct answer to what the best Wordlestarting word is. However, there are more strategic options, and we have plenty of ideas that can help you choose. For example, try picking a word that includes at least two different vowels, as well as some common consonants such as S, T, R, or N.
The entire archive of past Wordle puzzles used to be available for anyone to enjoy when they had some spare time and no pressing responsibilities. Unfortunately it has since been taken down, which was done at the request of the New York Times according to the website's creator.
SEE ALSO: Wordle-obsessed? These are the best word games to play IRL.If you've been finding Wordletoo easy, there is a Hard Mode you can enable to give yourself more of a challenge. But unless you activate this mode, we can assure you that Wordle isn't getting harder.
Usually, Wordlesolutions are like Highlander: There can be only one. However occasionally the puzzle game has accepted two different correct solutions on the same day, in apparent defiance of Wordlelaw. This aberration is due to changes the New York Timesmade after it acquired Wordle.
The Timeshas since added its own updated word list, so this should happen even less frequently than before. To avoid any confusion, it's a good idea to refresh your browser before getting stuck into a new puzzle.
You've already done it today.
Not today!
Today's Wordlestarts with the letter W.
It's your last chance to guess today's Wordle! We're finally about to reveal the solution.
Are you ready?
The answer to Wordle #534 is...
WOKEN.
Don't feel down if you didn't get it this time! There's always another day, and with it another Wordle. Come back tomorrow for more helpful clues and hints!
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to today's Wordle.
Topics Wordle
Fellow NFL players join Colin Kaepernick in National Anthem protest'Just Cause 4' review: Play 'Just Cause 2' insteadHere are the 10 most used GIFs of 2018, according to GiphyQuora data breach results in 100 million users affectedFellow NFL players join Colin Kaepernick in National Anthem protestThe 8 best returning TV shows of 2018Neighbors who thought they scored a free doormat were in for a gross surpriseRussian ride3 crewmembers launch to space station aboard Russian Soyuz rocketFacebook collections are now shareable and collaborative'The Office' cast just met up and are you thinking what we're thinking?Mesmerizing video shows what would happen if an asteroid crashed into Earth's oceansBoomer Phelps is the real king of the pool in new Instagram videoBruce Miller discusses 'The Handmaid's Tale' Season 2Spotify just released 2018's most streamed artists and yup, it's all dudesJoe Biden gives surprisingly candid response to protester at Clinton rallyMicrosoft's next browser might be based on ChromiumParent gives brutally honest excuse for tardy kidsCan you find the hot dogs among the Instagrams of people's legs?Humans are jerks. Dance with your dog instead. The Amorality of Robot Cars The Secret’s Out: We’re BORING AS FUCK R. Crumb Is Still Weird (Thank God!) Anagramming the News: The Answers Before ASCII Art, There Was … This 19th A Note to the Teen Reading Sartre’s “Critique of Dialectical Reason” on My Flight Today Why “Mad Ducks and Bears” Is Plimpton’s Best Sports Book Glen Baxter Week, Day One: Jane Austen, Men in Uniform It’s Official: Furniture Is Made out of Shit Vivienne Westwood’s Son Will Burn $7.1 Million in Punk Memorabilia Football: Three Impressions Comfort Reading: On Lee Bailey’s Cookbooks Listen to Djuna Barnes Read from “The Antiphon,” 1971 John Betjeman Reads “The Licorice Fields at Pontefract” “Own It!”: The Most Grating Phrase of the Moment Staff Picks: Prince, Mary Ruefle, and Mary Shelley Lisa Hanawalt: Hot Dog Taste Test “Purple Elegy”: A Poem for Prince, by Rowan Ricardo Phillips Anagramming the News: Can You Solve These 25 Puzzles? Richard Fariña’s “Been So Down It Looks Like Up to Me” Turns 50
1.7369s , 10131.609375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Dagmar Bürger】,New Knowledge Information Network