亚洲天堂

Skip to content

Wordle answer changed to avoid fraught word, NY Times says

Appearance of 鈥榝etus鈥 was 鈥榚ntirely unintentional and a coincidence鈥
29070078_web1_220509-CPW-Media-Wordle-wordle_1
A sign for The New York Times hangs above the entrance to its building, Thursday, May 6, 2021 in New York. The New York Times moved swiftly to change the word fetus, Monday鈥檚 answer to its daily Wordle puzzle, out of fear that it would be seen as some sort of commentary on the debate over abortion rights. The game, which became a sensation late last year and was bought by The Times in January, gives users six tries to guess a different five-letter word each day. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

The New York Times moved swiftly to change Monday鈥檚 answer to its daily Wordle puzzle out of fear that it would be seen as some sort of commentary on the debate over abortion rights.

The game, which became a sensation late last year and was bought by The Times in January, gives users six tries to guess a different five-letter word each day.

Yet The Times scrambled when it discovered that Monday鈥檚 word, which had been entered into Wordle鈥檚 computer program last year, was 鈥渇etus.鈥

The timing was particularly fraught given last week鈥檚 leaked report of a draft U.S. Supreme Court decision that would strike down a 50-year-old ruling governing the ability of women to receive abortions.

The appearance of 鈥渇etus鈥 was 鈥渆ntirely unintentional and a coincidence,鈥 the newspaper said in a message to readers on Monday.

鈥淎t New York Times Games, we take our role seriously as a place to entertain and escape, and we want Wordle to remain distinct from the news,鈥 the message said.

The Times changed Monday鈥檚 answer to a different word, and a spokesman said that a 鈥渧ast majority鈥 of users saw that. But some people who had not refreshed their browsers saw 鈥渇etus鈥 instead, spokesman Jordan Cohen said.

READ MORE:

He would not say whether The Times had received any complaints about 鈥渇etus.鈥

Wordle was invented by Josh Wardle, a Brooklyn software engineer, as a gift for his partner and took off when he began posting it online. Players guess words and hone in on the correct answer as the game tells them if their guesses contain letters in the word of the day.

The Times bought his invention for more than $1 million and is revamping the technology to make sure every user is seeing the same word every day, the newspaper said. Cohen said millions of people play Wordle each day.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Like us on and follow us on  





(or

亚洲天堂

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }