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Kodos
12-21-2011, 12:11 PM
Phiz
Vires
Neem
Fen
Qat
Suq
Loge

I hate people who play bullshit words in Words With Friends. Those are all words from just one game against my friend, and I know for a fact that his vocabulary is not THAT good. :banghead: I know there are sites out there to get words from, but I refuse to use them. Whatever happened to the days of Scrabble when it was a game of strategy and vocabulary?

jeff061
12-21-2011, 12:13 PM
Qat has been the biggest continuous offender in my games.

Autumn
12-21-2011, 12:14 PM
I hate the same thing in Scrabble games, all those lame-ass words people only know because they're useful in Scrabble.

Ksyrup
12-21-2011, 12:14 PM
My mom got my wife into playing that game, and she was bitching about this last night.

cartman
12-21-2011, 12:15 PM
There is no penalty for trying random combinations in the hope they work, like there is in Scrabble.

SackAttack
12-21-2011, 12:19 PM
Phiz
Vires
Neem
Fen
Qat
Suq
Loge

I hate people who play bullshit words in Words With Friends. Those are all words from just one game against my friend, and I know for a fact that his vocabulary is not THAT good. :banghead: I know there are sites out there to get words from, but I refuse to use them. Whatever happened to the days of Scrabble when it was a game of strategy and vocabulary?

I'm with you on six of those seven, but 'loge' is a word I wouldn't be surprised to find in a casual player's vocab, even if only in a sporting venue context.

Fen is reasonable, if a little more obscure.

The other five, yeah. Dodgy.

AENeuman
12-21-2011, 12:32 PM
Phiz
Vires
Neemou
Fen
Qat
Suq
Loge

I hate people who play bullshit words in Words With Friends. Those are all words from just one game against my friend, and I know for a fact that his vocabulary is not THAT good. :banghead: I know there are sites out there to get words from, but I refuse to use them. Whatever happened to the days of Scrabble when it was a game of strategy and vocabulary?

but, come on, now that you know, you would use "qat" if you had the chance?

i've always thought the perfect game would be using only two letter words.
here's the list for you to continue the bullshit :)

* AA AB AD AE AG AH AI AL AM AN AR AS ATAW AX AY
* BA BE BI BO BY
* DA DE DI DO
* ED EF EH EL EM EN ER ES ET EX
* FA FE FI
* GO
* HA HE HI HM HO
* ID IF IN IS IT
* JO
* KAKI
* LA LI LO
* MA ME MI MM MO MU MY
* NA NE NO NU
* OD OE OF OH OI OM ON OP OR OS OW OX OY
* PA PE PI
* QI
* RE
* SH SI SO
* TA TI TO
* UH UM UN UP US UT
* WE WO
* XI XU
* YA YE YO
* ZA ZO

MJ4H
12-21-2011, 12:41 PM
This is amusing. As a reasonably competetive Scrabble player, none of those words offend me. All words, no matter how well known, are treated equally in these games. Think of words as an arbitrary string of letters that is legal to play instead of words and it is much better for your sanity.

One of the first things a decent Scrabble player does is learn all (ALL) of the 2 letter words and the Q no U words. QAT and QAID are the most commonly played on that list. SUQ is pretty common, too.

Any three letter word shouldn't be a surprise to a decent player, either. Most reasonable Scrabble players know all of them. There are just under 1,000, I believe. Here is a list of them.

http://www.yak.net/kablooey/scrabble/3letterwords.html

I don't think people that know the basics of the game you are playing with them should be called idiots.

Now, if you have reason to believe they are cheating, that's different. But just calling people that play those words idiots is, well, not too smart.

Rizon
12-21-2011, 12:45 PM
You have to assume that not playing someone face-to-face they're gonna cheat. Why I don't play anyone chess/scrabble/words with friends/biscuit unless they are within punching-in-the-face range.

Apathetic Lurker
12-21-2011, 12:49 PM
When I used to play scrabble we had to know the definition and the use of an obscure word before we could play it....

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 12:49 PM
This is amusing. As a reasonably competetive Scrabble player, none of those words offend me. All words, no matter how well known, are treated equally in these games. Think of words as an arbitrary string of letters that is legal to play instead of words and it is much better for your sanity.

One of the first things a decent Scrabble player does is learn all (ALL) of the 2 letter words and the Q no U words. QAT and QAID are the most commonly played on that list. SUQ is pretty common, too.

