Spellie Answer Yesterday — Sunday, June 28, 2026
Puzzle #1599 • Difficulty 5/10
Yesterday's Spellie Answer
Yesterday's Spellie Words
Click tiles to reveal each difficulty tier letter by letter.
Puzzle Analysis
Spellie's latest offering was a mixed bag, with some words yielding to the solver and others putting up a fight. HOPS proved to be the easiest of the lot, its short length and common letters making it an immediate fill-in. BOAST, on the other hand, presented a moderate challenge, requiring solvers to think strategically about vowel placement and letter distribution. But it was SQUARE that proved to be the real test of mettle, its unique combination of letters and awkward word shape making it a true puzzle veteran. While the overall difficulty rating of 5/10 seems about right, some of the tougher clues and clever wordplay push it closer to a 6. Overall, a solid effort from Spellie, but one that left this solver feeling a bit divided.
How to Play Spellie
Spellie tests your spelling ability across three difficulty tiers: Easy, Medium, and Hard. Each tier presents a different word to spell, and the difficulty reflects how commonly the word is used and how tricky its spelling is.
You hear the word spoken aloud or see its definition, then type what you think the correct spelling is. After submitting, the game shows you exactly which letters are right and which are wrong.
Each tier is independent. You can attempt all three in any order. Scoring is based on how many attempts it takes to spell each word correctly.
A new set of three words is available every day at midnight ET. Your results can be shared as a spoiler-free emoji grid.
Play at spelliegame.com. A new puzzle is available every day.
Tips & Strategy
- Start with the Easy tier to warm up and build confidence before moving to Medium and Hard.
- For Hard-tier words, break the word into syllables and tackle each one individually. Silent letters and double consonants are the most common traps.
- If you are unsure about a vowel, try the most common spelling first. English words favor A, E, and I in unstressed syllables.
- Listen carefully to the pronunciation. Emphasis patterns often indicate where double letters or unusual spellings occur.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Spellie ever repeat past answers?
Where can I find all past Spellie answers?
What was the hardest Spellie puzzle?
More Word Games
Looking for more puzzles? Try today's Spelling Bee, Mini Crossword answers and clues, or Nerdle solution.