Monday’s Quordle puzzle came with a twist that can either save you moves or send you spiraling: three of the four answers start with the same letter.
For Quordle #1631 (July 13, 2026), the game’s built-in hints pointed players toward a tight, no-nonsense set of solutions, common letters, no doubled characters, and none of the usual “gotcha” tiles like Q or Z. The real headline, though, was the opening-letter pileup: V, B, B, B.
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Today’s Quordle hints: four vowels total, no double letters, and no Q/Z/X/J
The first clue was about vowels: across all four answers, Quordle uses four different vowels total. That’s the kind of hint that sounds abstract until you’re burning guesses by cycling through A, E, I, O, and U without a plan. Knowing the vowel pool is limited helps you stop chasing phantom options and start narrowing.
The second clue was more concrete: none of today’s answers contain repeated letters. That immediately rules out a big chunk of common Wordle-style candidates, anything with doubled consonants or repeated vowels. If you’re staring at a pattern that “wants” a double letter, this hint tells you to pivot fast.
Then came the third guardrail: no Q, Z, X, or J anywhere in the solutions. Some players like to toss those in as quick diagnostic guesses. In Quordle, that’s expensive, every wasted letter hits four boards at once. Today, the game told you to stick with the workhorse consonants.
Put together, the hints signaled a relatively “clean” puzzle: familiar structures, no weird letter traps, and a setup that rewards broad coverage over cleverness.
The big tell: three answers begin with “B”
The most actionable clue was the starting letters: V, B, B, B. That’s not just trivia, it changes how you interpret every color result. Once you confirm a B in the first slot on one grid, it’s smart to treat B as a serious contender on the others, too.
Tactically, this is where players can gain ground. Lock in that opening B, then use guesses that keep the B while rotating the rest of the word to separate the three “B” answers. The goal is to avoid wasting turns testing alternate first letters when the puzzle is practically shouting the answer at you.
There’s a catch, though: three words starting with B doesn’t mean they share endings or vowel patterns. This kind of puzzle can trick players into mentally swapping letters between boards because the shapes look similar. The best approach is disciplined: treat each grid as its own case file, even when the first letter matches.
Quordle answers for July 13, 2026 (#1631): VOICE, BISON, BURNT, BUILT
The four solutions for Quordle #1631 areVOICE,BISON,BURNT, andBUILT. They match every hint: one word starts with V, three start with B, there are no repeated letters, and none of Q/Z/X/J appear.
VOICEis the odd one out, and that’s helpful. V is less common as a starter than B, so once V shows up as a hit, it often snaps into place quickly, especially if you’ve already tested high-utility letters like E and C.
BISONis straightforward American vocabulary (and a familiar sight in word-game answer lists). Its mix of consonants and vowels, especially I and O, can generate strong feedback early, and it separates cleanly from the other B-words because it doesn’t end in T.
BURNTandBUILTare the pair designed to mess with you. Both start with “BU” and end with “T,” and the middle letters are just different enough to cause a late-game stumble. If you’re playing methodically, testing letters like R vs. I and N vs. L early can keep you from looping.
Overall, today’s difficulty wasn’t about obscure words, it was about managing overlap. When three answers share the same first letter, Quordle rewards careful separation more than bold guessing.
Daily Sequence #1631 answers: HORSE, FAULT, PENNE, STONE
Quordle’sDaily Sequencemode for the same day (#1631) had its own set of published answers:HORSE,FAULT,PENNE, andSTONE. It’s a different format from the standard four-grid scramble, and it plays differently because each solve feeds the next.
HORSEandSTONEare classic, high-information words packed with common letters, exactly the kind of vocabulary that mirrors popular “starter word” strategies.
FAULTforces a shift, leaning on A and U and a less-obvious “LT” finish that can take an extra beat to lock down if you’re stuck in an E-and-O rut.
PENNEis the standout because it includes a repeated letter, double N, something the main Quordle answers avoided entirely. It’s a reminder that the rules of one mode don’t carry over to the other, and staying flexible matters.
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