Wordle
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Wordle
Summary
Wordle is a browser game[1]. Wordle ranks in the top 4% of browser_game entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (67,013 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Wordle's image is recorded as Wordle 196 example.svg[3].
- Wordle's instance of is recorded as browser game[4].
- Wordle's publisher is recorded as The New York Times[5].
- Wordle's owned by is recorded as The New York Times Company[6].
- Wordle's genre is recorded as word video game[7].
- Wordle's genre is recorded as letter game[8].
- word is named after Wordle[9].
- Josh Wardle is named after Wordle[10].
- Wordle's logo image is recorded as Wordle Lockup.svg[11].
- Wordle's logo image is recorded as Wordle NYT logo.svg[12].
- Wordle's developer is recorded as Josh Wardle[13].
- Wordle's copyright license is recorded as proprietary license[14].
- Wordle's part of is recorded as The New York Times Games[15].
- Wordle's Commons category is recorded as Wordle[16].
- Wordle's platform is recorded as web browser[17].
- Wordle's game mode is recorded as single-player video game[18].
- Wordle's language of work or name is recorded as English[19].
- Wordle's distribution format is recorded as web page[20].
- Wordle's input device is recorded as computer keyboard[21].
- Wordle's input device is recorded as computer mouse[22].
- Wordle's country of origin is recorded as United States[23].
- Wordle's publication date is recorded as +2021-10-00T00:00:00Z[24].
- Wordle's distributed by is recorded as The New York Times[25].
- Wordle's official website is recorded as https://www.nytimes.com/games/wordle/[26].
- Wordle's main subject is recorded as word guessing[27].
Why It Matters
Wordle ranks in the top 4% of browser_game entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (67,013 views/month).[2] Wordle has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]