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word up?!.....'Wordle' acquired today....
#1
....by New York Times.....will remain 'free' for now.....


The New York Times Buys Wordle

The word game, released in October, has millions of daily users.

.....The sudden hit Wordle, in which once a day players get six chances to guess a five-letter word, has been acquired by The New York Times Company.

The purchase, announced by The Times on Monday, reflects the growing importance of games, like crosswords and Spelling Bee, in the company’s quest to increase digital subscriptions to 10 million by 2025.

Wordle was acquired from its creator, Josh Wardle, a software engineer in Brooklyn, for a price “in the low seven figures,” The Times said. The company said the game would initially remain free to new and existing players.

Wordle — the name is a cheeky pun on its creator’s name — has had a striking rise. It first appeared on a no-frills, ad-free website in October, and had 90 users on Nov. 1. That number grew to 300,000 by the middle of this month, and now millions play the game daily, according to the Times announcement.

A feature enables users to share their performance, with rows of five bricks indicating how close they were to guessing the correct word. For the uninitiated: A green brick indicates that the letter is correct and in the exact location; a yellow brick indicates that the letter appears in the word but in a different place; and a gray or black brick indicates that the letter does not appear anywhere in the word. These analog brick layouts have been endlessly memed and have driven millions of tweets.

“The Times remains focused on becoming the essential subscription for every English-speaking person seeking to understand and engage with the world,” a company statement said. “New York Times Games are a key part of that strategy.”

Since The Times put up a paywall in 2011, its business strategy has revolved around persuading readers and users, the overwhelming majority of whom get Times content digitally, to buy subscriptions. The traditional newspaper business model is centered on advertising.

The Times sells subscriptions to its print newspaper and core digital news app. For lower prices, it also offers subscriptions to a games app (Games), a recipe app (Cooking) and, as of last year, Wirecutter, a product-recommendation site The Times bought in 2016. This month, The Times spent $550 million to buy the sports news website The Athletic, hailing the 1.2 million subscribers the site brings with it.

The business strategy has been vindicated to the tune of millions of new subscribers. In November, The Times said in an earnings report that it had nearly 8.4 million. (Its next earning report is scheduled to be released Wednesday.) In December, The Times reported that Games and Cooking each had more than one million subscribers.

The Times’s games — along with the crossword and Spelling Bee, they include Letter Boxed, Tiles and Vertex — were played more than 500 million times last year, the company said.

Mr. Wardle, told a Times reporter this month that he had started Wordle after he and his partner “got really into” The Times’s crosswords and Spelling Bee games during the pandemic.

“New York Times Games play a big part in its origins,” Mr. Wardle said in the company’s statement, “and so this step feels very natural to me.”



spread......the word......?!
_____________________________________
I reject your reality and substitute my own!
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#2
That took less time than I thought it would.
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#3
A significant reason for my NYTimes subscription is the crossword; I try to get it done everyday. A colleague has recently started pushing the Times of London cryptic crossword on me. Haven't looked at wordle yet, but seems it will happen sooner than I thought.
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#4
Damn - wonder if they will start charging for it?
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#5
ArtP wrote:
Damn - wonder if they will start charging for it?

Ugh, I enjoy it, but not enough to pay for it.
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#6
August West wrote:
A significant reason for my NYTimes subscription is the crossword; I try to get it done everyday.

Same here, except I go on binges. Haven't looked at the crossword in a while.

I did a mini recently, but it was too big. 6x6 or larger grid, I think
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#7
RecipeForDisaster wrote:
[quote=ArtP]
Damn - wonder if they will start charging for it?

Ugh, I enjoy it, but not enough to pay for it.
I doubt they'll specifically charge for Wordle but likely put it behind the paywall and include it with the value of a NYT Online subscription...

Oh, and I can't understand - beyond name recognition and the eyeballs - why they would spend the money when they're going broke. There are 1001 identical "wordle archive" and clones and the word list is encoded at the site so anyone who wanted it could get it and make their own.
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#8
gabester wrote:
There are 1001 identical "wordle archive" and clones and the word list is encoded at the site so anyone who wanted it could get it and make their own.

I was thinking the same. No need to pay for it really.
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#9
The company said the game would initially remain free
Hello, paywall.

I'm happy for the guy who created the game, no way I would turn down 7 figures. But it will ruin something that everyone could enjoy for free. A little bliss in the mud puddle of the pandemic. Phooey.
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