Top 25 Yu-Gi-Oh Cards That Defined the Playground Meta

If your first time playing Yu-Gi-Oh was at a local card shop surrounded by twitchy pro players and the sweet fumes of so much cardboard, turn back now. This list is not for you. This list is for those who sit, right now, in the grass, mulch, and dirt, on the steps of plastic slides and at scalding hot steel picnic tables, cards in hand, blissfully ignoring the basic rules and strategies of Yu-Gi-Oh. That’s right, I’m talking about the playground meta.

In the same way a newly hatched turtle knows instinctively to crawl toward the ocean, nascent Yu-Gi-Oh players are compelled to gather their precious, janky first decks at the playground, school bus, or cafeteria. It is a safe space, free from netdecking, from end boards of omni-negates, and from binders loaded with actually decent, tradeable cards and not just page after page of chaff. In playground Yu-Gi-Oh, there was no ban list. Rule disputes were decided by whoever sounded more confident. Everything was playable. Venom was playable. Aliens were playable. Cloudians were playable – and could even be a meta threat if your opponent was playing a 60-card Hail Mary deck of every Yu-Gi-Oh card they owned. It was, put simply, a different, arguably better time.

Today, I’ll be ranking the top 25 cards that defined the playground meta of our childhoods.

#25: Solar Flare Dragon(s)

Starting off our list of playground powerhouses, we have one of the nastiest combo cards to ever hit the mulch: Solar Flare Dragon. A Level 4 Pyro-type monster that burns your opponent for 500 at the end of your turn, Solar Flare Dragon is a decent beast to throw out for some free damage, and its 1500 ATK is nothing to scoff at during a time when your opponent could very well be running something like Cyber Falcon or Bean Soldier for reasons known only to God. The real trouble comes when you or your opponent manages to play a second Solar Flare Dragon, as both say they can’t be attacked if you control another Pyro monster.

That’s right: it’s baby’s first Wattlock, and it’ll burn you for 1000 life points every turn until you are as toasty as a metal slide in the summer.

#24: Mr. Volcano

Mr. Volcano is on this list less for his actual presence in our early Yu-Gi-Oh games and more for what he represents: god-awful normal monsters that we played because they look cool and we liked them. Mr. Volcano is iconic in my mind, and for prehistoric Yu-Gi-Oh, he’s not even half-bad for a Level 5 monster. Plus, his art is dope, and at a young age the art was half the reason to play a card. See also: Launcher Spider.

#23: Dian Keto the Cure Master

Umm free life points? Are you kidding me? Run ‘em at three, baby!

#22: Scrap-Iron Scarecrow

This one is a little after my time, but Scrap-Iron Scarecrow was apparently meta-defining for playground duelists. If you were lucky, you had maybe one Mirror Force in your deck, which left room for a stew of lesser battle traps like Negate Attack, Draining Shield, and even Fairy Box. Part of what set Scrap-Iron Scarecrow above the rest however was its ability to set itself again instead of being sent to the graveyard. You know what that means: infinite battle traps during your opponent’s turn. If anyone tried to point out that the first rule of trap cards is they can’t be activated the same turn they’re set, you could just tell them you saw Duncan using it that way, and Duncan has the shiniest Cosmo Queen this school has ever seen.

#21: Nightmare Wheel

Nightmare Wheel, along with ‘burn-a-turn’ cards like Mask of Dispel and Mask of the Accursed, was devastating on grade-school decks for one simple reason: no one would play backrow removal to save their life. Not that it wasn’t available, mind you; early starter decks were packing actual meta threats like Heavy Storm and Giant Trunade, and Dust Tornado has been around since the dawn of time. It’s just no one played them, OR they had exactly one copy of MST they would transfer from deck to deck like a lucky rabbit’s foot. You just had to pray you didn’t end up getting hit with one of these and dying the world’s slowest death at 500 life points a turn.

