Construct crossword puzzles in a flash

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The Crosshare constructor helps me build better puzzles faster. The interface is more intuitive than Crossfire's and the autofill feature works far more efficiently.
Will Pfadenhauer of Pandora's Blocks Weekly Meta Crossword

It's 100% free

Constructing puzzles on Crosshare is always free. You can publish as many puzzles as you'd like and share with them with as many solvers as you can find.

Fill grids like magic

The autofiller instantly fills in the rest of the grid as you enter your fill. Press the `Enter` key to shake things up and get a different autofill.

All shapes and sizes are welcome

Crosshare supports grids of any size. The interface is optimized to fit as large a grid (and as many clues) as possible on any devices you and your solvers are using.

Construct on the go

The Crosshare constructor works on desktops, tablets, and phones. Construct a mini puzzle while waiting for the bus, or work on a grid from your iPad on the couch.

An app-like experience

Crosshare's solving interface is mobile-first and makes solving your puzzle as smooth as butter on desktops, tablets, and phones. Almost 50% of solvers are using mobile devices - don't let a poor interface keep them from solving your puzzles. Crosshare also supports dark mode, grid highlighting and tooltips for referenced entries, and more best-in-class features.

Crosswords are social

Crosshare puzzles are made to share. Our search engine optimization and social tags will get as many people solving your puzzle as possible. Social media posts automatically include grid preview images, puzzle titles, and teaser clues.

Advanced analytics

As a constructor, you get access to advanced analytics about your puzzle. Find out how many people solve your puzzle, how long it takes them, and view heatmaps of exactly which cells they get stuck on.

An instant crossword blog

After constructing your first puzzle you can reserve your own URL and instantly create a crossword blog. You get a centralized page to share and talk about all of your puzzles. Commenting is enabled from the start and Crosshare is the only place where comments feature solve times, clue tooltips, and other crossword specific features.

First class meta puzzle support

Crosshare is the only puzzle host that has built in support for meta/contest crosswords including submission tracking, a leaderboard, and detailed statistics.

Dead simple embedding

Any of your puzzles can be embedded on another site with just a few clicks.

Barred grids

Barred crosswords (and combinations of bars and blocks) have first class support in the constructor and the solving interface.

Schrödinger puzzles and bidirectional rebuses

Crosshare also natively supports puzzles with an arbitrary number of valid solutions. The alternate solutions are shown to the solver after the grid is complete to make sure they have the aha moment.

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New to making crosswords?

Don’t be intimidated! Constructing great crosswords takes a lot of practice, but it’s easy to get started. When you first launch the constructor, Crosshare defaults you to a 5x5 mini grid (to create a different sized puzzle click on “More” in the top bar and then click “New Puzzle”). Mini puzzles are a great way to get started because you don’t need to worry so much about the grid layout - you just need to focus on getting fill you like and coming up with fun clues.

Filling the grid

After launching the constructor, click anywhere in the grid and start typing your first fill entry. As you type you’ll notice the Crosshare autofiller magically fills in the rest of the grid. You shouldn’t rely exclusively on the autofiller - the wordlist(s) beside the grid give you other options for the currently selected entry. You can also use any other word you like even if it’s not in the list - it’s all COVFEFE.

Using black squares

You can create a black square by typing the ‘.’ key on your keyboard or hitting the all black key on the keyboard if you’re on a mobile device. Select the square and hit ‘.’ or type any letter to toggle it back. Placing black squares is an art form for larger grids. This nytimes article does a pretty good job of introducing some of the ideas behind where they should go.

Finalizing the grid

It can take a lot of tweaking to get a grid that you’re happy with. Maybe you really want to work a specific word in but every time you try it makes for poor (or no!) choices elsewhere. The best thing to do is to try to stay flexible and keep playing with different options until it all clicks. The Crosshare autofiller can help this along by showing you different candidate fills - every time you press the ‘Enter’ key (or click ‘Rerun Autofill’ in the top bar) you’ll get a slightly different fill.

Adding clues

Once your grid is filled in click the “Clues” button in the top bar to go to the clue view. You’ll see every word in your grid with an input next to it for your clue. Try to come up with your own interesting clue for each word. It’s important to have some easier clues (especially on mini puzzles!) so that solvers have a place to start. This nytimes article talks about cluing and might be a good read for a beginner. It can also help to look up words in a clue database like crosswordtracker to see how other constructors have clued them. The only way to get better at cluing, though, is to force yourself to come up with some of your own!

Publishing

After all of your clues are filled in, come up with a title for your puzzle. This gets entered at the top of the clue view. Now click “Back to Grid”, give it one more look, and hit “Publish”. After publishing, Crosshare will redirect you to your puzzle’s new home. You might want to add a comment (solvers will see it they finish solving). When you’re ready, copy the link and share it with as many solvers as you can find! As the author, you’ll be able to view solve stats for your puzzle - click “More” and then “Stats” from the puzzle page.

That’s all there is to it! If you’re looking for more info about constructing your first puzzle, this article has a lot of good information.

FAQ

What if I have an existing puzzle I’d like to upload?

Crosshare supports .puz uploading here.

Does Crosshare support rebuses?

Yup, both the constructor and the solver support entering rebuses - hit ‘Escape’ (or ‘Rebus’ on your mobile device keyboard) to enter a rebus. The autofiller supports filling around them, too 😉.

What about circled / shaded squares?

Yup, and yup!

How do clue cross-references work?

When you use something like 7-Across or 5D in a clue it will automatically get linked to the referenced clue. This sets up clue highlighting and tooltips for solvers. You can also prefix clues with a ‘*’ and use phrases like “the starred clues” in another clue to set up references to them.

What if my clue uses 3D but it's not supposed to be a cross-reference?

You can prefix a clue with ‘!@’ to tell Crosshare to skip it when scanning for clue references. Solvers won't see the !@, obviously.

Where does the wordlist come from?

Crosshare uses a custom wordlist that’s mostly based off spread the word(list), with additions from Peter Broda’s list, Erica’s expanded name list, and some additional words that have frequently appeared in NYT puzzles.

Can I use my own wordlist?

Custom wordlists / wordlist editing will be released soon.

Can I create rectangular grids?

Yup, you can use any dimensions you want. Better yet, both the constructor and solver interfaces optimize around whatever size grid you use - to maximize usability on smaller screens.

Does the constructor work on (iPad / iPhone / Android / Windows / OS X / Linux)?

The Crosshare constructor should work on any modern browser, and is optimized for mobile devices. For the first time you can have a first class constructing experience on your iPad. If you have any issues on any device, please get in touch and let me know!

Can I work on more than one puzzle at a time?

Saving and loading multiple puzzles is coming soon. In the meantime you can use the export/import .puz features to save a local copy of a puzzle in progress and then import it again later.

Will Crosshare ever have an offline mode?

I know I’m sounding like a broken record, but this is coming soon too!

Can I export my puzzle as a PDF or .puz file?

You can export a .puz file directly from the constructor. After publishing a puzzle both PDF and .puz become available for solvers. To get a nicely formatted PDF for printing: click “More” and then “Print puzzle”. To download a .puz click “More” and then “Download .puz”

What types of grid symmetry are supported?

ALL OF THEM.

What if I have a different question?

Please get in touch via email or discord.

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