Easy scenarios
Double letters are easy when the candidate pool contains only repeated-letter words after several grays.
They are also easier when one letter is green and the same letter remains plausible elsewhere.
Double letters are not rare enough to ignore, and they often explain boards that feel stuck.
What Double letters tells you and why it matters during a Wordle solve.
Double-letter words are some of the most frustrating Wordle solves because early strategy usually rewards five unique letters. That is correct for information gain, but it can leave repeated E, L, O, S, R, F, or N hidden until the candidate pool is small.
Words such as EERIE, SLEEP, SHEEP, CARRY, SUNNY, BELLE, LEVEL, BLOOM, SCOOP, STAFF, and STILL show why duplicate logic matters. A letter can be present twice even if your first copy is yellow or green, and a gray copy can behave differently when the answer contains only one instance.
Pattern work is strongest when it stays connected to the actual board. Use the pattern to organize candidates, then let green, yellow, and gray tiles decide whether you should solve directly or spend one more turn splitting the remaining group.
How often this shape should influence your decisions.
Double letters are less common than single-letter structures, but they are common enough that ignoring them loses games. They appear in vowels, consonants, and mixed positions, often after the board has already confirmed several letters.
The best time to consider a duplicate is not turn one. It is usually turn three or later, after the remaining candidates all reuse a confirmed letter or the board seems impossible with five unique letters.
Frequency is a guide, not a shortcut. A common pattern can still be wrong if the positions do not fit, and a less common pattern can become the best explanation once several high-frequency letters are removed.
Representative Wordle-style words grouped by the way they behave on the board.
| Group | Examples | Why the group matters |
|---|---|---|
| Double vowels | EERIE, SLEEP, SHEEP, BLOOM, SCOOP | These words can hide extra E or O information until late. |
| Double consonants | CARRY, SUNNY, STAFF, STILL, FLUFF | Repeated consonants often appear in positions three through five. |
| Separated duplicates | LEVEL, ROTOR, REFER, CIVIC, MAMMA | The duplicate letters are not always adjacent, so position logic matters. |
When this pattern is clean, and when it becomes a trap.
Double letters are easy when the candidate pool contains only repeated-letter words after several grays.
They are also easier when one letter is green and the same letter remains plausible elsewhere.
Duplicates are hard when a single confirmed letter could appear once or twice and hard mode limits testing.
They are especially hard when the duplicate is a vowel, because many plausible vowel placements remain.
The mistakes that usually cost a turn with this pattern.
Do not assume one green letter means there is only one copy of that letter.
Do not treat a gray duplicate tile as proof the letter is absent if another copy has already scored yellow or green.
Avoid testing duplicates too early when broad unique-letter information is still more valuable.
How to confirm the pattern and decide between solving and splitting.
| Step | Decision |
|---|---|
| 1 | Start with unique-letter guesses for broad information, then revisit duplicates when the candidate pool narrows. |
| 2 | If every logical unique-letter word fails, ask which confirmed letter could repeat. E, L, O, S, R, N, and F are common repeat suspects. |
| 3 | In hard mode, use legal guesses that place the confirmed letter in a new position while also testing at least one fresh consonant or vowel. |
Board-style situations that show how to use the pattern without guessing blindly.
| Board clue | What it teaches | Best next move |
|---|---|---|
| SLATE -> --G-Y, SLEEP -> GGG-- | One E clue may not be enough; a second E can explain the remaining shape. | Check SLEEP, SHEEP, STEEL, or LEVEL-style duplicates if unique candidates fail. |
| CRANE -> --Y--, CARRY -> GG--- | C and A can be fixed while R may need to appear twice. | Consider CARRY-style duplicate consonants before forcing a five-unique-letter answer. |
| STONE -> G---Y, STILL -> GG--G | S/T/L can form a frame where duplicate L or I changes the ending. | Test STILL, SKILL, or similar legal candidates based on the remaining grays. |
Use pattern recognition with candidate reduction, not instead of it.
A pattern page is most useful after you already have a few strong clues. If you are still early in the puzzle, broad information words from Best Starting Words or the Starting Word Analyzer usually matter more than chasing one shape. Once the board suggests Double letters, the goal changes: identify the family, avoid duplicate traps, and decide whether a direct answer or a splitter gives the highest chance of finishing cleanly.
For live solving, the Wordle 求解器 can filter green, yellow, and gray constraints. For finished games, Wordle 分析器 helps you review whether your pattern guess actually reduced the candidate pool. Pair both tools with Wordle Statistics and 今天的Wordle提示 when you want a broader solving workflow.
Move between similar pattern problems when your board points somewhere else.
Short answers for common questions about this topic.