Useful signal
One of the highest expected information profiles among practical five-letter starts.
ROATE is an elite entropy opener that tests R, O, A, T, and E, but it feels less natural than common openers like SLATE or STARE. ROATE is for players who prioritize expected information gain above familiarity. It compresses vowel and consonant value into one very efficient first guess.
The scores are a practical model for judging ROATE, not a promise that one opener wins every puzzle.
The entropy score estimates how much information ROATE is expected to gain across many possible answers. The frequency score reflects how often its letters appear in answer-style Wordle words. Letter coverage rewards the fact that ROATE uses five unique tiles, while the hard mode score asks whether the confirmed letters usually leave playable legal follow-ups.
The overall score is most useful when comparing openers with different personalities. A word can be easy for beginners without being the highest-entropy choice, and a word can have elite entropy while feeling less natural to play every day. Use the numbers to understand the tradeoff, then choose the opener whose feedback you can act on consistently.
ROATE has five unique letters, so every tile can produce new information on turn one.
| Letter | Frequency and usefulness |
|---|---|
| R | R is a high-value consonant and gives ROATE strong practical solving power. |
| O | O is the vowel many A/E openers miss, making ROATE excellent at separating vowel families. |
| A | A pairs with O and E to create broad vowel coverage without using four vowel slots. |
| T | T is a major consonant and contributes heavily to entropy. |
| E | Final E captures one of the most common answer endings. |
Where ROATE performs well as a first Wordle guess.
One of the highest expected information profiles among practical five-letter starts.
Tests three major vowels while keeping R and T.
Very strong at reducing candidates after almost any pattern.
Hard mode friendly because R, O, A, T, and E can form many legal follow-ups.
No opener is perfect. These are the tradeoffs to plan around.
ROATE is less familiar, so some players dislike using it even when valid.
It misses S, L, C, and N, so the second guess must be disciplined.
Because it is optimized for information, it may feel less intuitive than SLATE or STARE.
The point is not to memorize one first word and stop thinking. Use the first result to decide whether your second move should reduce candidates broadly, chase a likely answer, or obey hard mode constraints.
Example feedback patterns for ROATE and what each one teaches you.
| Pattern | Information gained | Candidate reduction | Best next guess |
|---|---|---|---|
| ROATE --Y-G | A is present elsewhere and E is fixed last. | This points toward final-E words with A in another position. | SLANE or CLASP-style tests can add S/L/N/C depending on legal constraints. |
| ROATE -G--- | O is fixed second while R/A/T/E are absent. | The pool becomes _O___ words with a mostly new consonant set. | SONIC tests S, N, I, C while keeping O fixed. |
| ROATE ----- | R, O, A, T, and E are absent. | This is extremely informative and leaves unusual I/U/Y-centered answers. | SILKY or CLIMB can cover new letters quickly. |
The second guess is where a good opener becomes a real strategy.
After ROATE, do not automatically play a memorized partner word. Start by asking what the colors actually proved. Green tiles create structure. Yellow tiles create placement work. Gray tiles remove entire answer families. If the first result leaves many candidates, your second guess should usually test missing high-value letters. If the first result leaves a tight pattern, a direct solve or trap-breaking guess may be stronger.
In normal mode, you can use a broad information word even if it ignores a confirmed clue. In hard mode, every confirmed green and yellow from ROATE must be respected, so the best follow-up may be less flashy but more legally useful. This is why the hard mode score matters: it measures whether the opener gives you room to keep learning after the first feedback pattern.
Use the actual colors you received, but these options show how ROATE is normally complemented.
This follow-up favors broad coverage and avoids overcommitting to a single answer family too early.
This path is better when the first pattern points toward a recognizable answer shape and you want to press for a faster solve.
This option is designed to reuse confirmed information while still testing letters that can split the remaining pool.
How ROATE compares with other popular starts.
ROATE works differently depending on your skill level and mode.
Good but not ideal. The word can feel unusual.
Excellent. It is built for information-first play.
Excellent. The letters are flexible and high-value.
Use ROATE if you care about top-end entropy and do not mind a less common-looking opener.
Openers with similar goals or useful comparison value.
Common questions about using ROATE as your first Wordle guess.