Technologies
Like Word Games Like Wordle? Try These 10 Others
There are plenty of word and puzzle games out there to try.

Wordle is a popular word game that asks players to figure out a five-letter word in six or fewer guesses (we have a two-step strategy to help you solve the puzzle every time). After each guess, the game shows gray blocks for the wrong letters, yellow blocks for the right letters in the wrong spot and green blocks for the right letters in the correct spot. CNET’s Gael Cooper has loads of tips and tricks to tackle each Wordle puzzle, but if you’ve completed today’s game — or just love puzzle games — these alternatives are well worth your time.
You’ve likely already learned some tips, tricks and lessons from the popular word game, so why not apply your newly honed problem-solving skills to other puzzles, too? After all, Wordle isn’t the only game in town. Here are 10 other puzzle games like Wordle you’ll probably enjoy.
Connections
Another New York Times-owned puzzle, Connections is a tricky word game. «Players must select four groups of four words without making more than four mistakes,» the New York Times wrote on X, formerly Twitter. There are also four color-coded difficulty levels for each game; yellow is the easiest, then green, the blue and finally purple. The game is also similar to the BBC quiz show Only Connect, and the show’s host took to X to point out the connection. See what I did there?
You can play Connections on any web browser, but you need a New York Times subscription (which starts at $1 a week) to play.
Strands
Strands is another New York Times-owned puzzle, but this game resembles a word search more so than Wordle and Connections. This game presents a theme every day to help you find words in a grid. In Strands words can appear forwards, backward, top-to-bottom or any number of ways in a traditional word search, and words can also form in the shape of an «L» or have a zigzag in them. When you find a word, tap the first letter and drag your finger to the other letters. Every letter in the puzzle is used, so if you still have letters that aren’t connected to words, you aren’t finished yet.
You can play Strands on any web browser, but you need a New York Times subscription (again, $1 a week) to play.
Quartiles
Quartiles is a new word game Apple News Plus subscribers can access on their iPhone or iPad that’s running iOS 17.5 or later. In this word game, you’re given 20 tiles with letters on them, and you’re trying to put them together to form different words. The longest words are four-tiles long, and these are called Quartiles. The game can be tough, but finding just one of the Quartiles is as satisfying as remembering something that was just on the tip of your tongue.
You can play Quartiles on an iPhone or iPad, but you need an Apple News subscription (which starts at $13 a month) to play.
Multiple Wordle spinoffs: Dordle, Quordle, Octordle and Sedecordle
Are you up for a challenge? If you love Wordle and want puzzle games that take more brain power, you’ll want to check out either Dordle, Quordle, Octordle or Sedecordle. Each of these word games resembles Wordle, but they add more rows, columns and words to solve. Each game requires you to simultaneously solve a different number of words at once: Dordle has you solving two words, Quordle four at once, Octordle eight at once, and Sedecordle a whopping 16. Good luck.
You can play Dordle, Quordle, Octordle or Sedecordle on any web browser.
Lewdle
«Lewdle is a game about rude words,» this game’s content advisory reads. «If you’re likely to be offended by the use of profanity, vulgarity or obscenity, it likely isn’t for you.» Translation: It’s Wordle, but with bad words. The words range from mild — like poopy — to words that would make a sailor blush. Thankfully, despite this game’s content warning, slurs are not included. Like Wordle, gray, yellow and green blocks are used in the same way and there’s only one puzzle per day. So go forth and let the bad words flow!
You can play Lewdle on any web browser. You can also download this game from Apple’s App Store or the Google Play store.
Antiwordle
Tired of seeing those grey, yellow and green blocks plastered all over your social media feed? Give Antiwordle a try. While Wordle wants you to guess a word in as few tries as possible, Antiwordle wants you to avoid the word by guessing as many times as possible. When you guess, letters will turn gray, yellow or red. Gray means the letter isn’t in the word and can’t be used again, yellow means the letter is in the word and must be included in each subsequent guess and red means the letter is in the exact position within the word and is locked in place. If you can use every letter on the keyboard without getting the word correct, you win. Honestly, I’ve found this version of Wordle to be much harder than the original.
You can play Antiwordle on any web browser.
Absurdle
Absurdle bills itself as the «adversarial version» of Wordle. While Wordle nudges you in the right direction with each guess, Absurdle is trying to avoid giving you the correct answer. According to the game’s website, «With each guess, Absurdle reveals as little information as possible, changing the secret word if need be.» Absurdle doesn’t pick a word at the beginning of the game for the player to guess. Instead, it uses the player’s guesses to narrow its list of words down in an effort to make the game go as long as possible. The final word might not even include a yellow letter from one of your earlier guesses either. You can guess as many times as you want, which is helpful, and the best score you can get is four. Have fun!
You can play Absurdle on any web browser.
For more word game fun, check out CNET’s Wordle tips, the best Wordle jokes and everything you need to know about the word game. You can also cehck out what to know about the other New York Times-owned games, Connections and Strands.
Technologies
The Best Co-op Games for Every Situation
Whether you’re hitting a couch co-op sesh or logging in with three other people, try picking up one of these co-op titles.
