Spelling bee game

  1. Free Bee
  2. How to Win the New York Times Spelling Bee Every Single Time


Download: Spelling bee game
Size: 5.39 MB

Free Bee

What is Free Bee? Free Bee is an enhanced Free Software clone of The New York Times game Spelling Bee. It has all the features of the original game and more, including the ability to play a nearly infinite number of randomly generated games. No longer are you stuck with only one game per day. Looking to play? Click Key improvements in Free Bee Free to play, forever. Free Software client. Code and game improvements always welcome and accepted on our One curated daily game per day and an infinite number of computer-generated games to play any time. Never be stuck waiting for the next daily game to play. No hidden dictionary. Free Bee uses the Public Domain ENABLE dictionary as found Mobile and desktop friendly. Words can be written by typing them into the input box or clicking on the letters. Or, if you are on a device with a touchscreen, you can tap the letters to make words. How to play The goal of Free Bee is to make as many words as you can with the seven letters you are given. You do not have to use every letter and you can use letters more than once. The only requirements are that you must use the center letter at least once in every word and words must be at least four letters long. Every word has a point value: Word length Points earned Four 1 Five 5 Six 6 Seven 7 Eight 8 Nine 9 Ten 10 Eleven 11 Twelve 12 Thirteen 13 Fourteen 14 Fifteen 15 If you create a pangram, a word that uses all seven letters, you will score an additional seven points on top of the value of the...

How to Win the New York Times Spelling Bee Every Single Time

Wordleisn't the only word game worth mastering -- CNET has recommended a number of others. My absolute favorite is The NYT Spelling Bee has been around since 2014 in print and since 2018 online. The rules are pretty simple: Each day offers up seven letters arranged in a honeycomb shape (honeycomb, spelling BEE, somebody on the Times design staff got a buzz out of that). Players need to make words of four or more letters using the given letters, and always have to include the center letter. There's always one pangram, which means a word that uses all seven of the letters and counts for big points. The game reminds me of a childhood favorite, Boggle, minus the little lettered dice and fun-to-shake game tray, but with all the setup and scoring done for me. As you find words, the puzzle praises you with such compliments as "genius" or "amazing" and moves your score up a little line giving you higher ranks as you progress. If you find all the possible words, you're rewarded with the title of "Queen Bee." Or, uh, so I hear. I have yet to ever do that. Can I play the Spelling Bee for free? Note that while Wordle is free on the New York Times site -- at least for now -- the New York Times Spelling Bee is more complicated. Stay with me, here. People who don't subscribe to any form of the New York Times, paper or digital, can play up to the rank of "Solid," a Times spokesperson told me in an email, noting that this may be a different number of words each day, depending upon the puzz...