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Mastering Duotrigordle: How to Solve 32 Wordles at Once
May 27, 2026 · 15 min read

Mastering Duotrigordle: How to Solve 32 Wordles at Once

Want to conquer Duotrigordle? Learn the expert strategies, best starting words, and logic hacks to solve 32 wordles at once without breaking a sweat.

May 27, 2026 · 15 min read
Word GamesPuzzle StrategyBrain Teasers

If you think solving a single Wordle is a satisfying morning ritual, brace yourself. Imagine staring at a digital grid containing not one, not two, but thirty-two different five-letter puzzles simultaneously. This is the wild world of Duotrigordle, a game where you solve 32 wordles at once. It sounds like an exercise in absolute chaos, a typographic nightmare designed to make your brain short-circuit.

Yet, beneath the surface of this visual sensory overload lies a deeply strategic, highly structured mathematical playground. Thousands of puzzle enthusiasts take on this daily challenge, turning what looks like a frantic scramble into an elegant sequence of logical deductions. Whether you are a casual word-game lover looking to test your limits or a seasoned speedrunner aiming for a perfect game, this ultimate guide will teach you how to dominate the 32 wordles grid. We will dissect the mathematics of the guess economy, analyze the split-color keyboard, reveal the best opening word combinations, and provide a step-by-step roadmap to consistent victory.

The Mathematics of Duotrigordle: Understanding the Guess Economy

To understand how to solve 32 wordles at once, we must first look at the cold, hard numbers. In a standard game of Wordle, you have six attempts to solve a single hidden word. This gives you a massive margin of error; you can afford to make several "exploratory" guesses to eliminate letters before narrowing down your target.

In Duotrigordle, the game changes entirely. You are presented with 32 separate, independent five-letter word boards. To win, you must successfully solve all 32 boards. However, you are only given a total of 37 guesses.

Let's do the math. Because each correct guess "locks in" and solves exactly one board, you must use at least 32 guesses simply to input the 32 correct answers.

37 total guesses - 32 required correct answers = 5 spare guesses

This simple equation is the defining characteristic of 32 wordles at once. You have a maximum budget of exactly five "throwaway" or "exploratory" guesses. Every single guess beyond those five must be a correct answer. If you use four starting words to gather information, you have used up four of your five spare guesses. From that point on, you have exactly one single mistake or exploratory guess left for the rest of the game. If you make a second mistake, a mathematical trap snaps shut: you will run out of guesses before you can solve all the remaining boards, even if you know the answers to every single one of them.

Understanding this strict guess economy is the first step toward master-level play. It dictates that your strategy cannot be a series of reactive, board-by-board guesses. Instead, you must treat the game as a two-phase campaign: a highly optimized information-gathering phase followed by a flawless, methodical execution phase.

Deciphering the Split-Color Keyboard: Your Visual Control Center

When you first load up a game of Duotrigordle, the sheer amount of visual information can be overwhelming. You are looking at a massive scrolling interface of 32 grids, each reflecting the letters you type. However, attempting to scroll up and down constantly to check your progress on 32 individual boards will quickly lead to mental fatigue and mistakes.

This is where the game's secret weapon comes in: the split-color keyboard.

In standard Wordle, a key on your virtual keyboard changes color based on its status: green for correct placement, yellow for correct letter in the wrong spot, and gray for a letter not in the word. In Duotrigordle, a single letter might be green on Board 3, yellow on Board 12, gray on Board 22, and completely untested on Board 30.

To solve this, the virtual keyboard keys are divided into up to 32 tiny colored segments (often represented as small color-coded wedges or a split grid on each key). When you look at the letter 'E', for example, you can see at a glance its status across all 32 boards.

  • If a wedge is green, it means that letter is correctly placed on that specific board.
  • If a wedge is yellow, it means that letter is present but misplaced on that board.
  • If a wedge is gray, the letter is not in that board's word.
  • If a wedge is white or dark (unlit), it means the board is already solved, or the letter has not yet been tested for that board.

