Wordle Hints and Answer for June 1, 2026

The Wordle Review notes that today’s puzzle contains spoilers and advises players to solve Wordle first before reading further. It explains that Wordle is released at midnight in each player’s local time zone, and because of global time differences, two Wordle Review posts are published each day using Eastern Standard Time dating. Readers who open the wrong review are directed to check their puzzle number and use the archive page to find the correct review.
The page says the comments section is open for hints, scores, and conversation from the Wordle community. It also reports the day’s difficulty based on advance testing by paid puzzle solvers. According to those testers, today’s puzzle took an average of five guesses out of six, which the review classifies as very challenging. Players are invited to compare their own experience in the comments or review a more personalized solve analysis through Wordle Bot.
The review identifies the day’s featured artist as Chou Chia Yu, an artist from Tainan, Taiwan, now based in Tokyo, Japan. Chou works primarily as a graphic designer, creating magazine layouts and editorial materials during the week, and also works occasionally as an illustrator. The artist spotlight is presented as part of the Wordle Review’s regular featured content.
Additional links on the page point readers to the archive for past and future posts, with a note to refresh the page if the solved word differs from the featured word shown. The review also encourages conversation on social media using the hashtag #wordlereview. Readers are reminded to follow community guidelines, including being respectful in the comments, which are moderated for civility.
The page includes support and reference links for users who encounter technical issues, directing them to the Settings menu and the “Report a bug” option. It also points players to the Wordle Glossary for help with common terms and phrases used in discussion of the game. Separate forum links are provided for readers who want to talk about other New York Times word games, including Spelling Bee and Connections. The page ends with a prompt for users who want to return to the puzzle.






