Thanks for the encouragement, my high words so far is 80... but I do get in the high range quite a bit,,, have a lot better go of it when there aren't a ton of words in the puzzle because I do find obscure words and given time I find more than average most of the time.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The strange, the bizarre and the unexpected
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by JoanM19 View PostHow does anyone get 108 words in the time allotted. I know Megamword is good, but come one...
.. Played: 2 times
Average Score: 580.3 points
Average Words: 108 words
High Score: 1125 points by MegaWord
Most Words: 200 words by MegaWord
It seems you misread the game results. Megaword actually played 200 words during that game. He is the only person who has ever played 300 words in a game. How does he do it? It think it has something to do with his playing over 96,000 games, learning thousands and thousands of words, constantly striving to improve his typing speed and having a talent for it. If you don't believe that could ever be done, then watch his videos and see for yourself.
I looked at last month's 5x5 avg words/game competition results and there were 14 different people who averaged over 108 words/game.Last edited by lalatan; 07-14-2020, 12:03 AM.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by lalatan View Post
It seems you misread the game results. Megaword actually played 200 words during that game. He is the only person who has ever played 300 words in a game. How does he do it? It think it has something to do with his playing over 96,000 games, learning thousands and thousands of words, constantly striving to improve his typing speed and having a talent for it. If you don't believe that could ever be done, then watch his videos and see for yourself.
I looked at last month's 5x5 avg words/game competition results and there were 14 different people who averaged over 108 words/game.
- Likes 2
Comment
-
I knew the rhino- had a use! Screenshot 2020-07-25 at 11.56.58 AM.png
I like how it simply means "ear, nose and throat doctor."
- Likes 1
Comment
-
I stitched together what I thought were some interesting Frankenstein words this month for new best and longest word records:
SELENOMORPHICALLY (30/16, I learned the word SELENOGRAPHY a couple years ago so I thought, "Why not?")
TUMORIGENICITY (26/14, I didn't think the combo form tumori- would be valid.)
ARCHAEOMETRIST (26/14)
METAGENETICALLY (28/15)
ANTHROPOPATHIES (28/15)
Originally posted by walden123 View PostI like how it simply means "ear, nose and throat doctor."Last edited by lalatan; 07-29-2020, 04:47 PM.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
I almost duplicated the impossible feat of three years ago: the famous "invisible game". If I had scored precisely 499 points instead of 517, I would have tied for everything and my game would have been completely invisible. As it was, I tied for the word total, best word, and longest word.
Game Results
YOUR STATS:Total points: 517 New record!
Total words: 99 (51 common,15 wide,10 rare,23 ultra rare)
Best word: WEANERS (12 pts.)
Longest word: LEARNERS (8 letters)
PUZZLE STATS:
Played: 5 times
Average Score: 344.7 points
Average Words: 69 words
High Score: 499 points by ktschnider
Most Words: 99 words by ktschnider
Best Word: WEANERS (12 pts) by Troglodyte
Longest Word: LEARNERS (8 letters) by Troglodyte
- Likes 2
Comment
-
I think I'm beginning to recognize this word when I see it. For the second time so far this month (and this time on a "new" board that I thought I recognized):
Game Results
YOUR STATS:Total points: 590 New record!
Total words: 89 (40 common,13 wide,7 rare,29 ultra rare) New record!
Best word: INCONTROVERTIBLENESSES (42 pts.) New record!
Longest word: INCONTROVERTIBLENESSES (22 letters) New record!
This time, I also entered "convertibleness(es)" and "convertible(s)". I'm not sure I entered "controvertibleness(es)", though; I thought I remembered those weren't allowed. Perhaps I was wrong and could have had more points.
- Likes 2
Comment
-
Originally posted by walden123 View PostI knew the rhino- had a use! Screenshot 2020-07-25 at 11.56.58 AM.png
I like how it simply means "ear, nose and throat doctor."
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Screen Shot 2020-09-21 at 9.08.04 AM.png
The difference between learning a lot of weird new words worth more points: 88 more points despite one less word.
I imagine the really good players would easily have scored well over 750 on this.
Looking at the board, I should have scored 500 with a couple dozen words I'd normally see, but I just woke up and...
- Likes 1
Comment
-
I talk to my daughters almost every day. My younger one gets the vocabulary lesson most of the time, and I don't know why. The most recent "odd" word was desquamation, which came up when we were discussing world record attempts that Guinness would no longer sanction. I like taking long showers, and I said there would not be a record for that because of (cue the trumpets) desquamation. So she looked it up on her smartphone and told me the definition was in French, which she had had one year of in high school (she's nearly 50) so she had a little trouble with it. I looked it up on my computer, and it meant what I thought it meant and what I'd earlier told her -- and my definition came up first in French, too. But it's such a PERFECT word! It's basically "the removal of the top layer of skin" and it can come mechanically by abrasion or by exposure to harsh chemicals or prolonged exposure to water. Here's the thing: English is great at borrowing words from other languages, and evidently "desquamation" is one such word. But I have NEVER had a word where the primary definition was given in French. I'd thought it was entirely an English word. Are there any other such? BTW, RussDNails, her degree is in laboratory science and she began her career as a lab tech, later moving more into the programming/CS end of things but staying entirely within hospitals and health care.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Definitely a smart move, more money and opportunity in computer science.............I've made some good friends in the IT department at my hospital and have enough experience with software and operating systems that I could probably find something in this area but I'm getting a little long in the tooth now and change doesn't come as easy as it used to
- Likes 1
Comment
-
When my daughter made the move, she was 40. Maybe that's not "long in the tooth" and maybe it is, but I had my own doubts about whether that was a good move. But she is my daughter, and she can do anything so I told her to go for it and crossed my fingers. And she was as good as she thought she was, as good as I hoped she was, and in the end she was better than either of us thought. I take no credit for her accomplishments but you can bet I am proud of her. Perhaps you can surprise yourself and make yourself and some other people proud, too. "Long in the tooth" is just a state of mind. It's not a sentence.
- Likes 1
Comment
Comment