By mastering the art of "reading" the split keyboard, you can play the game almost entirely without scrolling. Instead of looking at individual grids, you can scan your keyboard to find letters that are highly active. When you identify a board number that has several green and yellow wedges lit up across various keys, you can scroll directly to that specific board, confirm the layout, and execute the solve.

Furthermore, as you solve boards, they "freeze." A frozen board is locked in, and its corresponding wedges on the split keyboard turn dark, decluttering your visual field as the game progresses. The transition from a chaotic, rainbow-colored keyboard to a clean, dark keyboard is one of the most satisfying visual progressions in modern digital puzzle gaming.

The Best Starting Words: Scattershot vs. The "Perfect" Opener

Because your guess budget is incredibly tight, your choice of starting words is the single most important decision you will make in a game of 32 wordles. While standard Wordle players debate the merits of opening with "CRANE," "ADIEU," or "STARE," a Duotrigordle player must think in terms of maximum systemic information.

There are two primary approaches to opening the game: the Scattershot Strategy and the Perfect Challenge Strategy.

The 3-Word Scattershot Combo: BLIND, CHAPT, MORSE

If you want a reliable, scientifically backed opening that consistently sets you up for a win, a three-word opener is your best bet. A popular favorite among data analysts is the combination of BLIND, CHAPT, and MORSE.

These three words cover 15 unique letters, including four of the five primary vowels (I, A, O, E) and many of the most common consonants (B, L, N, D, C, H, P, T, M, R, S). By typing these three words as your first three guesses, you immediately reveal clues across all 32 boards simultaneously.

According to dictionary analysis, this combination is so effective that it reduces the word pool of the remaining boards to a single, guaranteed option for over 70% of the possible Wordle solutions. After inputting these three words, you have used 3 of your 5 spare guesses, leaving you with 34 guesses to solve 32 boards—giving you a comfortable margin of two errors.

Another excellent three-word alternative is:

  • BLIMP, DANCE, SHORT

The 4-Word Powerhouse: SPUNK, MOLDY, FIBER, WATCH

For players who prefer absolute certainty and want to minimize cognitive load during the deduction phase, a four-word opener is highly effective. The classic four-word sequence is SPUNK, MOLDY, FIBER, WATCH.

Let's look at the letters covered: S, P, U, N, K, M, O, L, D, Y, F, I, B, E, R, W, A, T, C, H. This sequence uses 20 unique letters, covering all five standard vowels (A, E, I, O, U) plus the semi-vowel Y, alongside 14 consonants.

By the end of your fourth guess, only six letters of the English alphabet remain un-guessed: Q, Z, X, J, G, and V. When you scroll through your 32 boards after this opener, almost every single word will be laid bare. You will see boards with 4 or 5 letters already illuminated, making the identification of the hidden words trivial.

The catch? You have used 4 of your 5 spare guesses. You now have 33 guesses to solve 32 boards. You have a margin of error of exactly one. If you make a single typo or fall into a spelling trap, your game is over. It is a high-reward, high-tension strategy favored by experienced players who trust their spelling and reading accuracy.

The Statistical Magic of "FILET" and "Deuces"

For elite players who attempt the legendary Perfect Duotrigordle Challenge, the goal is to solve all 32 boards in exactly 32 guesses. This means you cannot use any throwaway starter words at all. Your very first guess must be the correct answer to one of the 32 boards, and every subsequent guess must also be a correct answer.

To pull this off, you need a starting word that, even if it isn't the answer itself, has the highest mathematical probability of leaving "deuces" across the other boards. In word-game theory, a "deuce" occurs when a guess yields a color pattern on a board that can only belong to one single, unique word in the dictionary (a singleton).

Through exhaustive algorithmic brute-forcing of the Wordle dictionary, programmers discovered that FILET is the mathematically superior starting word for generating these singletons. When you guess FILET as your first word, it is highly likely to yield a pattern on at least one of the 32 boards that points to a single, unmistakable solution. From there, you can solve that board, which in turn reveals clues for the next, triggering a beautiful, deductive domino effect that can carry you to a perfect 32/32 finish.