Cooperative play is intrinsic to gaming. Some of my earliest (and best) gaming memories are of hours-long gaming sessions with friends. There’s a reason why Hazelight Studios’ Split Fiction and It Takes Two were so well received — people love playing games with others. Bonus points if you don’t need two copies of the game, or can do so from the same couch.
Whether you’re looking for a couch co-op or logging in with others across the internet, these are the best games to jump into with your friends.
Best co-op games right now
- Split Fiction
- It Takes Two
- Helldivers 2
- Elden Ring Nightreign
- Baldur’s Gate 3
Best co-op games for two players
These games are best experienced with one other person, so grab a friend and get to work. A few in this section, like Split Fiction, It Takes Two and Cuphead, only require one copy of the game, which makes it even easier to play.
Best co-op games for four players
These games are better experienced with a crew at your back. Squad up with three friends and get ready to squash alien bugs, hunt monsters or battle waves of demons.
Best single-player games with co-op
These games are primarily single-player adventures, but they do support bringing along a friend or three. Whether you’re passing the controller back and forth or dropping in and out, try these games solo or with friends.
Best free co-op games
You don’t always have to shell out to play with friends. Here are a few free options.
Technologies
Prime Day Headphone Deals Still Available: Last Chance to Shop 40+ Discounts on Apple AirPods, Sony, Beats and More
Technologies
Worse Than a Recession? Trump’s Tariffs Risk ‘Self-Inflicted’ Stagflation
Stagflation isn’t just a thing of the past. High inflation and economic stagnation could bring it back.
President Donald Trump’s turbulent tariff agenda, combined with mass deportations and increased national debt, has created heightened volatility in financial markets. Though many economists say there’s low risk of a job-loss recession, others say we’re at a critical crossroads, as consumer sentiment sours and the labor market sputters.
Some analysts have even posited that the economy could be circling the drain toward stagflation, a rare and toxic scenario of slowing growth and high inflation. In the 1970s, stagflation — a combination of inflation and stagnation — was a major economic crisis characterized by double-digit inflation, steep interest rates and soaring unemployment.
In a June study by Apollo Global Management, chief economist Torsten Sløk warned of ongoing stagflationary risks. «Tariff hikes are typically stagflationary shocks — they simultaneously increase the probability of an economic slowdown while putting upward pressure on prices,» Sløk wrote. «The current tariff regime increases the chance of a US recession to 25% over the next 12 months.»
Stagflation is considered to be an even worse economic prognosis than a typical downturn, as the government lacks effective policy prescriptions to control it. «There may not be an easy path to monetary or fiscal stabilization,» said James Galbraith, economics professor at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin.
US households, already struggling to afford the high cost of living, are preparing for what’s next. Whether we’re headed for a recession or a period of stagflation, taking steps to proactively safeguard your finances becomes all the more critical.
Are we still at risk of a recession?
Rampant economic uncertainty often triggers recessionary conditions as companies and households start to reduce spending and investment. During a recession, unemployment goes up, and the prices of goods begin to decline. It’s generally harder to obtain financing, as banks tighten their requirements to minimize their risk of lending to borrowers who may default on loans.
The economy regularly experiences periods of booms and busts, with downturns occurring roughly every five to seven years. «We are due for a reset and a slowdown in the economy,» said Greg Sher, managing director at NFM Lending.
Certain macroeconomic hallmarks, like shrinking GDP and rising joblessness, are consistent across all recessions. But every US recession is also unique, with a different historical trigger. The Great Recession of 2007-09, which kicked off with the subprime mortgage crisis and the collapse of financial institutions, was the longest. The COVID-19 pandemic recession, resulting from lockdowns and the loss of 24 million jobs, was the shortest recession on record.
Working-class and middle-class households experience the day-to-day hardship of a recession well before the National Bureau of Economic Research makes the official call. Folks on the margins also experience a much slower recovery after a recession is declared to be over.
Relying on hard data like GDP and employment to determine recessions is faulty. Because those figures are backward-looking, they tell us where the economy was before, not necessarily where it’s heading. Many economists note that unemployment is worse than what the headline figures report.
Here are some of the key warning signs of a recession:
Declining gross domestic product (GDP) |
A sustained drop (typically two consecutive quarters of negative growth) in the country’s total output of goods and services signals the economy is shrinking. |
Rising unemployment |
When businesses cut costs, hiring slows down and layoffs increase for a sustained period. Households receive less income and spend less. |
Declining retail sales |
When people buy fewer goods in stores and online, it shows weakening demand, a key driver of the economy. |
Stock market slumps |
A significant and lasting drop in stock prices often reflects investor worry about the economy’s future. |
Inverted yield curve |
When short-term bond interest rates become higher than long-term rates, it can signal that investors expect a weaker economy ahead. |
Could we be facing stagflation?
Stagflation would mean having less purchasing power as prices go up and saving becomes more difficult. Jobs become harder to find, investments might take hits and interest rates could rise. Stagflation is typically measured by the «misery index,» the sum of the unemployment rate and the inflation rate, reflecting the level of economic distress felt by the average person.
