The Guardian (USA)

How am I spending early middle age? Playing Phrazle – and other mesmerisin­g word games

- Zoe Williams

The problem with Wordle isn’t that some people use it to show off to strangers or that it’s especially timeconsum­ing, or even that it’s a bit of a waste of brain, but the minuscule feeling of emptiness once you have done it. All that thrill of the chase collapsed into the meagre satisfacti­on of arriving at something you’re not even sure is a word, like “caulk”.

That is how I got hooked on Quordle – a four-word grid – just to delay the inevitable anticlimax. I cycled through Heardle

(guessing a song, way too hard) and Worldle (guessing a country, in which I was mainly hamstrung by not being able to instinctiv­ely tell east from west). I had just enough discipline to avoid Octordle, in which you have 13 guesses to reach eight words. Then I discovered Phrazle, in which you have to find a whole phrase. I’ll just have one quick go, I thought. I definitely won’t commit.

This enterprise is just daft. The world is absolutely rammed with phrases. I had one easy win – “Beware the Ides of March” on the first try – and then

I was hooked. Now I can lose a sizeable proportion of my mental energy for the entire day, getting to “until the cows come home”. It doesn’t even mean anything! The whole experience is one of aching meaningles­sness, chasing some combinatio­n of words that are either platitudes, demonstrab­ly untrue, or long ways to say a thing that could be shorter. There’s no skill in it at all that I can make out. It’s not unusual for the phrase to contain so many weird combinatio­ns of letters that you have gone down a rabbit hole of whether there are any well-known axioms pertaining to the Balearic islands, before you finally land on “my birthday suit”. I can’t even bear to time how long it takes me, this daily three-act theatre of puzzling. “Word games” was not the addiction I expected so incredibly earlyin middle age. And the post-victory flatness, the diminishin­g dopamine returns, are still exactly the same – I’m just taking a more scenic route.

Anyway, I pass this on mainly to

 ?? Kemp/In Pictures/Getty Images ?? Wordle … the thrill of the chase, followed by a feeling of emptiness. Photograph: Mike
Kemp/In Pictures/Getty Images Wordle … the thrill of the chase, followed by a feeling of emptiness. Photograph: Mike

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