Step-by-Step Walkthrough: The Flawless Duotrigordle Playbook

Now that you understand the mathematics, the interface, and the starting words, let's walk through a complete, step-by-step tactical playbook for winning a game of 32 wordles.

Step 1: The Blind Setup (Guesses 1 to 3 or 4)

When the game starts, do not look at the grids. Do not analyze the boards. Save your mental energy for later. Immediately enter your chosen starting sequence. For this walkthrough, we will use the highly secure 3-word combo:

  1. Type BLIND and press Enter.
  2. Type CHAPT and press Enter.
  3. Type MORSE and press Enter.

You have now used 3 guesses. You have 34 guesses remaining to solve 32 boards.

Step 2: The Low-Hanging Fruit Harvest (Guesses 4 to 12)

Now, scroll through the 32 boards. Do not look for difficult words yet. Your goal right now is to find the "low-hanging fruit"—boards that are already completely or almost completely resolved. Look for:

  • Boards with 5 green letters. (Solve these immediately!)
  • Boards with 4 green letters and an obvious missing consonant.
  • Boards where the yellow letters can only fit into one logical arrangement.

As you solve these easy boards, several things happen. First, you successfully convert your guesses into solved boards, maintaining your strict guess economy. Second, you freeze these boards, which removes their distracting colors from your keyboard. Third, each correct word you guess acts as a "free" clue for all the remaining unsolved boards, potentially illuminating letters you hadn't tested yet (like J, Z, or Q).

Step 3: Navigating the Vowel Anchors (Guesses 13 to 25)

As the easy boards are cleared away, you will be left with boards that require some deduction. Focus on the vowels. Look at the split keyboard to see which boards have yellow vowels. Remember, in English, vowels are the structural anchors of words. If a board has a yellow 'A' and a green 'O' at the end, and you know the letters 'L', 'R', and 'T' are active, you can quickly deduce words like "FLOAT" or "BLOAT." Always prioritize boards that have the most green tiles, as they have the narrowest pool of potential solutions.

Step 4: Dismantling the "Pillars of Doom" (Guesses 26 to 37)

As you enter the final stretch of the game, you will inevitably run into the most dangerous hazard in all of Wordle: the word traps, often called the "Pillars of Doom." These are families of words that share four out of five letters. Examples include:

  • _IGHT (FIGHT, LIGHT, NIGHT, SIGHT, MIGHT, RIGHT, TIGHT, WIGHT)
  • _OUND (BOUND, FOUND, HOUND, ROUND, SOUND, WOUND, POUND)
  • _ATCH (BATCH, CATCH, HATCH, MATCH, PATCH, WATCH)
  • _OWER (COWER, LOWER, MOWER, POWER, TOWER, SOWER)

If you have a board that shows green tiles for _IGHT, and you have three unsolved boards remaining with only three guesses left, guessing "FIGHT," then "LIGHT," then "NIGHT" is a massive risk. If you guess wrong once, you run out of guesses and lose the entire game.

To dismantle these traps safely, you must utilize your remaining "spare" guesses. If you managed your guess economy well in the early game, you should have at least one or two spare guesses left. Instead of guessing words that fit the trap on individual boards, guess an "eliminator word" that contains as many of the starting consonants as possible. For example, if you are stuck on the _IGHT trap, you can guess the word FLING or FORMS. This guess will test the letters F, L, N, G, M, R, and S simultaneously. Based on which letters light up green or yellow, you will instantly know whether the hidden words are FIGHT, LIGHT, NIGHT, or MIGHT. You can then input the correct answers on subsequent turns with 100% mathematical certainty, completely bypassing the trap.

Advanced Techniques: Speedrunning and the Perfect Challenge

For players who have conquered the basic game, Duotrigordle offers deeper layers of complexity to master. The two main avenues of advanced play are Speedrunning and the Perfect Challenge.

