Quick Answer: Redactle is a daily browser-based word puzzle game where you are shown a Wikipedia article with nearly every word blacked out. Your goal is to guess words one at a time to reveal them throughout the article — and figure out what article you’re reading in as few guesses as possible. It is free to play, requires no download, and a new puzzle is available every day. The current official version runs at redactle.net, operated by Ben Brady. The original version created by John Turner is no longer active.
Key Takeaways:
Redactle is a Wikipedia-based word puzzle game originally created by John Turner in 2022. The original site is no longer active, but the game lives on at redactle.net, now operated by Ben Brady with significantly expanded features.
The concept is simple and addictive: you are shown a full Wikipedia article where virtually every word has been replaced by a black rectangle (█████). Only punctuation, some common prepositions, and the occasional short word remain visible. You type guesses into a text box — one word at a time — and every occurrence of that word throughout the article is instantly revealed.
Your goal is to figure out the title (and subject) of the hidden Wikipedia article using as few guesses as possible. The fewer guesses you need, the better your score.
Redactle is most similar to Wordle — the five-letter daily word game — but substantially more complex. Where Wordle involves guessing a single five-letter word in six tries, Redactle involves identifying an entire Wikipedia topic from a full-length article that could span thousands of words. A typical Redactle puzzle takes 5–60+ minutes depending on difficulty.
1. Open the game Go to redactle.net in any browser. No download, no account required to start playing. Free accounts unlock stats tracking, multiplayer, and sync across devices.
2. Read the redacted article The screen shows a full Wikipedia article with most words replaced by black rectangles. Punctuation is mostly visible. Short function words (prepositions: “the,” “of,” “in,” “a,” “an,” “to,” etc.) are pre-revealed.
3. Type a guess Enter any word in the text box at the bottom of the screen and press Enter or the Guess button. Your guess must be a single word — multi-word phrases don’t work.
4. Watch words reveal If your guessed word appears anywhere in the article, every instance of it lights up simultaneously. You can see how many times the word appears across the full article. This reveals context — if “France” appears 47 times, you’re likely reading about a French topic.
5. Keep guessing until you identify the article Continue guessing relevant words. As more of the article reveals, context clues accumulate. Once you guess all words in the article’s title, the puzzle is solved and the complete article is revealed.
6. Check your stats After solving, you see your total guesses, hit count, accuracy percentage, and how your performance compares to other players who solved the same puzzle.
Redactle tracks performance through several metrics:
| Metric | What It Measures |
|---|---|
| Total guesses | How many words you guessed in total |
| Hits | Number of correct guesses (word found in article) |
| Misses | Guesses that don’t appear in the article |
| Accuracy % | Hits ÷ total guesses × 100 |
| Hints used | Pre-purchased hints that reveal a portion of the article |
Pre-revealed words don’t count. Common function words (prepositions, articles) are automatically revealed at the start and not tallied in your guess count — so guessing “the” or “of” won’t affect your score.
A good score is typically under 20–30 guesses for a moderately difficult article. Expert players sometimes solve puzzles in under 10 guesses. Very difficult articles can require 100+ guesses from skilled players.
1. Start with broad category words. Open with words like “war,” “country,” “city,” “king,” “president,” “football,” “artist,” “scientist.” These appear frequently in many article types and reveal whether you’re dealing with a person, place, event, or concept.
2. Look at what’s already revealed. The pre-revealed punctuation and function words show sentence structure. Long parenthetical sections (dates, coordinates) suggest a biographical or geographical article. Numbered references suggest an academic subject.
3. Guess plurals and verb forms separately. Redactle by default treats “city” and “cities” as different words. The Shift+Enter shortcut attempts auto-pluralization/singularization, which helps — but don’t assume both forms are covered by one guess.
4. Use article length and structure as a clue. Very long articles with many numbered sections often indicate major historical events, prominent people, or countries. Short articles usually cover specific objects, terms, or minor topics.
