These are the most-used letters in Wordle. What to do with them is up to you.

The strategy-based word game Wordle hit the internet like a bomb cyclone storm this winter. Nobody was safe. Either you’ve since become hooked enough to find ways to slake your word-thirst in between games, or you’re part of the inevitable backlash. Anyone in that first camp, though, will probably appreciate the Redditor who recently hacked their way into finding the 10 most-used letters in the game. Wordle is, for the somehow-still-uninitiated, a solo Hangman where the word is always five letters long and the player only gets six guesses to reveal it. Along the way, the game helpfully fills in with green the right letters in the right place, and fills in with yellow the right letters in the wrong place, so players can make better informed guesses as they go along. Those first couple guesses are crucial for rooting out the answer in the fewest possible terms, which is of course the goal for competitive players or those trying to impress on Twitter. The more green and yellow letters a player uncovers right away, the less sweaty the deductive reasoning that follows. Knowing the most common letters in the answer won’t quite enable anyone to cheat at Wordle, and shame on those who would want to, but it just may lead to seeing more color in the first and second turns. So, how did someone find those letters? “One of my coworkers today told me that all of the words that Wordle will ever use are apparently all served to your device whenever you visit the webpage,” writes Redditor ghillieman18. “The game only shows you the word for the current day however. So, I decided to loop through all 2000+ words and plot the most frequently used letters. I used Python (specifically numpy and matplotlib + seaborn) to make the plot in a jupyter notebook which you can find in the GitHub repo linked [here].” As for the letters themselves, many of them will not be very surprising. Of course, four of the five vowels are in the top 10, with the fifth at number 11. Seeing them laid out in the order of usage, however, should both confirm some suspicions and open some new doors.

A strategy-minded player might look at the above and start using five-letter words from the top 10—such as STARE, IRONS, CLONE, TRAIN, and RACES—for future first turns, and follow up with another word made up of the top 10’s remaining letters. Maybe not, though! Each Wordler must chart their own course toward victory or defeat. Consider this a nudge in the right direction.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90717072/these-are-the-most-used-letters-in-wordle-what-to-do-with-them-is-up-to-you?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creato 3y | 28 gen 2022, 18:21:26


Accedi per aggiungere un commento

Altri post in questo gruppo

Trump extends TikTok sale deadline again—this time by 75 days

President Donald Trump on Friday said is signing an executive order to

4 apr 2025, 21:20:02 | Fast company - tech
Nintendo delays Switch 2 preorders because of Trump’s tariffs

Nintendo is pushing back preorders for its upcoming Nintendo Switch 2 while it figures out the implications of President Donald Trump’s

4 apr 2025, 18:50:05 | Fast company - tech
$2,300 for an iPhone? Trump’s tariffs could make that a reality

Your favorite iPhone could soon become much pricier, thanks to tariffs.

4 apr 2025, 16:30:07 | Fast company - tech
My dog recognizes the sounds a Waymo car makes

Most of us know the general (albeit simplified) story: Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov used a stimulus—like a metronome—around the dogs he was studying, and soon, the hounds would start to saliva

4 apr 2025, 16:30:07 | Fast company - tech
How I wrote the notes app of my dreams (no coding required)

For years, I’ve had a secret ambition tucked away somewhere near the back of my brain. It was to write a simple note-taking app—one that wouldn’t be overwhelmed with features and that would reflec

4 apr 2025, 14:20:04 | Fast company - tech
The AI tools we love right now—and what’s next

AI tools are everywhere, changing the way we work, communicate, and even create. But which tools are actually useful? And how can users integrate

4 apr 2025, 14:20:04 | Fast company - tech
How this former Disney Imagineer is shaping the next generation of defense technology

The way Bran Ferren sees it, the future of warfare depends as much on creativity as it does on raw firepower.

The former head of research and development at Walt Disney Imagineering—the

4 apr 2025, 11:50:04 | Fast company - tech