Connect the words through the links
Each puzzle is a chain of six words connected by five links. A link describes how one word relates to the next — for example, “rhymes with” or “is an anagram of”.
The links are given in a set order, with empty slots where the words should go. The word bank contains the six correct answers plus a few decoys. Each word can only be used once.
Drag words from the bank into the slots, or drag them back out to return them to the bank. You can also tap a word then a slot to place it and you can tap a filled slot to remove its word. When every slot is filled, submit your answer. The puzzle is solved when your chain satisfies every link.
Sign in to record your time on the daily leaderboard. Fastest first correct solve wins the day.
An Anagram is a word that uses the exact same letters as another in a different order. ("Spot", "Stop" and "Pots" are anagrams of eachother)
A Synonym is a word that essentially means the same thing as another word ("Damp" and "Wet" are synonyms)
A Homophone is a word that sounds the same as another word ("Site" and "Sight" are Homophones)
I do not count Homophones as Rhyming ("knight" doesn't rhyme with "night")
The rules that involve changing single letters, require the other letters to stay in the same positions. So "Cat" to "Cart" can be linked by "add one letter". But "Rat" to "Arty" isn't valid, as you'd need to rearrange the letters as well as add one.
The "can make a word by adding" rule, means that you can take the first word, add the second word and it will create another word. For example: "Light" can make a word by adding "House" (they'd make Lighthouse)
The "is in the same category as" rule is very subjective, but you'll understand it when you see it. I mean that the words are easily grouped together, such as "Dog" and "Cat" are both pets.
The "is the same colour as" rule only includes things that are very clearly, or traditionally, one colour. It also doesn't include colour-names themselves, only two things that are the same colour. So "Paper" is the same colour as "Snow", but "Paper" isn't the same colour as "White"