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The Death of Wordle

40 pointsby 333cover 3 years ago

7 comments

returningfory2over 3 years ago
&gt; But I resent that we live in a system where any independent creativity is exploited for financial gain.<p>So what&#x27;s the alternative system? One in which creators of delightful projects like Wordle are prevented somehow from making money from their creations? That seems weird and bad.
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noah_buddyover 3 years ago
The reports of WORDLE&#x27;s death are greatly exaggerated. Whatever, NYT bought a game. Who was going to still be playing in a year? Who was going to be playing till it was done with the scheduled run? I promise you it&#x27;s increasingly small fractions of the current player base in the hypothetical no sale world. Change is as constant as the sea, the magic would&#x27;ve died out in a few months regardless. Rehost&#x2F;stop playing&#x2F;move on.
tony-allanover 3 years ago
The current Wordle will live on in 1000 private copies. It&#x27;s self-contained in a HTML and a JS file with no server requirement other that file hosting.
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dataangelover 3 years ago
Oh no! How dare the author of something that millions of people have enjoyed earn one penny from his work! And it&#x27;s definitely dead now that it might only be available to one of the most successful publications on the planet! &#x2F;s
jamesgreenleafover 3 years ago
&gt; This is not to say that I have any animosity towards the game’s creator. Given such a large price tag, it’s hard to imagine not accepting a buyout offer. But I resent that we live in a system where any independent creativity is exploited for financial gain.<p>That&#x27;s sort of the trade, isn&#x27;t it? If independent creativity is regularly exploited for profit, that means people are always incentivized to create more. Would they really create as much in a system that offered few or no incentives?
imgabeover 3 years ago
I&#x27;ve been playing Wordle religiously for the past 21 days and I&#x27;m nothing but happy that the creator was able to get a life-changing amount of money for this very fun game that he generously shared with the world for free.<p>Extrapolating this to &quot;all creativity is exploited for financial gain&quot; is silly. There are millions of websites full of independent creativity that are not being exploited for financial gain, mostly because there&#x27;s no opportunity to do so.<p>This vision of a world where artists work only for the pure love of making art without considerations of money doesn&#x27;t exist. It never existed. Artists gotta eat too.<p>And let&#x27;s get real for a moment here. It&#x27;s not <i>War and Peace</i> or Beethoven&#x27;s 5th Symphony or something. It&#x27;s a very slick version of hangman with an extremely clever virality mechanism. If it goes behind a paywall it will be a mild annoyance at best before people move on to something else. It&#x27;s probably going to die down anyway as the fad passes.
madarcoover 3 years ago
NYT bought the NFT of Wordle!<p>This acquisition will forever be remembered as the best example of how NFTs work.<p>They didn&#x27;t buy the copyright, the source code or any assets, but the de-facto distributed knowledge that they acquired the right to be considered the Wordle Owners.