#20: Mystical Space Typhoon

Speaking of backrow removal, at #20 we have the legendary Mystical Space Typhoon. Now, I know what you’re thinking: MST was a staple card in nearly every competitive Yu-Gi-Oh deck for more than a decade after its release. Well, it happened to be integral to the recess meta too, especially once you grew up a little and started facing decks that weren’t just 60-card vanilla beatdowns. MST was actually better in playground format since along with removal, it could also negate, and to anyone who claims otherwise, I ask you: how can the effect of the card I just destroyed still go off? Is it a graveyard effect? No? Then shut up.

#19: Space Mambo, Neo the Magic Swordsman, Battle Ox, Darkfire Soldier #1, Darkfire Soldier #2, Warrior Dai Grepher, Plus Any and Every Other 1700 Beater We Could Find

While pro players were lusting after tournament packs for a chance to glimpse Mechanicalchaser’s unprecedented 1850 ATK, we were stuffing our decks with 1700 beaters of every shape and size. It was a strange time, as if for a period of a few years everyone’s only 1800 ATK monster was 7 Colored Fish– a Level 4 boss monster to be feared, capable of turning the tide on its own. Still, the rest of your deck needs to be filled with something, and if it wasn’t awful Ritual monsters or a single, useless copy of Polymerization, it was more vanilla beaters.

#18: Share the Pain

Share the Pain is an amazing card for the playground, on account of it not specifying that the first monster tributed needs to be your own. When you’re eight years old and overconfident about the rules of Yu-Gi-Oh, you 100% could and would get away with using this Spell to make your opponent tribute two monsters, and you’d do it again. “Share the Pain” my ass, I attack with 7 Colored Fish for game.

#17: Convulsion of Nature

To be clear, this card was not good. Did it have its niche uses? Maybe. Would you splash it into every deck because its effect was so weird? Absolutely. You were the coolest kid in the cafeteria if you were the first one to show your friends Convulsion of Nature in action: like the first pro player who built a deck that could use Arcana Force XXI – The World’s turn skip effect, except the payoff here was that you got to do something even more fun than winning a Yu-Gi-Oh duel: flipping your decks upside down and playing like nothing had changed.

#16: Infinite Cards

Assuming you don’t read it, Infinite Cards lets you draw your entire deck, which is such a busted effect I’m surprised Konami didn’t ban the card. Everyone argues about whether Maxx “C” is healthy for the game, but a Spell that lets you go +infinite in card advantage is okay? Truly, I don’t understand modern Yu-Gi-Oh players.

#15: Marshmallon

Okay, now we’re getting into some seriously nasty cards. If you played Marshmallon on school grounds, your deck was borderline toxic. The moment he hit the asphalt nothing could get rid of this guy. A thoughtful player might have one or two good cards for monster removal among all the other jank, but it was a 50-50 as to whether you already wasted your Fissure or Dark Hole on something else. Marshmallon is infinitely better than Spirit Reaper (which saw actual meta play) because you took 1000 damage (that’s a whole Dian Keto right there) just for crashing into it the first time, and then all you could do was stare at that taunting, silly smile for the rest of the duel… or until the teacher pulled you aside because you were being too loud in the library.

#14: Exodia

Look, if you were lucky enough to have all the pieces, you played all the pieces. Those were the rules. Not to mention properly shuffling your cards was something of a learned art, so chances were good Exodia was just chilling in your deck all stacked up, like the little man in the jack-in-a-box waiting to be freed.

#13: Megamorph

Everyone remembers their ultimate Equip card, their ace in the hole. No, not Axe of Despair: Megamorph. I’m sorry, double the attack of a monster? Konami, do you know what that means in a deck full of 1700 beaters? We’re talking a 3400 ATK Space Mambo that beats over Blue-Eyes without thinking twice. Sure, it came with the caveat that your life points had to be lower than your opponent’s, but that never actually came up because you were always losing anyway.

#12: Insect Barrier + DNA Surgery

You bastard. Screw you.

#11: Final Countdown

Yu-Gi-Oh games these days don’t usually last for more than three turns. The same could not be said in the golden days of our youth, where decking out happened more than you’d think, even when playing with only 4000 life points. Final Countdown, a card that lets you win in a measly 20 turns, will never, ever go off in a modern game (as long as Mystic Mine stays on the ban list where it belongs), but it promised salvation down in the mulch if you could just hold out a little longer.

