The difference between a C-rank and an S-rank in Rushle isn't vocabulary — it's strategy. Specifically, it's about the order you solve words and how efficiently you turn each guess into maximum cascade value.

Understanding the Grading System

Your efficiency grade is based on the ratio of productive guesses (correct matches + partial reveals) to total guesses. Here's how the grades break down:

GRADEEFFICIENCYWHAT IT MEANS
S95%+Nearly every guess produced value
A85-94%Very clean run with minimal waste
B75-84%Solid run, some dead guesses
C60-74%Room for improvement
D45-59%Too many wasted guesses
FBelow 45%Start over and think more carefully

The Five Rules of S-Rank Play

Rule 1: Always Solve the Most-Revealed Row

Look at the board. Find the row with the most letters already showing. That's your target. A row with 4 out of 5 letters visible is almost always solvable in one guess — and solving it triggers cascades that reveal letters everywhere else.

Key insight: Solving a nearly-complete row is a guaranteed productive guess. Guessing at a row with 0-1 revealed letters is often a waste.

Rule 2: Think About Cascade Value, Not Just the Word

When two rows are equally solvable, pick the one whose letters will cascade into more unsolved rows. A word with common letters (E, A, S, T, R, N) cascades wider than one with uncommon letters (X, Z, Q, J).

Rule 3: Use Wrong Guesses Strategically

Even an incorrect guess can be productive. If your word shares letters with multiple target words in the same positions, those letters get revealed across the board. A "wrong" guess that reveals 3-4 letters is better than most correct guesses in other word games.

Rule 4: Don't Guess Randomly Early

Your first few guesses set the cascade foundation. Start with common 5-letter words that have high-frequency letters in common positions. Words like STARE, CRANE, or PLATE are strong openers because their letters appear in many English words at those positions.

Rule 5: Watch the Chain Counter

When you see a chain reaction happening (multiple words completing from cascades), pause and scan the board. New letters are appearing everywhere. The rows that were hard 5 seconds ago might now be nearly solved.

Common Mistakes

Tunnel vision on one row. If you've guessed at the same row 3 times without solving it, move on. Other rows might be easier now because of cascades from your failed guesses.

Ignoring position 1. The first letter of each word is the row letter (A-Z). That's always free information. Use it.

Burning hints too early. Hints cost 20 points each. If you're going for S-rank, use them only when stuck — and only on rows that will trigger big cascades.

Not using the keyboard colors. The on-screen keyboard shows which letters are confirmed (green), possible (yellow), or eliminated (gray) for your current target row. Read it before guessing.

The S-Rank Mindset

S-rank players think in systems, not individual words. Every guess is evaluated not by "did I solve a word?" but by "how much information did I add to the board?" A guess that reveals 5 letters across 3 different rows is extremely valuable, even if it didn't directly solve anything.

The goal is zero wasted guesses. Every word you type should either match a target, reveal letters, or provide color clues that narrow down possibilities. If a guess does none of these, it's a dead guess — and dead guesses kill your grade.

Put It Into Practice

Today's puzzle is waiting. See if you can get S-rank with these strategies.

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