Yeardle provides players with three historical events and tasks them with deciphering the exact year in which they occurred. Players have eight chances to come up with the right answer, and, as is the case with Wordle, their incorrect responses are repurposed as color-coded hints. Guesses more than 200 years off appear as gray, while guesses between 40 and 200 years off appear as brown. More accurate guesses show up as red, orange, and yellow, with green used to indicate a correct answer.

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Everything from ancient Mesopotamia to the twentieth century seems to be fair game, though fans will need to be veritable experts on world history in order to decipher some of the hints. For instance, the March 24 puzzle required players to be savvy with Asuka Period Japan, English architecture, and the Siege of Constantinople. It’s perhaps not quite as difficult as the befuddling Octordle which asks players to come up with eight words at once, but it certainly seems to be geared toward those with more than a casual understanding of the subject.

Gaming and history, while not necessarily joined at the hip, do intersect every now and again. While popular series such as Wolfenstein and Fallout are known for re-writing the past, franchises such as Assassin’s Creed and Call of Duty—though by no means bound to a pact of authenticity—often draw from real events to add a certain amount of verisimilitude. Assassin’s Creed may be known for its many marked historical changes in particular, but it likely inspired in more than a few players an interest in history they hadn’t previously discovered.

Unfortunately, recent data suggests that interest in Wordle has declined in the months since the New York Times acquisition, but it has left an indelible mark on gaming in 2022. Once-a-day games which challenge a player’s lingual skills, understanding of history, brand recognition, and much more remain incredibly trendy at the moment.

Wordle is available now for internet-accessible devices.

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