Answer
SMILE
Published puzzle analysis for May 30, 2026 with the verified answer, difficulty, traps, and solving paths.
This analysis covers Wordle 1806, published on May 30, 2026. It reviews answer difficulty, likely mistakes, hard mode risk, pattern links, and practical solve paths for the verified answer.
The next section reveals the Wordle 1806 answer for May 30, 2026. Continue only if you want the solution and full puzzle analysis.
The verified answer, meaning, and example usage.
SMILE
a happy or pleased facial expression
A clean two-vowel board gave solvers a reason to smile.
What made this answer easy, medium, or hard.
| Difficulty rating | Easy |
|---|---|
| Difficulty score | 38/100 |
| Trap score | 28/100 |
| Repeated letter risk | Low |
| Hard mode risk | Low |
| Vowel count | 2 |
| Rare letter check | No J, Q, X, Z, V, W, K, or Y pressure appears. |
SMILE was friendly because it had common letters, two vowels, and no repeats.
First letter, last letter, vowels, consonants, frequency, repeats, and rare letters.
S starts the answer. That opening letter is common enough to appear in balanced solving paths.
E ends the answer. The final letter is best solved by applying earlier green, yellow, and gray constraints.
SMILE contains 2 standard vowels (I, E) and 3 consonants (S, M, L).
Common letters in the answer: S, I, L, E. Lower-frequency pressure: M.
No letters repeat, so the puzzle is mostly about placement and candidate separation.
No J, Q, X, Z, V, W, K, or Y pressure appears.
Likely wrong turns and misleading patterns for this exact answer.
Players could still waste a turn if they ignored S/M/L placement after E or I appeared.
Guessing similar candidates too early could waste a turn before all positions were checked.
Ignoring the words with two vowels pattern would make the endgame harder than necessary.
In hard mode, the safest path still needs to move yellow letters into new legal positions.
Three practical paths that show how to reach the answer without guessing blindly.
| Guess 1 | CRANE - Tests C, R, A, N, and E to establish a common-letter baseline. |
|---|---|
| Guess 2 | MILES - Targets the clue most relevant to SMILE: SMILE was friendly because it had common letters, two vowels, and no repeats. |
| Guess 3 | SMILE - Uses the narrowed board to solve the verified answer. |
| Guess 1 | SLATE - Covers S, L, A, T, and E with strong opening information. |
|---|---|
| Guess 2 | SLIME - Adds a focused second question based on the answer family and remaining letters. |
| Guess 3 | SMILE - Commits once the vowel shape and key consonant risk are resolved. |
| Guess 1 | TRAIN - A hard-mode friendly opener with common letters and playable branches. |
|---|---|
| Guess 2 | SMIRK - Keeps the solve close to legal candidate logic while testing the main danger. |
| Guess 3 | SMILE - Finishes after preserving confirmed clues and avoiding a late trap. |
Balanced, high-information, beginner, and hard mode opener options.
| Use case | Word | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Balanced opener | CRANE | CRANE overlaps with useful answer letters and still gives broad structure. |
| High entropy opener | SLATE | SLATE gives a strong read on common letters and makes the second guess easier to choose. |
| Beginner opener | STARE | STARE is readable and balances vowels with common consonants. |
| Hard mode opener | SLANT | SLANT keeps common consonants active without creating awkward early constraints. |
Relevant pattern pages for this answer shape.
The answer has a balanced two-vowel structure.
How risky this answer was under hard mode constraints.
Hard mode risk is low for this answer because smile was friendly because it had common letters, two vowels, and no repeats.
Because there are no repeated letters, hard mode mainly depends on preserving clues while testing the right remaining slot.
Avoid locking a trap family unless the remaining candidates fit inside the guesses you have left.
Difficulty, main challenge, and best strategy in one place.
SMILE rated Easy with a difficulty score of 38. The main challenge was smile was friendly because it had common letters, two vowels, and no repeats. The best strategy was to respect the actual pattern, avoid emotional guessing, and use a focused second or third guess before solving.
Continue solving, checking difficulty, or moving between daily analyses.
Short answers for common questions about this topic.