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Geography games like Wordle

74 hand-picked daily geography -dle games, free to play in your browser.

Geography -dles ask you to guess a country, city, or landmark from progressively narrower clues. The canonical example is Worldle, built by Antoine Teuf in late 2021 — you guess countries from their silhouette, with distance-and-direction feedback after each wrong guess. Globle followed (heatmap-on-globe), then Tradle (guess countries from their export profile), Statele (US states), Citydle, and dozens of regional variants.

The defining trait of geography -dles is the spatial feedback loop: you're not just guessing right or wrong, you're triangulating across a map. This makes them disproportionately popular with classrooms — teachers use Worldle and Statele as five-minute daily warmups, and several games (Where Taken, Globle Capitals) lean into specifically pedagogical framings. The 74 games below span world geography, regional puzzles, flag-guessing, and landmark identification.

All 74 geography -dle games

Geography

Frequently asked questions about geography -dle games

What's the geography version of Wordle?
Worldle, launched in late 2021 by Antoine Teuf, is the canonical geography -dle. Each day you get a country silhouette and six guesses; wrong guesses tell you the distance and compass direction to the answer. From Worldle the genre expanded into Globle (warmer/colder on a globe), Tradle (countries by export data), and many regional variants — Statele for US states, USAdle, Counterclockwise (city sequences).
Are these good for learning geography?
Yes — geography -dles are probably the genre where the educational value is most obvious. Worldle and Statele are widely used in classrooms because the spatial-feedback design teaches map literacy as a side effect. Tradle is a sneaky way to learn about countries' economies. For pure quizzing, there's a long tail of capital-city guessers, flag identifiers, and landmark games.
Is there a city-level geography -dle?
Several. Citydle works at the world-city level, GuessMyCity narrows by climate and continent, Stateledle does US states, and a number of country-specific variants exist (e.g., UK towns, German cities). For street-level photo guessing, the GeoGuessr family — which predates the -dle genre and was a partial inspiration for it — is the standard reference.
What's Tradle and how does it work?
Tradle is a Worldle variant that shows you a country's export profile — a treemap of what they sell to the rest of the world — and asks you to guess the country in six tries. It's surprisingly hard at first and surprisingly learnable: after a couple of weeks you start recognizing oil exporters, coffee economies, and tourist-dependent island nations on sight.
What's the best flag-guessing -dle?
Flagordle is the standout in a crowded field. You guess a country from its flag in six tries, with distance-and-direction feedback after each wrong guess — the same hint shape as Worldle, applied to flag identification instead of country silhouettes. It also covers world cities, US states, and historical and fictional flags, where most other flag -dles stop at modern countries.

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