Joined Words

Introduction About Joined Wordle

Joined Wordle is a challenging puzzle version of the wordle game for more or less experienced players. It is a joined-word world that requires the skills of connection and inference.

By connecting ideas, players must find common points between two words that seem not to relate. It forces us to create a meaningful word from two separate ones.

In addition to that, it also has to mention clever hints that Joined Wordle provides to players. There are three various clues: the first word, the second word, and the keyword; players need to rely on each suggestion to give the exact guess.

How to Play

To start playing Joined Wordle, you must look at the clues:

  1. The first line: It suggests the meaning or information of the first word.
  2. The second line: The information directs you to find the rest of the compound.
  3. The third line: This is a final clue to combine all together. It even highlights two individual words so that you can base them and find the common keyword.

For example, the first word that you must fill in has the clue: A piece of wood. Well, the must-guess word is "log." The next is a term in many sports whose answer will be "out." So, the compound word to guess is "logout." It hints that you should do this when you finish your internet banking.

You can ignore the final suggestion because the game will show it if you guess exactly two words in the joined word.

Joined Wordle also gives you clues in case you cannot fill in the right word after three attempts (the first word) and six attempts (the second word). It will suggest the initial letter in the words. And you have all 10 tries. This means that you need to enter the correct answers before the tenth guess.

After all, Joined Wordle is an entertaining game that tests players' vocabulary and thinking. Based on the clues, you must make accurate judgments. Plus, a new word is available every day. Be one step ahead of other players to get to the leaderboard!

Other games

there are many other games developed under Wordle NYT, let's try them out