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

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?

  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.).

  5. 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.