Today’s Wordle Answer #287: Saturday, April 2
Are you looking for help with the April 2 (287) Wordle answer? Sometimes these five-letter words don’t pop into your head when you need them most, even if you’re sure you’ve read dozens of them before breakfast. I allow you to give yourself a break (there is one) and allow (and another) our helpful tips to guide you.
or you would like to browse our Wordle Archive instead? Whatever the reason for your visit, I’m here with helpful tips and full answers to today’s puzzles. If you’re not sure what Wordle’s business is all about, I can also help.
Wordle April 2: A Helpful Tip
Today’s word is a recurring theme online — especially in relation to television — but often doesn’t come up in casual conversation. You need two different vowels to solve this problem.
Wordle 287 answers today
You always know it when you see it, don’t you? If you catch yourself peeking, don’t kick yourself hard — sometimes it’s too late before you think of the right word. April 2 (287) Wordle’s answer is simile.
How Wordle Works
In Wordle, you can use five empty boxes, and you need to use no more than six guesses to determine which secret five-letter word fits into these boxes.
Start with a word like “RAISE” – which is good because it contains three common vowels and no repeating letters. Press Enter and the boxes will show you your correct or incorrect letter.
If a box becomes ⬛️, that letter is not in the secret language at all. 🟨 means the letter is in the word, but not in that position. 🟩 means you’ve identified the letter, it’s in the word and it’s in the right place.
On the next line, repeat the process for the next guess using what you learned from the previous guess. You have six tries and can only use real words (so don’t fill the box with EEEEE to see if there is an E).
Originally, Wordle was conceived by software engineers Josh Wardle, surprise your friends who like word games. From there it spread to his family and was finally released to the public. It didn’t take long for it to be a hit, selling to The New York Times for a seven-figure sum. Of course, it’s only a matter of time before we all communicate only in three-color boxes.