#10: Great Maju Garzett

What did I say about doubling a monster’s attack? Great Maju Garzett gets attack equal to twice that of the tributed monster, meaning not only could he turn your Darkfire Soldier #1 into Darkfire Soldier #Won, he could become the supersized version of any boss monster you had in play. A classic case of sick art, sicker effect, and beloved among children everywhere.

#9: Raging Flame Sprite

As soon as Raging Flame Sprite hits the cheap, heavily-creased paper playmat, you have one of two options: kill it immediately, or die to it in two turns. This unassuming 100 ATK Pyro monster can attack directly, a non-issue if it didn’t also gain 1000 ATK every time it did so. That is insane. Pair it with something like Swords of Revealing Light, and it’s an instant win. Competitive Yu-Gi-Oh had the ban list, while playground Yu-Gi-Oh had “We have all come together and decided you cannot play Raging Flame Sprite anymore, Duncan.”

#8: Dark Master

Either you played this obviously fake Yu-Gi-Oh card thinking (hoping) it was real, or you were the one who had to break your best friend’s heart and tell them the packs their dad brought back on his trip to Germany were all fake. Maybe you took pity and let them play the fakes anyway, or you were the one pitied. It didn’t matter much either way since Dark Master is pretty terrible, even with his attack stat of “limitless offensire force”, but his near-ubiquitous presence on the playground justifies a high spot on this list.

#7: Mechanical Hound

Along with its decent stat-line, Mechanical Hound has the ability to completely lock your opponent out of activating Spells while you have no cards in your hand. Now, read that again. Really think about that condition, “while you have no cards in your hand”. Let your brain momentarily walk the neural pathways my 3rd grader brain walked, and you’ll begin to see how Mechanical Hound was ripe for abuse. That’s right, its effect is always active if you just put your cards on the table and play with “no cards in your hand”. A loophole so evil it’s brilliant. To be fair, this is exactly the kind of nonsense Yugi would pull.

#6: The Egyptian God Cards

I haven’t the slightest idea where people were getting these enticingly-colored Yu-Gi-Oh legends from, but as I grew older, seeing the Egyptian God cards in their original blue, red, and yellow backs in binders became a common experience. Sometimes they were even played, and you can bet your Jinzo they had every last busted effect from the anime you could remember.

#5: Prohibition

Under the right circumstances, Prohibition was the ideal floodgate against that one extremely annoying or busted card your opponent insisted on using in all their decks. Perhaps it was one of the cards on this list. As long as you had tasted defeat at the hands of that card before, Prohibition could nip it in the bud for your next game. Bye-bye, Raging Flame Sprite.

#4: The Fiend Megacyber

This card goes so hard. I remember just staring in awe when I first encountered it. The art is so distinct and flashy, even for a Yu-Gi-Oh card. In a format blissfully short on cards that special summoned, The Fiend Megacyber was practically Cyber Dragon, three whole years before that card would release. Forgive me for getting a little personal, but my journalistic integrity compels me to disclose that I love him very much.

#3: Patrician of Darkness

I wonder if the person at Konami who wrote the words “You choose the attack targets for your opponent’s attacks” knew what they were doing. They must have known how we would interpret this effect, right? Patrician of Darkness was a total playground staple, through and through. It single-handedly ended games and probably friendships. Reader, I ask you, what constitutes a valid attack target for your opponent’s attacks? Your monsters? Their monsters? Their life points? The moon? It was the Wild West playing this card back in the day, and Patrician was how the West was won.

#2: Tip Card

I was never sure what these did but there were an awful lot of kids playing them.

