Don't Wordle vs Antiwordle
Same Family, Different Trade-offs
Don't Wordle and Antiwordle are both reverse-format word puzzles, but they differ in three areas: how strict the legal-guess engine is, how Hard Mode is handled, and what counter is shown to the player. The table below summarises the key differences.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Don't Wordle UK | Antiwordle |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Avoid the hidden word in 6 rows | Avoid the hidden word in 6 rows |
| Legal-guess engine | Strict; tracks min/max counts per letter | Looser on letter-position reuse |
| Counter shown | Valid Words Remaining | Number of possible answers |
| Standard mode Undo | 5 Undos | No native Undo |
| Hard Mode | Reduces Undo from 5 to 2 | Streak-only mode |
| Daily puzzle | Yes, plus unlimited mode | Yes |
Goal and Clues
Both games keep the same green, yellow, and gray clues. Both use a hidden five-letter answer. The difference is what the clues mean for the rest of the round: Antiwordle tends to leave more room for improvisation, while Don't Wordle is closer to a hard-mode constraint engine.
Hard Mode
Hard Mode is the area where the two games differ most. Antiwordle's hard mode is essentially a streak-mode variant. Don't Wordle's hard mode changes the Undo budget from five to two, which keeps the same legal-guess engine but tightens the recovery cost for a bad guess. That makes Don't Wordle's hard mode more about decision pressure than streak tracking.
Difficulty Curve
If you have not played a reverse-format puzzle before, Antiwordle is the gentler introduction. If you are looking for a sharper challenge, Don't Wordle's strict legal-guess engine and Undo mechanic give it a steeper curve, especially once the Valid Words Remaining counter starts to drop. See our strategy guide for tips that apply to both.
Which One Should You Play?
If you want a casual reverse-format puzzle with a familiar feel, Antiwordle is a fine choice. If you want a tighter constraint engine, a clearer recovery mechanic, and a daily plus unlimited setup, Don't Wordle UK is the better fit. Both are valid. The difference is how sharp you want the board to feel.