The Art of the Duotrigordle Speedrun

Speedrunning 32 wordles at once requires a blending of rapid visual scanning, muscle memory, and keyboard shortcuts. Elite speedrunners can complete all 32 boards in under two minutes. Here are the techniques they use:

  • Keyboard Navigation: Use the keyboard arrow keys or the mouse scroll wheel to rapidly glide past solved boards. Experienced speedrunners don't stop scrolling; they scan the boards in a continuous fluid motion, identifying solved patterns on the fly.
  • Solve Assist: In the game settings, you can toggle "Solve Assist." When enabled, boards whose solutions can be logically deduced with 100% certainty from your previous guesses will automatically solve themselves. While some purists prefer to play with this turned off, speedrunners use it to shave valuable seconds off their times, allowing them to focus entirely on the unresolved boards.
  • Visual Chunking: Instead of reading words letter-by-letter, speedrunners train their eyes to recognize "chunks"—common prefixes and suffixes like "CH-", "SH-", "-ING", or "-EST"—instantly, allowing them to type solutions without conscious spelling deliberation.

The Perfect Challenge: 32 Puzzles, 32 Guesses

The Perfect Challenge is the mountaintop of multi-board word gaming. There is no room for error, no scattershot openers, and no safety nets.

To achieve a perfect score, you must leverage starting words like FILET or TEAMS to get an initial foothold. Once you get a confirmed letter pattern on your first turn, you must painstakingly analyze the dictionary possibilities for that specific board. You cannot make a guess unless you are 100% certain it is the correct word.

Once that first word is solved, you must use the letters in that correct word to deduce the next board, creating a tightly wound logical chain. A single misstep breaks the chain and ruins the attempt. It is a grueling, slow-paced test of vocabulary and deductive logic that can take hours of focused concentration to complete.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is the game with 32 wordles called?

The official and most popular game for solving 32 wordles at once is called Duotrigordle. There are also other multi-board variants, such as Quordle (4 boards), Octordle (8 boards), and Sedecordle (16 boards).

How many guesses do you get in 32 wordles?

In Duotrigordle, you are given exactly 37 guesses to solve all 32 word boards. Because you must use at least 32 guesses to input the correct answers, you have a maximum of 5 spare guesses for information-gathering or mistakes.

What is the best starting word for Duotrigordle?

If you are playing standard Duotrigordle, the best approach is to use a multi-word sequence like BLIND, CHAPT, MORSE or SPUNK, MOLDY, FIBER, WATCH. If you are attempting a Perfect Challenge (solving in 32 guesses), the mathematically optimal single starting word is FILET, as it generates the highest number of unique letter-pattern singletons (deuces).

What is "Solve Assist" in Duotrigordle?

Solve Assist is an optional setting in Duotrigordle. When turned on, the game automatically inputs the correct answer for any board that has been reduced to only one mathematically possible solution based on your previous guesses. This is highly useful for speedrunners and casual players who want to avoid tedious typing.

Is there an unblocked version of Duotrigordle?

Yes, Duotrigordle can be played for free directly in any modern web browser without downloads or accounts. Many school-friendly and unblocked gaming sites host versions of the game under the name "Duotrigordle Unblocked" or "32 Wordles Free."

Conclusion: Emphasizing Logic Over Luck

At first glance, playing 32 wordles at once looks like an impossible mountain to climb. The wall of flashing colors, the scrolling grids, and the looming 37-guess limit are designed to intimidate.

But as we have explored in this guide, Duotrigordle is not a game of luck. It is a game of pure visual optimization and mathematical discipline. By utilizing structured opening combinations like BLIND, CHAPT, MORSE, reading the split-color keyboard like a master dashboard, and keeping a firm grip on your 5-spare-guess economy, you can consistently solve all 32 boards with guesses to spare.

The next time you load up the grid, take a deep breath, ignore the chaos, trust your starting words, and let the logic guide you to victory. Happy puzzling!

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