Guess the mystery country - the globe shows how warm you are
Think of it as a geography puzzle with a twist: instead of looking at a flat map, you're staring at a 3D globe. Pick any country and the globe paints it a colour - icy blue if you're way off, fiery red when you're right next door. There's no guess limit, so the real challenge is keeping your score low. A new mystery country drops every single day at midnight UTC and it's the same one for everybody, which makes comparing scores with friends ridiculously fun.
Start typing a country name in the search box - you'll see suggestions pop up as you go. Hit enter, and the globe instantly lights up that country with a proximity colour. Blue? You're far. Orange? Getting warmer. Bright red? Check the neighbours. Drag the globe around to spot all your previous guesses and piece the puzzle together. There's no limit on attempts, but hey, bragging rights go to the lowest score.
Worldle hands you a country outline and six attempts - you get distance in km, a directional arrow, and a proximity percentage after each guess. It's basically shape recognition meets triangulation. Globle throws all of that out. No silhouette, no arrows, no numbers. Just a spinning globe that colours countries warmer or cooler depending on how close they are. They're both daily geography games on Worldle91, but honestly they feel like completely different puzzles.
Here's what works for us: open with a country smack in the middle of whichever continent you suspect - something like India or Nigeria. The colour you get back narrows things down fast. Dark blue? Wrong continent, move on. Orange? You're in the right neighbourhood, so start checking borders. Once you spot red, the answer is almost certainly touching that country. Most regulars land it in three to six guesses once they get the hang of it.