#1: Exchange

Exchange is possibly the worst card used for the greatest evil in Yu-Gi-Oh. It seems mundane at first. Oof, you got me! Alright, take a card from my hand, I guess I’ll take your Bean Soldier since it’s the only card you’ve got. Damn haha, you took my Jinzo! You summon Jinzo, attack for game? I don’t have a quick-play Spell so gg I guess, you win. Hey, where are you going? Duncan, you still have my Jinzo. Duncan, stop. No. No, that can’t be how it works. Right? You don’t get to keep the cards you exchange. Yeah haha, I guess you would know better Duncan, you have that shiny Cosmo Queen. Haha. Can I have my Jinzo back though? This is actually my big brother’s deck.

Duncan? Duncan? Can I please have my Jinzo. Duncan?

Can I please have my Jinzo?

Gamer Visiting London Blocks out Whole Day for Vicar Amelia Fight

LONDON — Visiting Gamer Timothy Stevenson has reportedly blocked out an entire day from his London vacation schedule in order to fight Vicar Amelia, a high-ranking member of the Healing Church who possesses the gold pendant of church founder Laurence.

“Fighting Amelia was the number-one thing I wanted to experience while here. In the game it took me about five hours to beat her, so I knew I’d probably need a full day, just in case,” said Stevenson. “I made sure to come prepared. My checked luggage is completely full with fire paper and blood vials. Unfortunately customs confiscated my saw spear, but I’m hoping I can find another one of those around here somewhere.”

Stevenson then explained just how different London was from how he imagined it.

“FromSoft definitely took some creative liberties when making the game. I haven’t seen any bonfires this whole time, though that may be because I’ve only been out during the day. There are also a lot fewer people carrying pitchforks and torches than I thought there would be,” Stevenson said, adjusting his tricorn hat. “Not everything is different, though. Everyone is calling me an outsider and saying I don’t belong here, which is just like in the game. The atmosphere is just as depressing, as well.”

Emily Beckins, a friend of Stevenson who accompanied him on the trip, gave her thoughts on the situation.

“I think he’s going to try to fight whoever is in charge of St. Paul’s Cathedral. He said we’re going there tomorrow and that I should bring my camera to ‘document him slaughtering his prey,’ whatever that means,” said Beckins. “I asked him if we could just do something normal like go to Westminster but he insisted that he needed to do this if we wanted to go to Hemwick. That’s not a borough I’ve ever heard of, but he seems to know more about the city than I do.”

At press time, Stevenson was seen circling around a member of the King’s Guard, fishing for an opportunity to perform a backstab.

Wordle Today – Answer And Hint For #937 January 12, 2024

Wordle can be an unforgiving puzzle sometimes, and you can often come so close to ending a long winning streak. So, for your convenience, here are some hints as well as the answer for the Wordle today Jan 12.

We present Wordle clues here in a variety of ways to gently help you along, but if you just want the answer straight, spoilers be damned,  then scroll all the way down to the section titled Today’s Wordle Answer.

 

Already Jan 13 at your location? Try our Wordle answer page for that day instead!

 

Wordle Hint Today 937 January 12, 2024

Wordle Hint Today
Today’s Wordle Hint

Here’s a hint with the meaning of today’s Wordle answer

 

A noun that refers to a path or course taken to reach a particular destination.

A verb that means to send or direct something along a particular path or course.

 

 

Wordle Hint Today Fifth Letter

The fifth letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“E”

 

 

Wordle Hint Today Fourth Letter

The fourth letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“T”

 

 

Wordle Hint Today Third Letter

The third letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“U”

 

 

Wordle Hint Today Second Letter

The second letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“O”

 

 

Wordle Hint Today First Letter

The first letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“R”

 

 

Today’s Wordle Answer

And finally, here is the Wordle answer today. While this is your last chance to turn back, don’t feel bad about having to look it up.

Sometimes you have just one last chance to solve the puzzle, but three different letters that could viably fit into that last remaining square. At other times the word is so obscure, you just would not have gotten it without having in-depth knowledge about some oddly specific subject.

That’s no reason to lose a streak you have kept going for 690 days straight! So here goes nothing:

 

3…

 

 

2…

 

 

1…

 

 

The Wordle answer today is “ROUTE”

 

 

Previous Wordle Answers With Their Definitions

Wordle Today – Answer And Hint For #936 January 11, 2024

 

Wordle #935 For January 10, 2024

THREW

The action of propelling something through the air with force, usually by hand; past tense.

