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Entertainment

New York Times' 'Wordle' game to be turned into TV show

Agence France-Presse
New York Times' 'Wordle' game to be turned into TV show
(FILES) In this file illustration photo taken on January 11, 2022 a person plays online word game "Wordle" on a mobile phone in Washington, DC. The New York Times announced on January 31, 2022 that it had bought Wordle, a phenomenon played by millions just four months after the game burst onto the Internet, for an "undisclosed price in the low seven figures."
AFP / Stefani Reynolds

NEW YORK, United States — The New York Times' hit game "Wordle" is set to become a television show, the American newspaper announced on Monday.

"Wordle" gives players six chances to guess a random five-letter word, using green, yellow, and gray tiles to help them solve the puzzle.

The game show version, which will air on NBC next year, will see teams of players go head-to-head to win cash prizes.

It will be hosted by NBC news anchor Savannah Guthrie, who has recently been through a very public family tragedy, following the abduction of her elderly mother at the end of January.

"Wordle" was launched by software engineer Josh Wardle in 2021 and quickly grew in popularity. It was acquired by the Times in January 2022 and is now played daily by millions of people worldwide.

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"Wordle is so beloved by so many that we thought it was an interesting, creative opportunity to think about how it might work in in a game show," said Caitlin Roper, executive editorial director of film and TV at the Times.

The Times' CEO Meredith Kopit Levien added that the move "reflects our broader approach of creating experiences people return to and share every day."

The game show will be co-produced by the Times, NBC host Jimmy Fallon's company Electric Hot Dog, and Universal Television Alternative Studio.

The newspaper has previously co-produced television shows including "The Weekly" and "Modern Love."

Games with similar rules have previously featured on television shows, including "Lingo," which first aired in the United States in 1987.

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