


In Dungleon, players aren’t supposed to guess the correct word but instead arrange pixelated tokens in the correct order. Dungleon plays with that objective in interesting ways.
4 PIC 1 WORD GAMES MOVIE
That something could be a word, a movie title, a song, or a country, but whatever you’re trying to discover is usually some kind of established concept.

Most Wordle-like games are based on the idea of finding something that already exists. Players who find the game are in for a treat, but those who can’t will get an equivalent experience with Globle. The only major downside is that Worldle is almost impossible to find via Google since it is one letter off from Wordle. Yes, Worldle slowly tells users how far away the correct country is from their guess and in what direction. The game offers a silhouette of a random country in the world and asks players to type in their guess as to which country it is. If the player is wrong, the game literally them in the right direction. The twist here is that you’re trying to identify a specific country. Like other Wordle wannabees, Worldle gives players six guesses to correctly identify the correct answer. After all, it’s hard to win at a game that keeps moving the goalposts. From there, the game gets easier and starts to resemble regular Wordle, but many players give up before reaching that point. Eventually, players corner the algorithm and receive a yellow or even green square. The only way to win is to play with the idea that each subsequent guess diminishes Absurdle’s possible solutions. The first few guesses will always be wrong since Absurdle is designed to remove every word with the initial letters from its pool of answers. On the surface, Absurdle plays like vanilla Wordle, but in reality, Absurdle uses a devious algorithm that reacts to players. However, one notable Wordle copycat lets players guess as many times as they want. Wordle and most of that game’s clones are built around a secret word, movie, Pokémon, or whatever that players have to guess in just a handful of attempts. Despite its name, Crosswordle plays more like a word-based game of Sudoku. But as an additional challenge, once a letter is placed in a gray square, it can’t be used again. Any letter is fair game for the gray squares, so long as the resulting combination of letters forms a word. Every other Crosswordle row includes scattered green and yellow tiles, which must be filled with the “appropriate” letters (i.e., a letter in a yellow block must be in the “solution” but not in the right spot). In Crosswordle, the “answer” is laid out at the bottom, and players have to utilize its letters to create four other words. But what would happen if you played that game in reverse? The answer is Crosswordle. In Wordle, players have to solve a five-letter word in six tries or less, and the game tells users when a letter is either in the word but not in the right spot or both in the word and right spot. Since Squirdle has more variables than other Wordle clones, the game offers eight chances instead of the standard six. Every attempt helps and narrows down the pool of potential answers (learning that the correct Pokémon is part Ground-type and is heavier than a Flygon but smaller than a Golurk is more helpful than you think). Squirdle (a portmanteau of Wordle and Squirtle) dares players to identify a Pokémon using its generation, types, height, and weight. Many players can readily identify a Pokémon based on its silhouette, but how many can identify them with Wordle rules? Squirdle asks this question. The world of Pokémon features over 900 unique species that come in a rainbow of types, body shapes, and sizes.