 

Wordle #934 For January 9, 2024

LINER

A cosmetic applied around the eyes to enhance their appearance.

 

Wordle #933 For January 8, 2024

FINAL

An adjective that refers to the last, concluding, or ultimate stage of a process, event, or sequence.

 

Wordle #932 For January 7, 2024

STONY

An adjective that describes something that is hard, firm, or has the appearance or qualities of stone.

 

Wordle #931 For January 6, 2024

CABLE

A thick insulated wire, often consisting of multiple conductors, used for transmitting electrical power or signals.

 

Wordle #930 For January 5, 2024

LUNGE

A sudden forward movement used for attack or strategic positioning.

 

Wordle #929 For January 4, 2024

SCANT

An adjective that describes something that is limited, insufficient, or barely enough in quantity, degree, or extent.

 

Wordle #928 For January 3, 2024

TWIRL

The action of rotating or spinning something around its axis or in a circular motion.

 

Wordle #927 For January 2, 2024

AGING

The process of getting older, typically associated with the passage of time.

 

Wordle #926 For January 1, 2024

MURAL

A large-scale artwork or painting that is created directly on a wall, ceiling, or other permanent surface.

 

Wordle #925 For December 31, 2023

SALTY

A taste sensation associated with the presence of salt.

 

Wordle #924 For December 30, 2023

THREE

The numerical representation of the quantity 3.

New Smosh Games Video Just 10 Minutes of People Trying to Look Surprised for Thumbnail

According to a investigation of recent uploads on the Smosh Games Channel, it seems the cast has thrown out all attempts to actually play or discuss a game and have opted to simply make surprised faces and hope one or two of them are good enough for a YouTube thumbnail.

“I saw my name on the call sheet but didn’t see any sort of description on what we were doing today,” said Damien Haas, long time Smosh cast member, “when I got there though they just told me to look shocked as if something crazy had just happened. I was a little confused at first, which I guess they saw on my face. They told me that look was good but not quite expressive enough.”

Although Smosh and many other YouTube channels have used a sort of thumbnail format where one person looks shocked while another person is either an attractive woman or just straight up a picture of boobs, this is sort of a whole new tactic on its own.

“We’re just really trying to streamline our process,” said Anthony Padilla, “When I decided to buy back the company with Ian, this was on our new big ideas to help make the brand more profitable. You see by just making the whole video about us getting the thumbnail we’ve eliminated all the hard work of coming up with an actual idea for the video. If the thumbnail looks outrageous and silly enough people will just click on it regardless. Why waste time being creative or funny anymore.”

Padilla, who recently bought back the company with his estranged partner Ian Hecox, was seen stretching out his jaw after spending the day rehearsing for new videos by opening his mouth all the way and raising his eyebrows for hours.

“Honestly I’m a little disappointed in the content change,” commented Shayne Topp, “I really felt like we’ve been making some of our best, most inspired content lately. People don’t understand the craft that goes into scrolling reddit for a good AITA post and then having 3 people talk about them for an hour.”

Hard Drive reached out to Ian Hecox for comment but he just kept looking at us like we’d just stepped on his foot.

8-Hour Video Essay Gives Brief Synopsis Of 2-Hour Movie

NEWCASTLE – Dan Harris, a film buff youtuber has made an in depth video essay about 2023’s Barbie movie, however he’s decided to spend very little time focusing on the actual film.

“I just didn’t have the time to go through the plot of the movie itself,“ pontificated Harris, in an interview we had to massively abridge. “The plot itself is moreso a facade that you have to get through to really understand the director’s intent. If you don’t have the hours of homework done beforehand, it may as well be like watching blind. Also, if I included another second of the movie, Youtube would’ve copyright struck me to hell and back.”

The attention to detail of the video combined with its lack of attention to the film have caused quite a reaction within Harris’s fanbase.