Any three letter word shouldn't be a surprise to a decent player, either. Most reasonable Scrabble players know all of them. There are just under 1,000, I believe. Here is a list of them.

http://www.yak.net/kablooey/scrabble/3letterwords.html

I don't think people that know the basics of the game you are playing with them should be called idiots.Ding ding ding. Growing up, Scrabble was very serious business in my household. We used the Official Scrabble Dictionary. By the time I was around 9 or 10, I had memorized every single legal 2-letter word. Those are the key to winning the game. If you think Scrabble is about vocabulary, then you're just not very good at Scrabble.

As far as those specific words, "Qat" and "Suq" are must-have words for any decent scrabble player, and "Loge" and "Fen" aren't really vocab stretches. And has someone has pointed out, the fundamental flaw in Words with Friends is that you can try any letter combination without penalty.

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 12:50 PM
When I used to play scrabble we had to know the definition and the use of an obscure word before we could play it....Well, if people want to use House Rules, that's certainly their right, but in the rules of the game, there's nothing that indicates you need to know what the words mean.

EagleFan
12-21-2011, 12:55 PM
When I used to play scrabble we had to know the definition and the use of an obscure word before we could play it....

+1

It's what makes it fun. Plus you learn as you go.


I stopped playing Hanging with Friends because of this same BS. I certainly wouldn't consider it a victory if I had to search the internet to come up with the most obscure word that I could with the letters I was given.

EagleFan
12-21-2011, 12:57 PM
Well, if people want to use House Rules, that's certainly their right, but in the rules of the game, there's nothing that indicates you need to know what the words mean.

But there are rules against using outside sources to come up with the word.

Drake
12-21-2011, 01:02 PM
I stopped playing Scrabble with my wife because she wouldn't play without the official Scrabble dictionary.

I don't mind the dictionary existing to resolve disputes, but my wife would dig through it *during the game* to find words to use. Her excuse? "You know my spelling sucks. I need to know I'm spelling it right before I try to play it."

Here's my thing: I'm not a huge fan of word games anyway. When you make me sit there for 20 fucking minutes while you troll through the dictionary for a word you can use...well, I've got better things to do. If I had any power over the rules of Scrabble (even in my own house)...it would be this: when it's your turn, you've got 90 seconds to put your tiles on the board or you lose your turn and 20 points.

If four people are playing, that's more than five minutes to look at 8 letters and come up with your play. I can't say I've ever thought even half that long about a Scrabble play, so that's probably even being over-generous.

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 01:02 PM
But there are rules against using outside sources to come up with the word.Outside sources, sure. I don't do that. Like I said, I just have all of the 2-letter words memorized, and most of the 3-letter ones. To be good at Scrabble, you really don't need outside sources during the game.

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 01:03 PM
I don't mind the dictionary existing to resolve disputes, but my wife would dig through it *during the game* to find words to use. Heh. Now that ain't right.

cartman
12-21-2011, 01:04 PM
most of the 4 letter ones I know aren't in the Scrabble dictionary.

Kodos
12-21-2011, 01:06 PM
I expect my friends to play words they know. If they've picked up some words along the way, fine. But when half their turns are crap words, I get annoyed.

I would fully expect a random internet opponent to be an idiot. I expect more out of my friends.

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 01:09 PM
I expect my friends to play words they know. If they've picked up some words along the way, fine. But when half their turns are crap words, I get annoyed.

I would fully expect a random internet opponent to be an idiot. I expect more out of my friends.If your opponent has played highly competitively most of his life and therefore just knows a lot of legal words without knowing their meaning, that's not an "idiot." That's "someone who is good at Scrabble."

Autumn
12-21-2011, 01:10 PM
Outside sources, sure. I don't do that. Like I said, I just have all of the 2-letter words memorized, and most of the 3-letter ones. To be good at Scrabble, you really don't need outside sources during the game.

I understand this is how serious Scrabble players play, and is why I would never want to be a serious Scrabble player, or play with one. To me it's no longer the game it was meant to be once players have memorized every two and three letter word, or know every possible six letter word with a Q, or what have you. I'm sure it's still fun for those people, to play against each other, but it's become a different game.

To me the game is about being able to recall words as you look at your limited selection of tiles. Learning new words just to use them in the game seems to miss the spirit of the game to me. But that's true, to me, about most really competitive sports/games. They become something different once you have every permutation and possibility memorized, and they no longer interest me much. Like in board games, when you know a game so well that there are certain moves you just never make because they're not maximum efficiency ... it loses the immersive fun for me to step back and look at things at that level. I'd rather make a fun move, that doesn't make perfect strategic sense, just like I'd rather play some low scoring word in Scrabble than one I don't really know, but scores better.

