Wordle Bulletin # 587 (January 27, 2023)


Strategy
My strategy is built to ensure I solve 95% of the puzzles in 4 guesses or less. It is not built to always shoot for the lowest score possible. The score depends a lot on the seed word. Wordle is a game of luck and skill.  My goal is to score an average solve rate of 4 guesses.  My aspirational goal is 3.5 average and <5% 5/6 guesses.


My current performance vs. the goals:
I started using the current set of seed and 2nd words on 12/9/2022. My performance since then is summarized below.  Due to relatively small sample size, it is too soon to draw any statistically valid conclusions.

No. of puzzles solved: 50
Average: 3.42 (aspirational target 3.5 or less)
😊
% Puzzles solved in 4 guesses or less: 96% (Goal >/= 95%)
😊
__________________________________________________________________________________________________

Statistical Facts:
Typical Wordle Word Construct
: 2 Vowels and one compound consonant (example KN or TCH)/paired consonant (example PP); seen with >50% frequency.
10 Most frequent consonants (in declining order): R, T, L, S, N, C, H, P, D, and G/M
6 Vowels (in declining order): E, A, O, I, U, Y
10 Most frequent letters (in declining order): E, A, R, O, T, L, I, S, N, and C
Frequency of the 5 vowels in the five positions: 15%, 49%, 54%, 35% and 24% respectively.
Position of the letter “Y”:  About 80% of all the “Ys” in Wordle are found in the 5th position.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________

Today’s Wordle:
Target Word
: WORRY
# Of Guesses 4.3 WordleBot average per Marc McLaren*; 3 for WordleGuru. 😊😊

Seed Word: ALERT (Top 3 consonants and top 2 vowels) – No change; this is my go-to Seed word.
What we learned from the Seed Word-
–  Letter(s) with their position (s): R
–  Letter(s) without their position (s):
NONE

Typical or atypical target word? —Typical
— # of Vowels: (Typical 2); 2 in WORRY (Treating Y as a vowel)
— # of Compound/paired consonants: (Typical 1); 1 paired consonant (RR) in WORRY

2nd word: SONIC; since no vowel was revealed by the seed word and a typical Wordle word consists of 2 vowels, I decided to use my “go-to” second word – SONIC. At this point I found 6 possible answers – DOBRO, BOURG, GOURD, ZORRO, WORRY, and DOWRY.  The first 2 are not commonly used.  So, I had to deal with only 4 words.  It was time to deploy the EnotE© strategy.

3rd word: WORRY; I prefer to use one of the possible words as an elimination word, whenever possible, since it gives an opportunity to solve the puzzle right here.  Today I had the option of 2 – WORRY and DOWRY.  I looked at the frequency data and it preferred WORRY over DOWRY.  Luckily it worked.

# Of Possible Solutions after the seed word: Too many
# Of Possible Solutions after the 2nd word: 6
# Of Possible Solutions after the 3rd word:  N/M (the third word was the answer).

__________________________________________________________________________________________________

EnotE© (Eliminate-not-Enumerate) Strategy deployment: Deployed at the 3rd word stage.  It worked as designed.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________

Final thoughts: Wordle is a game of luck and skill.   Sometimes luck favors the game and sometimes it favors the player.  Luck was in my corner today.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
My other work you may find interesting
I write Rhyming Prose (Prose that rhymes). My work in this area can be found on my website, Rhyming Prose — … when a poem won’t do it!

I have also started writing free-verse poems, haikus and songs. My work in this area can be found on my website, Budding Poets Corner – Poet Laureates of Tomorrow
__________________________________________________________________________________________________

© 2023 Ashok Gupta All rights reserved.
EnotE © (
Eliminate not Enumerate) is copyrighted by Ashok Gupta
Wordle and WordleBot are trademarks owned by the New York Times.

*The WordleBot score I refer to comes from Tom’s Guide by Marc McLaren.  Marc writes his post at around 7 AM U.K. time.
https:  //www.tomsguide.com/news/what-is-todays-wordle-answer#section-previous-wordle-answers
__________________________________________________________________________________________________


error: Content is protected !!