“Watching a movie can be such a hassle, you have to really sink two whole hours of your time into it,” explained Quinton Gibson, who has watched the essay twice. “With a video essay like this though, I can just put it on while I lay in bed and not break a sweat. Then when all my friends are talking about the movie, I can basically say the essay’s talking points word for word and everyone will think I’m smart! Maybe I can even make my own video saying those same talking points and get a deal with Nebula..”

Greta Gerwig, who directed the mostly inconsequential movie, finds the video to be a breath of fresh air.

“Finally, someone who’s a fan of my work who actually gets it,” remarked Gerwig. “How did it take so long for someone to recognize the subliminal messages about Barbie’s role in ending the Cold War? Even Ryan Gosling didn’t understand his casting as a representation of toxic masculinity was a commentary on his reputation on the internet! Whatever billionaires of dollars the movie made at this point doesn’t even matter to me. I’d rather make a measly profit on google adsense if it meant people actually understood my vision! My next movie is canceled – I will instead put out an explanation to what its themes would have been on YouTube.”

At press time, Harris’s video was considered a disappointment for his channel as it seems most of his fans who were interested in Barbie simply watched a 10 hour reaction of his video instead.

Star Citizen to Begin Offering Reverse Mortgages

LOS ANGELES – Cloud Imperium Games, makers of Star Citizen, have announced a new reverse mortgage program in conjunction with their new $48,000 Ship Bundle.

“We knew there would be a segment of our fans who would love to take advantage of our new ship bundle, but might not have the capital available to do so. Which is why we are proud to announce our new reverse mortgage program,” said company spokesperson Charlie Cooper. “The beauty of reverse mortgages is they require no repayment until the resident dies, sells their house, or does not live there for more than 12 months. It’s an incredible value that I think a lot of our players will take advantage of.”

Chad Hudson, a longtime supporter and fan of the game which has been in development since 2010, missed every deadline along the way, and has raised more money than the GDP of some countries, spoke to Hard Drive about the new program.

“I was one of the first people to sign up,” Hudson said, “It’s so generous of them to offer this program to those of us who could only afford to spend $10,000 up to this point. And the best part is I never have to worry about repaying it. I don’t plan on moving, and once I’m gone they can just have the house.”

When asked how his children might feel about their familial home being surrendered to a game developer after his death, Hudson said, “My kids will get the spaceships that the reverse mortgage paid for, which seems like a much better inheritance than a house on a multi-acre lot.”

Jim Cramer, noted financial analyst and host of Mad Money, offered his own input on the new program.

“I’m very bullish on this new program,” the former hedge manager said. “Letting people borrow against their home to purchase digital goods that will only appreciate in value is a no brainer. You’d be a fool to not take advantage of this program.” When asked about Cloud Imperium Games in general, Cramer added, “It takes a really special company to raise the level of funds Cloud Imperium has without releasing any kind of finished product. Every executive I’ve ever met would kill to have that kind of blind faith from their audience.”

At press time, Chad Hudson had died following a massive heart attack, and a group of Cloud Imperium interns was seen loading his possessions into a U-Haul van.

New Star Citizen DLC Only Costs Customers One 30 Minute Video Crawling Around Oinking Like Filthy Little Pay Pigs They Are

Gamers eagerly awaiting release of the forever-in-development space sim ‘Star Citizen’ will be happy to hear they can now own every ship, mod, and upgrade in the “upcoming” game by purchasing the “Legatus 2953” package, available at the cost of $48,000 and your last shred of dignity.

“You have to be a member of the Chairman’s Club first,” said Mason Foster, a devoted Star Citizen fan in charge of banning anyone from the subreddit who questions the developers. “That means you have to spend over $1,000 before you can even think about buying it, which I have. My grandma died and left me a big inheritance. My wife thinks I should’ve paid off our mortgage or started a college fund for our infant daughter, but this is the surer bet. I’m not worried. She’ll see. When the game comes out and blows everyone away, then she’ll see.”