AENeuman
12-21-2011, 01:14 PM
the fundamental flaw in Words with Friends is that you can try any letter combination without penalty.

My wife and her friends all say this is the only reason wwf is fun. totally changes the game, but there seems to be a relaxing yet mildly stimulating thing in this trial and error type of game play. seems like a male/female competitive thing to me.

Pumpy Tudors
12-21-2011, 01:14 PM
This thread brings me much joy.

Also, I agree with MJ4H.

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 01:15 PM
I understand this is how serious Scrabble players play, and is why I would never want to be a serious Scrabble player, or play with one.That's fair. And I rarely play against people who aren't aware of how serious the Lewises are about Scrabble. ;)

To me it's no longer the game it was meant to be once players have memorized every two and three letter word, or know every possible six letter word with a Q, or what have you.Here's where I completely disagree, though. If it was intended to be about playing words you know, then there'd be a "define the word" provision in the rules. Also, the fact that the company that makes the game also puts out a dictionary of legal words tells me that they "intend" for people to go all out.

Kodos
12-21-2011, 01:23 PM
I understand this is how serious Scrabble players play, and is why I would never want to be a serious Scrabble player, or play with one. To me it's no longer the game it was meant to be once players have memorized every two and three letter word, or know every possible six letter word with a Q, or what have you. I'm sure it's still fun for those people, to play against each other, but it's become a different game.

To me the game is about being able to recall words as you look at your limited selection of tiles. Learning new words just to use them in the game seems to miss the spirit of the game to me. But that's true, to me, about most really competitive sports/games. They become something different once you have every permutation and possibility memorized, and they no longer interest me much. Like in board games, when you know a game so well that there are certain moves you just never make because they're not maximum efficiency ... it loses the immersive fun for me to step back and look at things at that level. I'd rather make a fun move, that doesn't make perfect strategic sense, just like I'd rather play some low scoring word in Scrabble than one I don't really know, but scores better.

+1

To explain my position a little better, I play these games with my friends in the hope of replicating childhood Scrabble games, where you played face-to-face with no external resources allowed. A dictionary would be agreed upon as the final authority, and challenge rules were in place. If a challenged word is not in the dictionary, the person who played the word loses a turn. If a challenged word is in the dictionary, then the challenger loses a turn.

I am not a tournament player. I’m in this just for fun as a way of interacting with my friends. I expect my friends not to use outside sources when coming up with words. Clearly, to play in a tournament, you need to memorize lists of words. That’s fine. I have no desire to spend my time doing that. I don’t want to play people who want to play that way. I just want a competitive game with a friends with mutually agreed-upon rules in place where our vocabulary and strategy skills in large part determine the winner. If I were entering a tournament, I would have different expectations. This is just supposed to be for fun.

Kodos
12-21-2011, 01:25 PM
If your opponent has played highly competitively most of his life and therefore just knows a lot of legal words without knowing their meaning, that's not an "idiot." That's "someone who is good at Scrabble."

I know my friend. He is not a competitive Scrabble player. He's never played in a tournament. He is clearly using a word generator. That isn't what I signed up for.

gstelmack
12-21-2011, 01:33 PM
Why I don't play anyone chess/scrabble/words with friends/biscuit unless they are within punching-in-the-face range.

FWIW, when designing split-screen features for video games, this is a key rule when deciding if a feature is worth it or not. If your friend wants to be an idiot, you can always punch him, so we focus on what's fun, not on trying to keep everyone in line in the game design.

Online is a different story.

An example here is online, bringing up a pause menu is a big no-no, you have to let the game run in the background, we have to force you to spawn in at some point, etc. But we can allow the pause menu in splitscreen, because if your buddy keeps pausing the game and being a jerk about it, you can always punch him in the face.

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 01:37 PM
+1 I expect my friends not to use outside sources when coming up with words.I guess that's my question, though: how do you know for sure that they're using outside sources? Do they play WwF frequently? Could be as simple as they've been burned with "SUQ" in a previous game, and thought "need to store that one away." For example, when I was growing up, "QI" wasn't in the Scrabble Dictionary, but it has made its way into legal use. Someone played that one on me in the FB Scrabble. I challenged it and lost, and then of course immediately it was in my own arsenal.

