Inspired by @JWords and their Double Trouble series. Each cell in this puzzle (including the PlusWords) contains exactly two letters, use the rebus function to enter them. The bottom and rightmost rows are Wordle answers. After completing the crossword, use the shaded letters to solve it. To solve the bottom row, read the clues horizontally. To solve the rightmost row, read the clues vertically. Note that the 2 Pluswords are independent of each other, they only need to satisfy the Wordle grids read in their respective directions. For clarification, white = those 2 letters in that order are not in a cell of the PlusWords, yellow = the 2 letters in that order do appear in a cell of the PlusWords but not in the right place, green = the 2 letters in that order are correctly placed in a cell of the PlusWords.
Been too busy to set new puzzles, in the meantime, here is a puzzle I set 3 months ago.
Thanks for solving my puzzles! Any feedback is appreciated.
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Man, the pluswords were brutally hard here. I did get to INLIER but didn't think it was a word and didn't guess it. Probably wouldn't have ever gotten to LIGNIN, even though as a woodworker, I am aware of LIGNUM VITAE, whose name is obviously derived from LIGNIN. All abord the strugglebus!
I was wondering how Wordle answers could possibly have 6 letters. I've always done the New York Times Wordle and there are always only 5 letters. So I searched "6 letter wordle" and by golly, there are a few out there. Learned something new!
Very impressive construction! Must be a nightmare to constrain both pluswords to a single possibility. Unfortunately my lexicon wasn’t quite up to the challenge! Excellent work on getting a good double 3x3 fill. Btw, feel free to use the #double-trouble tag (if you want to!)
JR 2:45 · 2024-06-07T04:44:35.888Z
I don’t think I understand the rules, why was INLINE not a valid answer for the right wordle?