Wordle Today: Answers and Tips for Thursday, June 23
The week is almost over, let’s celebrate with June 23 (369) Wordle’s answer. Even though I get my Wordle every day, it’s always exciting when the letters are turned over.A pop of life-saving green, a yellow that sometimes raises more puzzles than answers, and seemingly sure bets are actually a dull grey Do not. I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of it.
If you had a good time today, maybe you want to check out our Wordle Archive (opens in new tab) instead? I’m sure I can help, no matter why you’re here today. I can give you a clue and answer, and if you’re not sure how to play Wordle, I can get you up and running quickly and easily.
Wordle June 23: A Helpful Tip
No matter how you use the word, it’s always about being on the edge of something. Sometimes this can be a literal cliff face, but usually it’s more metaphorical — and almost always negative. There is only one vowel today.
Wordle Today: 369 Answers
Let us turn those yellow boxes into a row of successful greens for you. Jun 23 (369) Wordle’s answer is edge.
How Wordle Works
In Wordle, you can use five empty boxes, and you need to find the five-letter secret word that fits into those boxes. You only have six guesses to determine it.
Start with the best Wordle starters (opens in new tab), 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.
As you’ll learn from our top Wordle tips (opens in new tab), on the next line, repeat the process for a second 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).
Wordle was originally conceived by software engineer Josh Wardle to surprise wordplay-loving buddies (opens in new tab). From there it spread to his family and was finally released to the public.Word puzzles have inspired many games like Wordle since then (opens in new tab), refocusing on the everyday gimmicks of music, math or geography. It didn’t take long for Wordle to become so popular it sold to The New York Times for seven figures (opens in new tab). Of course, it’s only a matter of time before we all communicate only in three-color boxes.