Quordle today




(Graphic debt: Getty Images)

It is actually opportunity for your day-to-day dosage of Quordle tips – today along with incorporated Daily Pattern responses! 

Yes, that corrects: the producers of Quordle possess a brand new activity, which observes you comprehensive 4 Wordle problems back to back. The spin is actually that the characters you have actually presently made use of on the initial activity are actually duplicated on the 2nd and so forth. 

It is actually excellent enjoyable, however likewise challenging – thus if you presently discover your own self hunting for Wordle tips, you’ll most likely require some for Quordle as well as the Daily Pattern as well. 

I am actually a Quordle as well as Wordle fanatic that’s been playing since December 2021, so I can definitely help you solve Quordle today and improve your game for tomorrow. Read on for my Quordle hints to game #463 and the answers to the Daily Sequence. 

SPOILER WARNING: Information about Quordle today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers. 

Your Quordle expert

Marc McLaren

Marc is TechRadar’s UK Editor in Chief and has been playing Wordle and Quordle for more than a year. He is actually authored dozens of articles on the game for TechRadar and its sister site Tom’s Guide, including a detailed analysis of the most common letters in every position. His Wordle streak recently reached the 450 mark and he’ll be inconsolable if he loses it. Yes, he takes it all too seriously. 

Quordle today (game #463) – hint #1 – Vowels

How many different vowels are in Quordle today?

The number of different vowels in Quordle today is 4*.

* Note that by vowel we mean the five standard vowels (A, E, I, O, U), not Y (which is sometimes counted as a vowel too). 

Quordle today (game #463) – hint #2 – total vowels

What is the total number of vowels in Quordle today?

The total number of vowels across today’s Quordle answers is 6.

Quordle today (game #463) – hint #3 – repeated letters

Do any of today’s Quordle answers contain repeated letters?

The number of Quordle answers containing a repeated letter today is 2.

Quordle today (game #463) – hint #4 – total letters

How many different letters are used in Quordle today?

The total number of different letters used in Quordle today is 12.

Quordle today (game #463) – hint #5 – uncommon letters

Do the letters Q, Z, X or J appear in Quordle today?

• No. None of Q, Z, X or J appear among today’s Quordle answers.

Quordle today (game #463) – hint #6 – starting letters (1)

Do any of today’s Quordle puzzles start with the same letter?

The number oftoday’s Quordle answers starting with the same letter is 0.

If you just want to know the answers at this stage, simply scroll down. If you’re not ready yet then here’s one more clue to make things a lot easier:

Quordle today (game #463) – hint #7 – starting letters (2)

What letters do today’s Quordle answers start with?

• C

• M

• S

• T

Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO SEE THEM.

Quordle today (game #463) – the answers

Quordle 463 answers on a yellow background

(Image credit: Merriam-Webster)

The answers to today’s Quordle, game #463, are…

  • CROSS
  • MOULT
  • STAIN
  • TATTY

A definite theme is developing in my daily Quordle exertions. I’m solving the standard game each day with a couple of guesses remaining, my strategy now honed after around a year of playing it. But the new Quordle Daily Sequence is proving a far tougher prospect, and today I needed to solve the final three puzzles in my final three guesses or lose my fledgling streak.   

The standard version could have been actually quite tricky today: though all four words are pretty common, there’s a repeated S in CROSS and a triple T in TATTY; you don’t get triple letters often in Quordle or Wordle. Fortunately, my guessing game was right on point today, and I solved it with two moves left.

The Daily Sequence, in contrast, foxed me right from the start. SNIPE took me four guesses and JERKY another four. That meant I had to solve CLONE and BUGLE in just one guess each, something I managed mainly because by that point I’d used all but three of the 26 letters in the alphabet (Q, Z and X)!   

How did you do today? Send me an email and let me know.


Daily Sequence today (game #463) – the answers

Quordle Daily Sequence 463 answers on a yellow background

(Image credit: Merriam-Webster)

The answers to today’s Quordle Daily Sequence, game #463, are…

  • SNIPE
  • JERKY
  • CLONE
  • BUGLE

Quordle answers: The past 20

  • Quordle #462, Monday 1 May: ETHIC, ALIKE, BIRTH, SLAIN
  • Quordle #461, Sunday 30 April: STOUT, GROUT, RALPH, RIGOR
  • Quordle #460, Saturday 29 April: SCOUR, BLUSH, WHINE, ELIDE
  • Quordle #459, Friday 28 April: TRITE, SLEEK, ALTAR, VOTER
  • Quordle #458, Thursday 27 April: QUASI, PLUSH, CHUTE, SOAPY
  • Quordle #457, Wednesday 26 April: PARKA, SPINY, BUSHY, CHAIR
  • Quordle #456, Tuesday 25 April: CREST, SHRUB, CREDO, BELOW
  • Quordle #455, Monday 24 April: DEUCE, BEAST, NOISY, YOUNG
  • Quordle #454, Sunday 23 April: FALSE, LUSTY, EMPTY, FLESH
  • Quordle #453, Saturday 22 April: LIMIT, IRONY, TERRA, ARBOR
  • Quordle #452, Friday 21 April: WARTY, SEVER, KNAVE, PUBIC
  • Quordle #451, Thursday 20 April: JELLY, PRONG, GLOBE, BLOOM
  • Quordle #450, Wednesday 19 April: PURGE, OPINE, LILAC, CHEAP
  • Quordle #449, Tuesday 18 April: MOLAR, PROBE, DRIER, BORNE
  • Quordle #448, Monday 17 April: ASSAY, SLANT, NADIR, DENIM
  • Quordle #447, Sunday 16 April: SLATE, BENCH, QUASH, FOGGY
  • Quordle #446, Saturday 15 April: HAZEL, BERET, FALSE, COVEN
  • Quordle #445, Friday 14 April: BROWN, PLAZA, DRUNK, DODGE
  • Quordle #444, Thursday 13 April: DELVE, PIXEL, MINOR, CLOAK
  • Quordle #443, Wednesday 12 April: INCUR, DRUNK, COVEN, THERE