Despite over a decade of development and $700 million in crowdfunded dollars, Star Citizen has yet to have an actual release date. Oddly, this has not kept Star Citizen from amassing a rather sizable following of loyal fans, eager to defend the game from any and all criticism.

“Our elite space-faring high rollers can experience the ultimate Star Citizen experience by buying this DLC that is priced similar to a mid-sized sedan,” said Chris Roberts, the director of Star Citizen, atop a human-furniture throne of supporters. “Inside the office we call these guys the Space Juggalos. We have a little clown nose honking noise that goes off whenever anyone buys a ship and we just laugh.”

According to reports, the “Legatus 2953” Package DLC cannot be purchased with just a credit card. Customers must also upload a 30 minute video of themselves crawling around on all fours and oinking like the filthy little pay pigs they are.

“Oink, oink,” said Foster, reenacting his video despite his crying wife repeatedly asking him to stop. “Sweeee!”

Wordle Today – Answer And Hint For #936 January 11, 2024

Wordle can be an unforgiving puzzle sometimes, and you can often come so close to ending a long winning streak. So, for your convenience, here are some hints as well as the answer for the Wordle today Jan 11.

We present Wordle clues here in a variety of ways to gently help you along, but if you just want the answer straight, spoilers be damned,  then scroll all the way down to the section titled Today’s Wordle Answer.

Already Jan 12 at your location? Try our Wordle answer page for that day instead!

 

Wordle Hint Today 936 January 11, 2024

Wordle Hint Today
Today’s Wordle Hint

Here’s a hint with the meaning of today’s Wordle answer

 

An adjective that means lasting for a short duration, being concise, or not taking a long time.

A noun that means a concise written or oral statement that summarizes the main points or arguments of a case, document, or presentation.

 

 

Wordle Hint Today Fifth Letter

The fifth letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“F”

 

 

Wordle Hint Today Fourth Letter

The fourth letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“E”

 

 

Wordle Hint Today Third Letter

The third letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“I”

 

 

Wordle Hint Today Second Letter

The second letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“R”

 

 

Wordle Hint Today First Letter

The first letter for the Wordle answer today is:

 

“B”

 

 

Today’s Wordle Answer

And finally, here is the Wordle answer today. While this is your last chance to turn back, don’t feel bad about having to look it up.

Sometimes you have just one last chance to solve the puzzle, but three different letters that could viably fit into that last remaining square. At other times the word is so obscure, you just would not have gotten it without having in-depth knowledge about some oddly specific subject.

That’s no reason to lose a streak you have kept going for 400 days straight! So here goes nothing:

 

3…

 

 

2…

 

 

1…

 

 

The Wordle answer today is “BRIEF”

 

 

Previous Wordle Answers With Their Definitions

Wordle Today – Answer And Hint For #935 January 10, 2024

 

Wordle #934 For January 9, 2024

LINER

A cosmetic applied around the eyes to enhance their appearance.

 

Wordle #933 For January 8, 2024

FINAL

An adjective that refers to the last, concluding, or ultimate stage of a process, event, or sequence.

 

Wordle #932 For January 7, 2024

STONY

An adjective that describes something that is hard, firm, or has the appearance or qualities of stone.

 

Wordle #931 For January 6, 2024

CABLE

A thick insulated wire, often consisting of multiple conductors, used for transmitting electrical power or signals.

 

Wordle #930 For January 5, 2024

LUNGE

A sudden forward movement used for attack or strategic positioning.

 

Wordle #929 For January 4, 2024

SCANT

An adjective that describes something that is limited, insufficient, or barely enough in quantity, degree, or extent.

 

Wordle #928 For January 3, 2024

TWIRL

The action of rotating or spinning something around its axis or in a circular motion.

 

Wordle #927 For January 2, 2024

AGING

The process of getting older, typically associated with the passage of time.

 

Wordle #926 For January 1, 2024

MURAL

A large-scale artwork or painting that is created directly on a wall, ceiling, or other permanent surface.

 

Wordle #925 For December 31, 2023

SALTY

A taste sensation associated with the presence of salt.

