Swordle
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What is Swordle?
Swordle is a clever daily guessing battle designed for swimming fans and sports trivia lovers. Instead of words or songs, you must identify a hidden competitive swimmer’s name from a massive pool of athletes. You get five attempts, and each wrong guess gives you a crucial clue: how close your guess is alphabetically to the secret name.
It’s challenging because the list includes hundreds of real-world swimmers from around the globe — from Olympic legends to rising stars. The alphabetical feedback adds a satisfying layer of strategy and deduction, making every guess feel like diving deeper into the sport while racing against your remaining tries.

Swordle Game Rules (The Catch / The Trap)
You have 5 guesses to identify the secret swimmer.
- Enter the full name of a competitive swimmer.
- After each incorrect guess, the game tells you whether your guess is before or after the target name in alphabetical order.
- The closer you get alphabetically, the tighter the clues become.
- You cannot guess the same name twice.
- Only valid competitive swimmers from the game’s database are accepted.
Narrow it down step by step until you lock in the correct athlete.
How To Play Swordle?
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Make your first guess — Type the name of a well-known swimmer (e.g. “Adam Peaty” or “Katie Ledecky”) and submit. The game responds with whether the secret name comes before or after alphabetically.
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Read the alphabetical clue — If it says your guess is “before” the target, you now know to try names that come later in the alphabet. Adjust your next guess accordingly.
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Refine with each try — Use the new boundary to pick a swimmer roughly in the middle of the remaining possibilities. The game updates the range after every guess, shrinking your search space.
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Zero in on the target — By guess 3 or 4, the alphabetical window is usually small. Pick names that fit the narrowed range and match the swimming context (Olympians, national team members, etc.).
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Claim victory — When you guess the exact correct swimmer, you win! See how many tries it took and return tomorrow for a brand-new daily swimmer to identify.
Strategy & Tips
Start with high-profile swimmers whose names sit in different parts of the alphabet to quickly cut the list in half. Pay close attention to first and last names — alphabetical order usually follows standard name sorting. If you know a particular country or stroke specialty, use that knowledge to guide guesses within the remaining alphabetical range. Stay systematic: treat it like a binary search through the swimmer database for the fastest solves.