Quordle FAQs: Everything you need to know

What is Quordle?

Where Wordle challenges you to guess a new five-letter word each day, Quordle presents you with four puzzles to solve. And rather than complete them in turn, you do so simultaneously. You get nine guesses, rather than the six for Wordle, but the rules are otherwise very similar. 

It’s played online via the Quordle website (opens in new tab) and you can also get to it via the Merriam-Webster site (opens in new tab), after the dictionary purchased Quordle last year. 

As with Wordle, the answers are the same for every player each day, meaning that you’re competing against the rest of the world. And also as with Wordle, the puzzle resets at midnight so you have a fresh challenge each day.

The website also includes a practice mode – which I definitely recommend using before attempting the game proper! – and there are daily stats including a streak count. You also get Quordle Achievements – specific badges for winning a game in a certain number of turns, participating in lots of times, or guessing particularly hard words.

Oh, and it’s difficult. Really difficult.

What are the Quordle rules?

The rules of Quordle are almost identical to those of Wordle.

1. Letters that are in the answer and in the right place turn green.

2. Letters that are in the answer but in the wrong place turn yellow. 

3. Letters that are not in the answer turn gray…

4. …BUT the word you guess appears in all quadrants of the puzzle at the same time, thus an A could turn green in one square, yellow in another and gray in the final two. 

5. Answers are never plural.

6. Letters may appear more than once. So if your guess includes two of one letter, they may both turn yellow, both turn green, or one could be yellow and the other green.

7. Each guess must be a valid word in Quordle’s dictionary. You can’t guess ABCDE, for instance.

8. You do not have to include correct letters in subsequent guesses and there is no equivalent of Wordle’s Hard mode.

9. You have nine guesses to find the Quordle answers.

10. You must complete the daily Quordle before midnight in your timezone.

What is a good Quordle strategy?

Quordle needs to be approached in a different way to Wordle. With four puzzles to solve in nine guesses, you can’t blindly throw letters at it and expect to win – you’ll stand a far better chance if you think strategically.

That’s the case in Wordle too, of course, but it’s even more important in Quordle.

There are two key things to remember. 

1. Use several starting words

Firstly, you won’t want just a single starting word, but almost certainly two or three starting words. 

The first of these should probably be one of the best Wordle starting words, because the same things that make them work well will apply here too. But after that, you should select another word or possibly two that use up lots more of the most common consonants and that include any remaining vowels.

For instance, I currently use STARE > DOILY > PUNCH. Between them, these three words use 15 of the 26 letters in the alphabet including all five vowels, Y, and nine of the most common consonants (S, T, R, D, L, P, N, C and H). There are plenty of other options – you might want to get an M, B, F or G in there instead of the H, maybe – but something like that should do the trick.

If all goes well, that will give you a good lead on what one or sometimes two of the answers might be. If not, well good luck!

2. Narrow things down

Secondly, if you’re faced with a word where the answer might easily be one of several options – for instance -ATCH, where it could be MATCH, BATCH, LATCH, CATCH, WATCH, HATCH or PATCH – you’ll undoubtedly want to guess a word that would narrow down those options. 

In Wordle, you can instead try several of those in succession as well as hope one is right, assuming you have enough guesses left. It’s risky, but will sometimes work. Plus, it’s the only option in Hard mode. But in Quordle, this will almost certainly result in a failure – you simply don’t have enough guesses.

In the scenario above, CLAMP would be a great guess, as it could point the way to four of the seven words in one go.

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Marc is TechRadar’s UK Editor in Chief, the latest in a long line of senior editorial roles he’s held in a career that started the week that Google launched (nice of them to mark the occasion). Prior to joining TR, he was UK Editor in Chief on Tom’s Guide, where he oversaw all gaming, streaming, audio, TV, entertainment, how-to and cameras coverage. He’s also a former editor of the tech website Stuff and spent five years at the music magazine NME, where his duties mainly involved spoiling other people’s fun. He’s based in London, and has tested and written concerning phones, tablets, wearables, streaming boxes, smart home devices, Bluetooth speakers, headphones, games, TVs, cameras as well as pretty much every other type of gadget you can think of. An avid photographer, Marc likes nothing better than taking pictures of very small things (bugs, his daughters) or very big things (distant galaxies). He also enjoys live music, gaming, cycling, as well as beating Wordle (he authors the day-to-day Wordle ideas web page).

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