5. Watch word frequency. If a word appears 30+ times, it’s likely in or directly related to the article title. If “American” appears 50 times, the article is probably about an American person, place, or historical event.
6. Guess related proper nouns aggressively. Once you have a rough category (e.g., “this seems to be about World War II”), cascade through specific proper nouns: country names, person names, battle names, year numbers.
7. Don’t waste guesses on very common words. Words like “was,” “said,” “became,” and “known” are already revealed or appear so frequently they give minimal information.
8. Use the title structure. The article title is shown as a series of redacted words (e.g., “████ ████ ████”). Count the words and characters in the title. Three short words might suggest “Battle of ████” or “King of ████.” One long word suggests a named concept, person, or place.
9. Read revealed sentences holistically. As the article fills in, read full sentences rather than individual words. Sentence-level context is far more informative than counting individual word occurrences.
10. Enable “show letter counts on all words” in Settings. Seeing how many letters each blacked-out word contains dramatically improves pattern matching — a 12-letter word is far more guessable than a generic rectangle.
Redactle Unlimited is the mode that removes the daily single-puzzle restriction. Instead of waiting for tomorrow’s puzzle, you can play through the archive of previous puzzles, request random new articles, or create custom collections.
Unlimited mode is particularly popular with players who want to practice strategy without the daily constraint or who have already solved the day’s puzzle and want more. The archive includes all previous Daily puzzles, organized by date.
Redactle Junior is a variant designed for younger players or beginners who find standard Redactle too difficult. Key differences:
Junior mode is accessible from the same “New Game” menu as the standard daily game.
Redactle is frequently described as a harder, more complex version of Wordle. Here’s how they compare:
| Feature | Redactle | Wordle |
|---|---|---|
| Daily puzzle | Yes | Yes |
| Goal | Identify Wikipedia article title | Guess 5-letter word |
| Guesses allowed | Unlimited | 6 attempts |
| Time to solve | 5–60+ minutes | 2–5 minutes |
| Subject matter | Any Wikipedia topic | 5-letter English words |
| Difficulty | High (variable) | Medium (consistent) |
| Multiplayer | Yes (redactle.net) | No |
| Skill required | General knowledge + deduction | Vocabulary + pattern recognition |
The core difference: Wordle is about vocabulary and letter placement. Redactle is about general knowledge, deduction, and systematic word association. Both reward consistent daily play — Wordle through word pattern familiarity, Redactle through improved Wikipedia topic knowledge.
Redactle was created by John Turner and launched in 2022 during the explosion of daily puzzle games that followed Wordle’s viral success in 2021–2022. The original site drew significant traffic — players appreciated the more demanding, knowledge-based challenge compared to simpler five-letter word games.
In 2023–2024, the original Redactle domain became inactive. The game now runs at redactle.net, operated by Ben Brady, who has substantially expanded the platform with multiplayer features, device sync, league tables, curated puzzle collections, and localization into 10 languages including Italian, Turkish, Hebrew, and Arabic.
Redactle.net is not affiliated with Wikipedia or the Wikimedia Foundation. Wikipedia trademarks and content remain the property of their respective owners.
BCR does not publish daily Redactle answers — doing so would spoil the puzzle experience for all players. For hints without full spoilers:
For past puzzle answers (not today’s), the Redactle archive at redactle.anybrowser.org maintains a historical record of previous puzzles.
Redactle was originally created by John Turner, a developer who built the game in 2022 as part of the wave of Wordle-inspired daily puzzle games. The original site is no longer maintained.
The current official version at redactle.net is operated by Ben Brady, who rebuilt the platform with expanded features including multiplayer, device sync, curated article collections, difficulty ratings, league tables, Weekly Collections (a new curated collection drops every Tuesday), and Redactle Junior.
The Redactle.anybrowser.org version (operated by a third party) serves as a mirror with some additional technical features for users who prefer it, including the full puzzle archive.


