What Is Wordfeud?
Wordfeud is a Scrabble-style word game played on a 15×15 board with the same 104-tile distribution as Words With Friends. The scoring rules mirror WWF exactly, which means every word our helper returns is ranked by its WWF point value — high-value plays such as QUARTZY or MUZJIKS float straight to the top. The board itself is randomly sprinkled with premium squares (double-letter, triple-letter, double-word, triple-word), so picking the right tile to land on a multiplier can swing a game by dozens of points.
Key Definitions
- Wordfeud — a mobile Scrabble variant played on a 15×15 board with randomised premium-square layouts and WWF-style scoring.
- Rack — the seven tiles a player holds at any moment; a new tile is drawn after each play to refill the rack.
- Blank tile — a wildcard tile that can stand in for any letter but always scores zero; Wordfeud gives each player two blanks per game.
- WWF points — the scoring scheme used by both Wordfeud and Words With Friends, in which letter values differ slightly from Scrabble (H is 3, B is 4, K is 5, and so on).
- Bingo bonus — the 35-point bonus awarded for playing all seven rack tiles in a single turn.
How the Wordfeud Helper Works
Type the letters from your rack into the search box above. Use? for blank tiles — Wordfeud gives you two blanks per game, and they can stand in for any letter. The helper sends your letters to the same unscramble engine that powers the homepage, returning every dictionary word that can be built from your rack, grouped by length so the longest, highest-scoring plays are easy to spot. Each result is ranked by WWF point value, which matches the scoring you will see on the Wordfeud board.
Wordfeud Strategy Tips
- Save blanks for bingo attempts (playing all seven tiles) rather than burning them on a short three-letter play.
- Target the Triple Word squares — even a modest five-letter word placed there can swing the game.
- Hook a pluralising S onto an existing word to score twice with one tile.
- Memorise the two-letter words (QI, ZA, EX, OX) for tight-board escapes.
- Keep a balanced rack — too many vowels or too many consonants both kill bingo chances, so trade one or two tiles when the mix is off.
- Pair this with our Wordle Solver and Boggle Solver for cross-game prep.
Reading the Results Like a Pro
The longest word in the results list is rarely the best play on its own, because points only matter once they are placed on the board. Cross-reference the top candidates against the premium squares in your current position: a six-letter word that lands its high-value letter on a Triple Letter square will often out-score a seven-letter bingo sitting on plain tiles. Use the helper to generate options, then use your board vision to pick the one that maximises both this turn's score and the position you leave for the next rack.