Today’s Wordle Answer for Saturday, June 29

Published:

Let’s set up your first Wordle win this weekend. Below are some hints to assist with any guesses, as well as a clue for the June 29 puzzle (1106) that will also give you a little hint. Missed rows? No problem. The answer to today’s Wordle is ready to save your game.

The key to winning turned out to be one of today’s yellow letters. If it couldn’t go Over there that meant the only available spot was… and that meant… I got it. I don’t think I could have asked for a more enjoyable Saturday Wordle.

- Advertisement -

Today’s Wordle prompt

(Photo: Josh Wardle)

Wordle today: Hint for Saturday, June 29

Plains, mountains, and Grévy are the three types of answers today. These striped equines live wild in East and Southern Africa and like to graze on grasses and other vegetation.

Is there a double letter in Wordle today?

No, there are no double letters in today’s puzzle.

Wordle Help: 3 Tips to Beat Wordle Every Day

If there is anything better than playing Wordle, it is playing Wordle well. That’s why I’m going to share some quick tips to assist you set yourself on the path to success:

  • A good opener contains a balanced mix of unique vowels and consonants.
  • Tactical retry allows you to quickly narrow down the pool of letters.
  • The solution may contain repeated letters.

There is no time pressure beyond making sure you finish by midnight. So there is no reason not to treat the game like a regular newspaper crossword and come back to it later if you have no idea.

Today’s Wordle Answer

(Photo source: Future)

What is today’s Wordle answer?

Here for you. The answer to Wordle from June 29 (1106) is RIBS.

Previous answers

Last 10 Wordle Answers

The more previous Wordle answers you can cram into your memory banks, the better your chances of guessing today’s Wordle answer without accidentally choosing a solution that’s already been used. Previous Wordle answers can also give you some great ideas for fun word starters to keep your daily puzzle solving fresh.

Here are some of the latest Wordle solutions:

  • June 28: HERD
  • June 27: ORDER
  • June 26: KNEAD
  • June 25: TASTE
  • 24th of June: DOLLY
  • June 23: BUGLE
  • 22th June: EDICT
  • 21st June: PAINT
  • 20th of June: SMELL
  • June 19: CURT

Learn more about Wordle

(Image credit: Nurphoto via Getty)

Every day, Wordle presents you with six rows of five boxes and it’s up to you to decide what secret five-letter word is hidden inside them.

You will want start with a sturdy word like ALERT – something with lots of vowels, common consonants, and no repeated letters. Press Enter and the fields will show you which letters are correct and which are incorrect. If the box turns ⬛️, it means that this letter is not in the secret word at all. 🟨 means the letter is in the word but not in that position. 🟩 means you have the right letter in the right place.

You’ll want your second attempt to be a follow-up to the first, using another “good” word to cover any common letters you missed last time, while also trying to avoid letters you now know aren’t present in today’s answer.

Then it’s just a matter of using what you’ve learned to narrow down your guess to the right word. You have six tries in total, and you can only employ real words (so don’t fill in the EEEEE boxes to see if there’s an E there). Don’t forget that letters can be repeated too (like BOOKS).

If you need further advice, you can check out ours Wordle tipsand if you want to find out which words have already been used, you can scroll to the appropriate section above.

Wordle was originally invented by a software engineer Josh Wardle, as a surprise for your partner who loves word games. From there it spread to his family and was eventually released to the public. Since then, the word puzzle game has inspired many people games like Wordlefocusing the everyday gadget around music, math or geography. It didn’t take long for Wordle to become so popular that sold to the New York Times for a seven-figure sum. Surely it’s only a matter of time before we all communicate only in three-colored boxes.

Related articles