How this all started
It started with that one puzzle. You know the one — you get it in two guesses, feel unstoppable, and then sit there staring at the screen with nothing left to do. One word. That's it. Come back tomorrow.
I'm a huge Wordle fan. Always have been. There's something satisfying about turning letters green that I genuinely can't explain to people who haven't tried it. But the daily limit drove me nuts. Some days I'd go through my five minutes of Wordle before my morning coffee was even done, and then I'd be itching for more the rest of the day.
So I started looking around for a version with no limits. I found a few, but they all felt clunky, or they were missing features, or they just weren't fun to use. That's when I decided to build something myself — not as a business idea or anything serious, just because I wanted a version of Wordle that I'd actually enjoy using.
What this site actually is
Wordle Unlimited is exactly what it sounds like. You can play as many rounds as you want, whenever you want, with no daily cap. Finished your game? Hit new game. Simple as that.
But we also went a bit further than just removing the limit. One thing that always bugged me about the original is that you're stuck with 5-letter words forever. Some days that feels too easy, other days it wrecks you. So we added word lengths all the way from 4 to 11 letters. If you want a quick game, go with 4. If you want to genuinely suffer in the best possible way, try 11.
There are also a bunch of extra game modes — a timed blitz mode, a hard mode that locks in your hints, a streak mode where the stakes go up the longer you go without losing, and more. Some of them came from ideas I had while playing, others came from friends who started using the site and kept asking "can it do this?"
Who it's for
Honestly, anyone who likes word games. But more specifically, it's for the people who finish the daily Wordle and immediately want another one. Or the people who want to play with their kids and need something a bit simpler. Or the people who play during their lunch break and have more than five minutes to kill.
We added a kids mode with easier words, a custom challenge feature so you can send your own word to friends, and themed modes if you want to test yourself on specific categories like food, animals, or movies.
There's no account to make, no points system trying to keep you addicted, no notifications bugging you. Just the game, whenever you feel like it.
A quick note on the original
This site isn't affiliated with The New York Times or Josh Wardle, who created the original Wordle. We have a lot of respect for what he built — it's genuinely one of the best casual games ever made, and the fact that it stayed simple while the world tried to copy it says a lot.
This is just an independent fan-made version for people who want more of that same feeling. If you haven't tried the original NYT Wordle, go play it too. They're both worth your time.
What's next
We're still adding things. There are a few modes in the works, and we're always tweaking the word lists and fixing the little things that come up. If something feels off or you have an idea, the feedback is genuinely welcome — this whole project exists because someone (me) had a complaint, so complaints tend to lead somewhere here.
Thanks for playing. Hope you enjoy it as much as I do.