 

Wordle #924 For December 30, 2023

THREE

The numerical representation of the quantity 3.

‘Madame Web’ Wardrobe to Be Provided by Spirit Halloween

EGG HARBOR TOWNSHIP, N.J. — Seasonal retailer Spirit Halloween recently announced that they provided all costumes and wardrobe for Sony Pictures’ upcoming superhero film, Madame Web.

“We can’t put into words how excited we at Spirit Halloween are for this partnership,” said Adriana Compton, a spokesperson for the costume retailer. “It’s a form of product integration that we’ve previously only dreamed about. Sure, we’ve licensed the likenesses and images of superheroes and produced imitations before, but it always gets bogged down in red tape. Our experience with Madame Web was much more efficient. We designed the outfits, sent the patterns to our tailors overseas who made a million units of each one, and mailed a box with a couple dozen costumes to the set. We make sure to pack a few extra for when— I mean, if they rip. The rest sit in our warehouses until October.”

Dakota Johnson, who portrays the titular Web, commented on the experience.

“I certainly have some experience with unique wardrobe situations,” said Johnson, referring to her turn in the Fifty Shades franchise. “I definitely wasn’t sure about the costume during the fittings, or even when we were shooting. The strings down the back that tied it shut were always swinging around and distracting me. Plus, on cold nights, they made us all wear coats over our costumes. I didn’t know how it would look on camera. But when I got that first glimpse of the full bodysuit on that bottle of Ocean Spray from China, I knew the producers had made the right call.”

Film historian and Oscar voter Daniel Moses related the story to other films that used unique production vendors.

“Well, sci-fi works have been using literal toys as props for years,” said Moses. “‘Star Wars,’ ‘Star Trek,’ ‘Doctor Who,’ and a bunch of others. When you’re watching an episode of ‘The Mandalorian,’ only about five percent of that is real, live action footage. The rest is just toys. If you look closely, you can see the hands bashing them together. I mean, that’s the point of the show — that’s what they’re trying to sell. Why wouldn’t they put the toys front and center?”

At press time, Spirit had entered a bidding war with Party City for the contract to dress Sony’s next Spider-man adjacent production, Kraven the Hunter.

Mad Genius Astrophysicist Uses Godlike Power of Gravity Manipulation to Mostly Throw Rocks

GIBRALTAR — Sources from within Overwatch and Talon have reported that genius astrophysicist and tank hero Siebren de Kuiper, better known as Sigma, has been utilizing his godlike powers of gravity manipulation mostly to throw big rocks over and over.

“I can’t help but feel like he isn’t using his powers to their fullest potential,” said Overwatch member Winston. “He has the ability to literally manipulate gravity. He could reverse gravity and send us all flying off into space. He could increase my gravity density and turn me into a black hole that will swallow up and spaghettify all life on Earth. The possibilities are endless, yet he seems content to simply gather up a bunch of rocks into one big rock and throw it at my face.

“Don’t get me wrong, I’m grateful that that’s pretty much all he does, but I can’t help but wonder why. I mean, you don’t need to have superpowers to throw a big rock. Mauga, Reinhart, Roadhog, I can think of several people who can easily do what Sigma does, and they don’t have superpowers. Just muscles.”

This quirk has not only been pointed out by Sigma’s rivals. It seems that his allies have taken notice as well.

“Sigma’s peculiarities in using his abilities has been rather disappointing,” said Moira O’Deorain, controversial geneticist associated with Sigma. “I had hoped his madness would give him more creativity in the utilization of a power as great as bending the force of gravity to one’s own will, but it seems my hopes have been misplaced. Instead, he throws rocks. Annoyingly, it stops my ult, but he is capable of so much more. Right now he is but another tank, easily countered by Symmetra or Zarya. It seems I have much work left to do.”

Hard Drive reached out to Sigma for comment.

“There is no obligation for the universe to make sense to you,” said Sigma. “The universe is singing to me. Can you hear it?”

Sigma then spent the next thirty minutes humming a tune and rambling in Dutch, until we simply hung up the phone.

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