And again, the fundamental flaw with this game is that you don't have to use an outside source. You can just try to play a word, and if it doesn't work, try something else. Based on the words you put up there, my guess is that your friend was doing that, not using some internet source. I'd think an internet source would yield longer words than that.

Bobble
12-21-2011, 01:39 PM
"When a patient gets difficult, you quone them." Suq that, Neems!

Ksyrup
12-21-2011, 01:39 PM
Speaking of scrabble-like games, has anyone played Spelltower? Just picked it up on my ipod. Pretty fun.

cartman
12-21-2011, 01:42 PM
It is perfectly cromulent to embiggen your word knowledge for the game.

Kodos
12-21-2011, 01:46 PM
I guess that's my question, though: how do you know for sure that they're using outside sources? Do they play WwF frequently? Could be as simple as they've been burned with "SUQ" in a previous game, and thought "need to store that one away." For example, when I was growing up, "QI" wasn't in the Scrabble Dictionary, but it has made its way into legal use. Someone played that one on me in the FB Scrabble. I challenged it and lost, and then of course immediately it was in my own arsenal.

And again, the fundamental flaw with this game is that you don't have to use an outside source. You can just try to play a word, and if it doesn't work, try something else. Based on the words you put up there, my guess is that your friend was doing that, not using some internet source. I'd think an internet source would yield longer words than that.

There are longer words too, just not in the particular game I referenced. Our series is still fairly equal. I think he's ahead 6-4 at this point. And to his credit, he is a very bright guy. So it is possible the bulk are just from experience. He's also a competitive person, so I'm sure he does learn from getting burned exactly as you described above. I guess I will make a list of odd words to add to my arsenal. I immediately used SUQ against his wife after he used it on me. :)

The lack of a challenge rule (along with the ability to test words until something is accepted) really does hurt the game.

Bobble
12-21-2011, 01:56 PM
I immediately used SUQ against his wife after he used it on me. :)

You might want to rephrase...

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 01:59 PM
I guess I will make a list of odd words to add to my arsenal. I immediately used SUQ against his wife after he used it on me. ..and somewhere, on some message boards frequented by her, she is complaining about Words With Friends Idiots who use B.S. words. :lol:

Ben E Lou
12-21-2011, 02:05 PM
Oh, and I've never played in a tournament, but I've read about them. More often than not, the champions of the big tourneys win (or lose) by bluffing, actually. Play a 7-letter word that may or may not be actually a word, and see if the other guy has the chutzpah to challenge it. I recall reading a tidbit in SI in the 80s about a guy who won 50 grand on the strength of a late-game 7-letter bluff word that gave him a small lead. The other dude thought it might have been a word, and figured he'd have a better chance to win by not challenging it, but he lost by a few points. The guy who played it was 99% sure it wasn't a word, but figured it was his only chance at that point.

Kodos
12-21-2011, 02:14 PM
..and somewhere, on some message boards frequented by her, she is complaining about Words With Friends Idiots who use B.S. words. :lol:

She uses those kinds of words all the time as well. Once she came up with some 7-letter word for the root of a nearly extinct tree in Florida. Or something like that.

Logan
12-21-2011, 03:46 PM
I understand this is how serious Scrabble players play, and is why I would never want to be a serious Scrabble player, or play with one. To me it's no longer the game it was meant to be once players have memorized every two and three letter word, or know every possible six letter word with a Q, or what have you. I'm sure it's still fun for those people, to play against each other, but it's become a different game.

To me the game is about being able to recall words as you look at your limited selection of tiles. Learning new words just to use them in the game seems to miss the spirit of the game to me. But that's true, to me, about most really competitive sports/games. They become something different once you have every permutation and possibility memorized, and they no longer interest me much. Like in board games, when you know a game so well that there are certain moves you just never make because they're not maximum efficiency ... it loses the immersive fun for me to step back and look at things at that level. I'd rather make a fun move, that doesn't make perfect strategic sense, just like I'd rather play some low scoring word in Scrabble than one I don't really know, but scores better.

Reminds me of the FOFC (the game, not the message board) experience for many.

Warhammer
12-21-2011, 04:01 PM
We played this for the word building aspect. So, if you played a word, you better know what that word meant. That said, you have to play with challenges, bluffing is an important part of this game as well as others. We also agreed on dictionaries that had definitions, not word lists.

You would also have to play fast, with the exception of my mom, who would always take at least 5 mins per turn. That is why I loathe Scrabble to this day.

