If you’re chasing the feeling of successfully getting those five green squares in a row, there’s finally a way you can Wordle more than once a day.
A fourth-year computational biology and bioinformatics PhD student at Duke University has created “Remembrance of Wordles Past,” an archive of previous Wordles that you can solve.
“I, like a lot of people on this website, love my daily Wordles,” Devang Thakkar tweeted. “But if you forget to do one, there is no way to go back to it. So I decided to make one.”
Here it is, the Wordle Archive – Remembrance of Wordles Past. This is the culmination of a very busy weekend built on a lot of work by other awesome people (@powerlanguish, @katherinecodes, https://t.co/Z784lbbUqK) . A š§µon why and how I did it (1/n)https://t.co/2gjoPnPAOR
ā Devang Thakkar (@devangvang) January 10, 2022
It not only allows people to solve any Wordles they might’ve missed, but it also allows newbies to hop on the word game train starting from the beginning.
The site gives you the option to solve the very first Wordle, to the latest one. You can also click previous or next, or if you want an overview of all of the puzzles, there’s a “choose” button that has the full list. There’s a “random” option as well if you want a surprise.
After going viral in early January, there have been a handful of creative iterations of the word game. For hockey fans there’s Gordle where you solve for the last names of hockey players and Lewdle, an R-rated version of Wordle.
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- There's now a hockey version of Wordle to play online
- Lewdle: the R-rated version of Wordle you didn't know you needed
- What is Wordle and why is everyone obsessed with the online game?
If you’re new to the Wordleverse, click here for a crash course.