Site ownership and transparency
About Word Wheel Solver
Word Wheel Solver helps you solve word wheel puzzles and build vocabulary with structured daily practice. This page explains who runs the site, why it exists, and how the dictionary tiers work.
In one sentence: We run a word wheel solver and daily practice hub to help people finish puzzles and grow vocabulary through repetition and review.
Who we are
Word Wheel Solver is operated by Technekaizen. Parent company website: https://techekaizen.com .
What this site does
The site has two goals:
- Help you solve word wheel puzzles faster by generating valid words from your letter set.
- Help you grow vocabulary by turning missed words into daily practice with structured review.
If you are playing now, use the solver on the homepage. If you want a routine, use the Daily Word Workout and revisit sets in the Archive.
How the solver works
Word wheel puzzles usually give you a fixed letter set and expect you to find many valid words. Our solver generates words from the letters you enter and groups results so you can scan quickly.
For a full walkthrough and best practices, use: Learn guide and Solver tips.
Dictionary and word tiers
Solver quality depends on the dictionary. We start with a standard dictionary word list and maintain a system of roughly 200,000 words. We then filter and tier words so lists feel useful instead of noisy.
What we include and exclude
- Include: common words, standard inflections, and words that help real players finish wheels.
- Exclude where possible: obvious “string noise,” many acronyms, and entries that tend to clash with common puzzle rules.
Easy, normal, hard tiers
Tiers are meant to improve scanning:
- Easy: high-familiarity words you usually spot fast.
- Normal: mid-range vocabulary that fills most progress.
- Hard: rarer or lower-familiarity words, useful when you are stuck or want to learn.
If you want the detailed breakdown, read: Our Dictionary Methodology.
Rules and expectations
Word wheel apps vary. A word that “should count” in one game might not count in another. To reduce confusion, we publish our assumptions and link them from our guides.
Content process and updates
We aim to keep pages clear about what they do, how they are maintained, and why they exist. The purpose is to help people solve puzzles and practice vocabulary, not to publish content “just to rank.”
Update cadence: We update guides when the product changes, when we improve methodology, or when users report confusing edge cases.
Feedback loop: If something looks off, check the rules first, then send feedback so we can review.
Contact and corrections
If you spot an error, a confusing definition, or a mismatch with common puzzle rules, please report it. Include the letters you used, the word you expected, and the app you were playing (if relevant).
Contact page: Contact
FAQ
Who runs Word Wheel Solver?
Word Wheel Solver is operated by Technekaizen. This page explains ownership, purpose, and how our solver and word lists are maintained.
What is the purpose of this site?
The purpose is to help people solve word wheel puzzles and practice English vocabulary through the solver, the Daily Word Workout, and learning guides.
Do you guarantee an exact match to every word wheel app?
No. Word wheel rules vary by app. We publish our rules and methodology so you can understand why a word appears and what to expect.
How big is your dictionary?
The system contains roughly 200,000 words sourced from a standard dictionary and then filtered and tiered into easy, normal, and hard to keep results useful.
How do “easy, normal, hard” tiers work?
Tiers group words by practical difficulty and familiarity. This helps you scan results faster and decide whether to enable Expert Mode for deeper vocabulary.
Next: Daily Word Workout | Tips | Learn guide
Sources
References used for our transparency and content approach:
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Creating helpful, reliable, people-first content
Publisher: Google Search Central (Google for Developers)
Publication Date: Last updated 2025-12-10 UTC
URL: https://developers.google.com/search/docs/fundamentals/creating-helpful-content