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Wordfeud Helper

Type your seven Wordfeud tiles (plus any blanks) and see every valid English word, ranked by letter score. Wordfeud English uses the same letter values as Scrabble, so the point column matches the game directly.

Look for bingos (all seven tiles used, +40 in Wordfeud) and plays that hit the game's randomised premium squares. Because premium tiles shuffle per game, remember to check your board — a "great play" on a Scrabble grid may not sit on any premium in this Wordfeud match.

Enter your seven tiles. ? = blank (up to three). Scores shown match Wordfeud English.

Options — narrow results
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Wordfeud in one paragraph

Wordfeud is a Scrabble-clone smartphone app that launched in 2010 and became a runaway hit in Scandinavia. It's asynchronous (each player takes turns whenever they like), plays on a 15x15 board with the same tile bag and letter values as Scrabble, and offers randomised board layouts so premium squares aren't always in the standard spots. The core skill overlaps almost completely with tournament Scrabble.

Randomised boards — the strategic twist

Wordfeud shuffles the position of double- and triple-letter and word squares at the start of every game. That kills a lot of Scrabble memorisation ("the K spot on square G7") because in Wordfeud the K spot changes every match. Instead:

  • Always scan for the nearest TW. Triple-word squares can appear anywhere; a play covering one is worth 3x its face value.
  • Watch for TL clusters. Wordfeud's random layouts sometimes create clusters of premium letter tiles — a single JQXZ tile on a TL is huge.
  • Don't open premium squares. If your play exposes a TW to an unknown-rack opponent, expect a 60-point counter.

Asynchronous-game etiquette and strategy

Because turns can be hours or days apart, Wordfeud rewards patience and planning:

  • Write down your rack. Between sessions, note the tiles you're holding so you don't waste a five-minute break re-reading the board.
  • Bingo hunting. With unlimited think time, spend an extra minute checking for a seven-letter play. Wordfeud players routinely find bingos that speed-Scrabble misses.
  • Endgame arithmetic. The last few racks are pure counting. Track which tiles are left in the bag (visible in Wordfeud) and calculate your opponent's likely rack.

Wordfeud English dictionary notes

Wordfeud English uses the SOWPODS/Collins lexicon by default, which is the same list UK, European and world Scrabble tournaments use. That means a lot of Collins-only two- and three-letter words are valid here: EW, OB, ZO, ZA, TE, KO, NA, DA, OD, PO, YU, ZOEA, XU.

For the same rack under Words With Friends rules (different dictionary and letter values), see the Words With Friends cheat.

Related

FAQs

Which Wordfeud dictionary does this match?

Wordfeud supports several regional dictionaries — English (SOWPODS/Collins), TWL, Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, Dutch, French, Spanish. This helper uses the English lexicon and covers both Collins and TWL for the most part.

How is Wordfeud different from Scrabble?

Wordfeud uses the same 15x15 board with the same premium-square layout as Scrabble. The main differences are that boards are randomised (premium squares are shuffled per game) and it's asynchronous — turns can be hours or days apart.

Do the point values match Wordfeud?

Wordfeud uses standard Scrabble letter values for the English game, so the Scrabble® scores shown match Wordfeud English exactly.

What's the bingo bonus in Wordfeud?

40 points — between Scrabble's 50 and WWF's 35. Playing all seven tiles in a turn is called a 'bingo' or 'seven-letter play'.

Can I paste multiple constraints?

Yes — use starts-with, ends-with, contains, and length together. If a board play must go through an existing letter K in position 3, use contains=K plus length to narrow.