It's an impossible sounding concept but I'm convinced that under Einsteinian law it should be impossible, but somehow it works. With 13 guesses you play simultaneously on the eight wordle grids, attempting to figure out all eight words at once. As it is obvious this will introduce a myriad of brand new methods to Wordle. If you thought your starting word was crucial then think about it trying to cover eight distinct starts at once. What about #2? Are you someone who inserts an entire alphabet (and this reveals that you're not engaging in Wordle in its shady "Hard Mode"), or are you someone who immediately starts to look for solutions? Is it time to bring in a third starter word, to get as much of the alphabet in as much of it as you can? (Whisper it: what about 4?) Similar to Quordle which requires you to solve four puzzles at the same time (in the case of Quordle with eight possibilities) Once you've solved one word that is correct, the grid will be locked, and you'll be able narrow your concentration. With 8 times as many possible solutions to find, that dramatically increases the odds of getting an awkward word on the table, which is why it's possible to modify your strategies to take this into account too. Might it be an idea to use some more obscure words in the beginning, so you can find them as quickly as you can? I feel like I'm pretty poor at this. I'm constantly focused on completing any one grid, at the expense of the other seven completely ignoring any thought of tactics in a mad-brained seeking of a single, pathetic answer. Yet, even after all that I've completed the challenge successfully. Which has me more amazed than any other player. (Not this morning, however. I've missed two whole words.) Luckily, similar to Quordle and Quordle, along with the daily game that is the same for everyone, there's "practice" games too, which allow you to play as much as you want with randomly selected groups of words. (I was able to play one right now, in order to make myself to feel more at ease.)