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Love Wordle? Here Are 10 Other Puzzle Games to Try Now

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Why This Matters

This article highlights a variety of engaging puzzle games beyond Wordle, emphasizing their importance in providing continuous mental stimulation and entertainment for players. These games demonstrate the evolving landscape of casual gaming, appealing to a broad audience and encouraging cognitive skills development in the tech industry and among consumers.

Key Takeaways

Josh Wardle launched the wildly popular word game Wordle more than five years ago in 2021 before the New York Times bought the game a year later in 2022. Since then, CNET's Gael Cooper has loads of tips and tricks to tackle each NY Times Wordle puzzle, as well as solutions to each puzzle every day.

Once you finish your Wordle, you'll have to wait until the next day for the next puzzle. Luckily, if you're still craving a good puzzle game, there are plenty to choose from. And some of these games let you play as many times as you want in a day.

Here are 10 other puzzle games you can play now for a fun challenge.

Connections

I know it's old but I'm not even going to try to figure this out. New York Times/CNET

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. There are also four color-coded difficulty levels for each game; yellow is the easiest, then green, then 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

James Martin/CNET

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 forward, 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.

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