As soon as news broke that The New York Times had purchased Wordle, there was widespread scepticism that the good times were over. The cynicism comes from the corporate culture of giants buying upcoming brands to neutralize competition. There was also fear that NYT might monetize Wordle in the future. All those fears were put to rest by technologist Aaron Rieke in a Twitter thread. Also Read — Wordle has a secret hard mode for players who find it too simple
Because Wordle is a webpage, it can be saved. You can download the entire game right now along with all the future words. What’s more? You will still be able to share your results online with your fellow players. To save the game, all you need to do is open it on a browser, press the right key on your mouse, and then hit “save as.” And just like that, a complete copy of Wordle will be saved on your desktop for offline use. Launch it every day and it will load the day’s word. Also Read — New York Times buys the viral Word game, Wordle
The only downside of it is that the game loses the previous progress, and you’ll have to start a new one. Don’t give up hope on losing your previous record yet as there have been suggestions, as noted in The Verge article, that it may be possible to retain them using developer tools. Also Read — Game made for love: Wordle and its origins
Now, while it’s all fine and good to save the game, it goes without saying that the action of saving it functions in a grey area at best. Saving it might be a copyright infringement, hence, we cannot recommend you to do the same. But it is important to note that saving pages offline is a time-honored feature that all browsers possess. Many places do it to retain records of web pages. So, it seems very likely
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