Pumpy Tudors
12-21-2011, 04:12 PM
I DON'T KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS SO IT'S NOT A WORD

Rizon
12-21-2011, 05:02 PM
I DON'T KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS SO IT'S NOT A WORD

If a word falls in a forest and nobody is around to hear it is it really a word?

MJ4H
12-21-2011, 05:13 PM
I guess that's my question, though: how do you know for sure that they're using outside sources? Do they play WwF frequently? Could be as simple as they've been burned with "SUQ" in a previous game, and thought "need to store that one away." For example, when I was growing up, "QI" wasn't in the Scrabble Dictionary, but it has made its way into legal use. Someone played that one on me in the FB Scrabble. I challenged it and lost, and then of course immediately it was in my own arsenal.

And again, the fundamental flaw with this game is that you don't have to use an outside source. You can just try to play a word, and if it doesn't work, try something else. Based on the words you put up there, my guess is that your friend was doing that, not using some internet source. I'd think an internet source would yield longer words than that.

QI and ZA were the biggest additions to the repertoire back when TWL06 replaced TWL98.

In your later post, the "bluffing" thing is fairly common, but it is more rare that it works than one might think. Taking out challenges from the game is a practical decision, but a disastrous one for the game itself.

By the way, words that aren't words are called "phonies" in Scrabble terminology.

Danny
12-21-2011, 05:32 PM
Well, if people want to use House Rules, that's certainly their right, but in the rules of the game, there's nothing that indicates you need to know what the words mean.

I use words in my everyday conversation that I have no idea what they mean. Splazzle doop mopshop

Autumn
12-21-2011, 09:03 PM
Reminds me of the FOFC (the game, not the message board) experience for many.

Yes, exactly, which is funny, I was trying to think of a parallel experience. I knew there was one, and I think FOF was exactly what I was trying to think of. [duh] When you get to the point where you've got it all figured out and you're able to put together a perfect team by using the same formula every time then yes, yo'ure better at the game, but in my mind the fun is gone. Making a team that maybe isn't that good but lends to the immersion, for me, is where it's at. Good call, very similar for me.

Kodos
12-21-2011, 09:15 PM
Agreed. FOF2001 was more fun than later versions because it wasn't dissected so much. You just built a team how you thought it should be, and that was usually good enough to enjoy some success in the game, but still lose enough to keep things interesting. With later versions that introduced multiplayer, the optimizers forced others to adopt whatever the current optimal strategies were or be left behind. Which turned out to be less fun in some ways.

ShaneTheMaster
12-22-2011, 11:47 AM
It is imperative to know the 2 & 3 letter words to be competitive (especially the 2 letter words).

Oh, and War of Words on iOS is SO much better than WWF. I don't have the urge to play WWF or Scrabble anymore.

Young Drachma
02-15-2012, 07:10 PM
Words With Friends Stats (http://wwfstats.com/stats/)

For the dorks who want to keep track of their stats. It only counts extended stats (aka, rankings) between players also registered for the site. But there's a way around that if you just want to see your #s, etc.

Butter
02-24-2012, 08:02 AM
I just got a smartphone, so I don't even know if anyone is still playing this... but if you are, my username is priceg75. I will beat you. Yes, I will.

CrimsonFox
02-24-2012, 08:27 AM
yeah Joey Rachel and Ross are just idiots I agree.
Chandler and Phoebe are cool tho.

Kodos
02-24-2012, 10:29 AM
What about Monica?!

CrimsonFox
02-24-2012, 11:35 AM
Fuck that bitch!!!!!!!!!!!

Rizon
02-24-2012, 11:38 AM
My wife plays this game still. I call it "Cheats With Friends", cause noway her friends can come up with all these words on their own.

terpkristin
02-27-2012, 06:45 PM
There is no penalty for trying random combinations in the hope they work, like there is in Scrabble.

That's my biggest frustration. Another thing I've had to "adapt" to is playing words I don't know. Growing up (and to this day), we've had a house rule that if you don't know what the word means, you can't play it. It probably did wonders for my vocabulary. But now, it's crippling. I hate the ones that are "Finnish word for ..." (OE) or "Chinese word...." (QI, XI), or stupid slang that I've only ever heard used on "The Office" (ZA). But one I really really really really really hate is GOX. :banghead:

Edit: Yeah, I know they're legit, and I've started learning and using them regularly. But they are just so different from how I played in my house growing up...and to this day with my mom and sister, it's just a different style to adapt to. I rarely even look for them...

