What is Quordle?
Quordle is a four-grid version of the classic word game. Instead of one hidden word, there are four, and every guess you type is applied to all four grids at the same time. You get nine guesses to crack all four five-letter words.
Four hidden words. Nine guesses. Every word you type is checked against all four grids at once — can you solve them all?
Quordle keeps everything you know about Wordle and multiplies it by four. There are four secret five-letter words, shown as four grids, and a single shared keyboard. Every guess you make is played against all four words at the same time.
If Quordle is too much at once, ease back into single-grid Wordle Unlimited. For a different challenge, sort words into hidden sets in Connections or build a chain of words in Letter Boxed. Stuck on a five-letter word? Our Wordle Solver can help.
Quordle is a four-grid version of the classic word game. Instead of one hidden word, there are four, and every guess you type is applied to all four grids at the same time. You get nine guesses to crack all four five-letter words.
You have nine guesses in total. Since you are solving four words at once and a standard Wordle gives six tries for one word, nine shared guesses makes Quordle a real step up in difficulty.
Yes. Each word you enter is scored against all four answers simultaneously, and every grid colours your guess independently. A letter can be green in one grid, yellow in another and grey in a third — the on-screen keyboard shows all four states at a glance.
They work exactly like Wordle. Green means the letter is correct and in the right spot, yellow means it is in the word but in a different position, and grey means it is not in that word at all.
No. Like the rest of our games, Quordle is unlimited — finish a board and you can start a fresh set of four words straight away, as many times as you like.
Because you must reveal letters across four different words, strong, vowel-rich openers matter even more than in normal Wordle. Many players spend their first two or three guesses on letter-rich words to map all four grids before committing to answers.