More daily games! OneWordSearch and Stackdown

I discovered both of these word games through Waffle, a letter-swapping daily game I’ve been playing on and off for a while now. I feel like I’m better at OneWordSearch than I am at Stackdown, though I like both enough to play almost daily.

A five-by-five word search grid for OneWordSearch starting with the following letters: SOIRN TSRAY YPGUL LRHTP ENCLE

OneWordSearch looks like a standard, small word search – it’s only a five by five grid. The catch is that there’s only one findable word at a given time, following the standard word search rules – vertical, horizontal, or diagonal, going either direction for each of those. When you clear that word, replacement letters fall in. That’s an important part to the strategy for this game, realizing that if you remove the fourth row, everything above it will drop and there will be a new row at the top. If you remove a column, that entire column is replaced. If you remove a diagonal, well, that shift is a little harder to plan for.

In this particular puzzle, the first word to find is “style”. When that cleared, the bottom letter of that first column became an ‘o’, creating “organ” in a diagonal. (You’ll see a partial word list in the next image.)

The completion screen for OneWord Search, showing the rating based on time taken to find all the words and the time each word took to find.

Why do you need a strategy for a word search? It’s scored! Specifically, it’s scored based on how long it takes to find all ten words in the puzzle. This screenshot was from a particularly good day – a full five stars, based on finding all ten words in under a minute. Some days, my brain gets stuck and a single word can take a minute on its own.

The clock doesn’t start until you find that first word. From there, it’s a race to find the next nine as they become available. I try to find the second possible word before I select the first one, and then wing it after that. Sometimes I see a possibility that’s waiting for a single letter and it takes a couple more found words to get there. Other times, the potential word gets split because of how the letters drop when something else is found.

A mahjong-style layout with 30 letters. Removing a letter or letters makes the revealed letters available. The starting letters for this day are CTEF.

In contrast, Stackdown is timed, but doesn’t score based on the time… which is good, cause the timer starts as soon as you open the page. Similar to OneWordSearch, only one valid word is available at a time, with more of the thirty tiles becoming available as letters are used. The scoring runs down from a starting five stars based on the number of hints you use, which are accessed by swiping the lightbulb near the bottom of the screen. These are crossword puzzle-style hints, so the degree of usefulness may vary depending on where your brain is at compared to the clue.

The strategy I’ve found for Stackdown is to look for letters that make vowels accessible. This particular puzzle starts with an E as one of its four available tiles, which would have been great if there had been an H in the next layer to simply make “fetch”. In fact, this particular day had many ‘e’s, I count six, all on the left side of the puzzle. The first word used two of them – clearing ‘f’ and ‘e’ make the ‘n’ available, followed by the ‘c’ and another ‘e’ to form “fence”.

What daily puzzles help keep your brain going?

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