For decades, experts didn’t believe stagflation was possible because it goes against basic principles of supply and demand. Usually, when more people are out of work, prices go down because demand for goods and services is lower.
But stagflation began to rear its head in the 1970s. Growing government debt, fueled by military spending on the Vietnam War, sent prices soaring. Soon after, the energy crisis hit. In 1973, OPEC’s oil embargo resulted in a massive supply shock, worsening inflation and depressing output.
Official unemployment peaked at 9% while inflation kept ratcheting higher and eventually surpassed 14% year over year. A second oil supply shock in 1979 prompted the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates to record highs, above 20%. While that approach worked to bring inflation down, it prompted a severe recession.
Most economists say the likelihood of entering a period of stagflation is still quite low, but others like Sløk warn that Trump’s trade policies could fuel the fire. At the same time, the dollar and the balance sheets of major financial institutions are in a much stronger position than in the 1970s.
What role do tariffs play?
Since February, new import taxes have been announced, delayed, raised and reduced in quick succession. If tariffs are eventually implemented as announced, the average rate on US imports will be the highest in a century, back to the levels last witnessed during the Great Depression.
Tariffs, which are import taxes on goods from another country paid by the importer, can have a similar effect to oil supply shocks, causing widespread disruptions and cost increases along supply chains. Companies either pass on those increases to domestic customers, triggering more inflation, or they cut back on investments and output, leading to layoffs and weakened growth.
«Big tariffs right now wouldn’t just make inflation worse — they could set off a chain reaction of economic trouble that central banks and governments aren’t ready to handle,» said Sher. According to Sher, there’s a misguided assumption that consumers will be willing to pay the higher cost of goods brought on by tariffs. «Consumers will be more likely to sit on their hands and stop spending, which will further stoke the recession flames,» said Sher.
There are signs that tariff-related uncertainty is causing cracks in the labor market. Even as unemployment remains relatively low, currently at 4.1% according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, hiring has slowed and those currently out of work are finding it nearly impossible to find gainful employment.
Is there a solution to stagflation?
There’s an established, if imperfect, playbook for diminishing the impact of a recession. The Fed, which is in charge of maintaining price stability and maximizing employment, usually lowers interest rates to stimulate the economy and buoy employment during a downturn.
When inflation is high, however, the Fed typically raises interest rates to combat price growth and slow down the economy by making credit and borrowing more expensive for consumers and businesses. The two approaches can’t be taken simultaneously.
«While prices are on the firm side and growth has cooled from a too-warm pace, unemployment remains closer to historic lows than not,» said Keith Gumbinger, vice president at housing market news site HSH.com. «We don’t have stagflation per se, at least as yet.»
Gumbinger said stagflation is more intractable than a recession. It has a trickier path because the go-to policies used to address one problem often worsen the other.
Right now the Fed is in a bind. Lower interest rates can boost a weaker economy, but they can also stoke inflation. If inflation remains sticky, the central bank is more likely to continue pausing rate cuts. The president’s habit of making knee-jerk policy announcements, only to delay or reverse them weeks later, makes it even harder for policymakers to course correct.
That kind of government paralysis could drag out economic hardship, especially for the most financially and socially vulnerable populations. While the average recession lasts about 11 months, the last bout of stagflation in the US lasted more than 10 years.
If a recession or stagflation materializes, it would be a «self-inflicted» injury resulting directly from US government policy, said Kathryn Anne Edwards, labor economist and independent policy consultant.
How can you prepare for an economic downturn?
Stagflation could feel like a recession with the added pain of high prices, making it difficult to prepare for and even harder to navigate. Still, experts say you’ll want to take some of the same steps you would ahead of an economic downturn.
Establish your emergency fund. Having an emergency fund is a good idea in any economy. During an economic downturn, high unemployment can make it harder to get back on solid financial footing if you have a sudden expense. If your savings cover at least three to six months of living expenses, you can more easily weather a financial storm without relying on credit cards or retirement savings.
Make a financial plan. Focus on paying down debt, particularly high interest credit card debt, so you don’t have to carry a balance when times are tougher. Postpone making any major purchases that overstretch your budget and that you’ll regret having to pay off in a year or two. Avoid panic buying things like laptops, phones or cars just to get ahead of expected price increases.
Review your investments. Given the level of economic uncertainty, expect the stock market to have more volatility. If you mostly have high-risk investments, consider diversifying with a variety of low-risk accounts, or combining stocks and bonds. Consult with an adviser about inflation-resistant assets and having a more balanced portfolio based on your individual risk tolerance, age and financial goals.
More on today’s economy
- How to Prepare for a Recession: 6 Money Rules Experts Recommend
- Tariff Pricing Tracker: We’re Watching 11 Products You Might Need to Buy
- I Bought Only Essentials for a Month. What I Learned Surprised Me
- Mortgage Rates at a Tipping Point. Why Trump’s Tariffs Have the Housing Market on Edge
- 3 Ways to Get Your Student Loans in Good Standing Before Paycheck Garnishment Starts
- DoorDash Wants Me to Finance My Fries. That’s a Hard No
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