Blossom Word Game – a free daily Spelling Bee–style puzzle
Yet another Spelling Bee clone, but this one's free with no signup.

Another daily word game when Wordle, Strands, and Connections already own this.
Casual mobile gamers, daily puzzle enthusiasts, Wordle players
Wordle · NYT Strands · NYT Connections
Bit of an LLM experiment in spinning off daily, theme-based word games easy enough to bang out over breakfast or a coffee break.
Anyway, fire it up in a mobile browser and have a poke at it - appreciate any thoughts as I keep tinkering with it.
No account or login required.
Yet another Spelling Bee clone, but this one's free with no signup.
Wordle-style daily anagram game where you add letters to a root word.
The killer detail here is the liquid-droplet UI and the one-tap AI level generator running on-device — small touches that make a familiar word game feel tactile and modern. It's not reinventing the category, though; reported glitches (missing letters/misspellings) and a tiny rating base keep this from feeling like a must-share hit.
Polished word puzzle, but Wordle, Semantle, and dozens of letter-grid games exist.
Nice, focused twist on the classic word-ladder: you can both replace and insert letters and every intermediate step must be a real word, which makes puzzles feel tighter than a random jumble. The big selling point is multilingual support — English, Spanish, French, German, Dutch and Swedish — with separate progress per language, which actually gives it genuine replay value. It’s not reinventing the genre, but the rules, daily stages and hint/score system show a clear game design sensibility.
Every word pairs a crossword-style text clue with an image hint generated and linted by an LLM/image pipeline — that's a clever UX twist that forces semantic reasoning instead of guesswork. The creator also built a nontrivial quality pipeline (Swiss-style LLM matches + Wilson lower-bound scoring) to pick good puzzle words, which is an uncommon level of rigor for a hobby game. UI shows thoughtful interactions (hint taps reveal/remove letters, center-letter rule, PWA install), though clarity around image provenance and accessibility could be tighter.