/tk

Ben E Lou
06-04-2012, 06:28 AM
So here's a weird angle. A friend of mine with whom I've never played FTF Scrabble (dude from Charleston..just met him ~3 years ago) started a WwF game with me two or three days ago, and it's pretty bizarre so far. It's like he sees the game as a contest to play the most esoteric words, but with little/no regard for point scoring or defensive play. It looks like we've played about 7 turns each (40 letters are left), and he has already played...

LAEVO
NAE
VUG
NAIF
WALE

..but I am leading him 176 to 101, due in no small part to the fact that he didn't score more than ~15 points for any of the above plays, and several of them opened up double and triple word scores for me to play. *shurg*

Kodos
06-04-2012, 07:29 AM
That is really odd.

spleen1015
08-16-2012, 01:38 PM
Not Word with Friends, but Scrabble...

CHEATER!

The highs and lows of SCRABBLE: A cheater overshadows a record champion – This Just In - CNN.com Blogs (http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2012/08/16/teen-kicked-out-of-scrabble-tournament-for-hiding-blank-tiles/?hpt=hp_c2)

M GO BLUE!!!
08-16-2012, 01:46 PM
When your vires fen phiz, you have to suq neem or your qat might loge.

Passacaglia
08-16-2012, 02:58 PM
Not Word with Friends, but Scrabble...

CHEATER!

The highs and lows of SCRABBLE: A cheater overshadows a record champion – This Just In - CNN.com Blogs (http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2012/08/16/teen-kicked-out-of-scrabble-tournament-for-hiding-blank-tiles/?hpt=hp_c2)

That's really interesting. Two blanks, two players, why not just give each player a blank to start the game? Or maybe they could consider having some tournaments like bridge, where the order of the tiles is predetermined.

Matthean
08-16-2012, 03:29 PM
So here's a weird angle. A friend of mine with whom I've never played FTF Scrabble (dude from Charleston..just met him ~3 years ago) started a WwF game with me two or three days ago, and it's pretty bizarre so far. It's like he sees the game as a contest to play the most esoteric words, but with little/no regard for point scoring or defensive play. It looks like we've played about 7 turns each (40 letters are left), and he has already played...

LAEVO
NAE
VUG
NAIF
WALE

..but I am leading him 176 to 101, due in no small part to the fact that he didn't score more than ~15 points for any of the above plays, and several of them opened up double and triple word scores for me to play. *shurg*

There are apps that give you words based on what your letters are. I honestly see no point in playing the game.

Kodos
01-14-2013, 07:50 PM
Playing this was the highlight of my day...

http://i1060.photobucket.com/albums/t446/KodosForPrez/Asshole.jpg

Kodos
05-21-2013, 09:40 PM
http://i1060.photobucket.com/albums/t446/KodosForPrez/Stargate_zpsc68c14e8.jpg (http://s1060.photobucket.com/user/KodosForPrez/media/Stargate_zpsc68c14e8.jpg.html)

I am getting hosed here. STARGATE is TOTALLY a word! I want my 107 points! [((1+1+1+3+3+1+1+1)X 3 X 2)+35 = 107]

Kodos
11-30-2015, 12:33 PM
Everything reminds me of JB.

ColtCrazy
11-30-2015, 04:37 PM
When I taught in England, one of the upper school teachers told me the key to Scrabble is knowing all the two-letter words. That's when I knew Scrabble (or Words) meant that knowing the obscure was more beneficial than having an extended vocabulary.

Julio Riddols
11-30-2015, 06:11 PM
2 letter words are the difference between playing a common word like feet and getting 7 points and playing feet and getting 20+ points. It can also be used defensively, crowding up the board to make it harder for your opponent to do anything but give you more places to play. I feel a scrabble marathon coming on now.

Dodgerchick
11-30-2015, 08:59 PM
Everything reminds me of JB.

:D :D :D :D :D :D :D

Toddzilla
12-01-2015, 08:35 AM
One of the first things a decent Scrabble player does is learn all (ALL) of the 2 letter words and the Q no U words. QAT and QAID are the most commonly played on that list. SUQ is pretty common, too.
SUQ MADIK?

spleen1015
12-01-2015, 08:37 AM
I always had success by knowing the 2 letter words and being able to make more than 1 word on a turn. With 2 letter words, you can make 3-4 words a turn for a lot of your turns.