AllWordTools
5 free tools in this category

Game Helpers

Dedicated cheat sheets for the word games you love — with the right dictionary, the right scoring and the right rules for Scrabble, Words With Friends, Boggle, Hangman and Text Twist.

Game Helpers tools

Pick a tool to get started — each one is fast, free and works on any device.

Category

About Game Helpers

Game Helpers are purpose-built solvers tuned for specific word games. Where a general unscrambler just lists words, these tools understand the rules and scoring of each game — so the plays you see are the plays you can actually make, ranked by the points you will really earn. Whether you are chasing a bingo in Scrabble, a comeback in Words With Friends, a long word in Boggle, a clever guess in Hangman or a bonus word in Text Twist, there is a helper here made for exactly that challenge.

This category brings together five game-specific tools: the Scrabble Helper, Words With Friends Helper, Boggle Solver, Hangman Solver and Text Twist Solver. Each one uses the correct letter values, board rules or word-tracing logic for its game, and each returns fast, accurate, clearly ranked results. Use them to win a tight game, settle a friendly dispute, or study between matches to become a stronger player.

Why game-specific tools matter

Different word games use different letter values and rules, so a play that scores well in one may be worthless — or invalid — in another. Scrabble and Words With Friends assign different points to the same letters, meaning the best move changes from game to game. Boggle only counts words you can trace through adjacent tiles, Hangman is about deducing a hidden word one letter at a time, and Text Twist rewards the word that uses every tile. A generic word list ignores all of this; a game helper is built around it.

Our helpers apply the correct scoring and rules for each game. The Scrabble and Words With Friends helpers rank plays by that game's own letter values, the Boggle Solver traces real adjacency paths and scores by length, the Hangman Solver suggests the statistically best next letter, and the Text Twist Solver highlights the bonus word you need to advance. That accuracy is what turns a lookup into a genuine advantage.

When to use each helper

Reach for the Scrabble Helper or Words With Friends Helper when you have a rack of tiles and want the highest-scoring play, complete with blank support and filters to hook onto the board. Use the Boggle Solver to reveal every word hidden in a 3×3, 4×4 or 5×5 grid, traced through connected tiles. Turn to the Hangman Solver when you need the smartest letter to guess next, and the Text Twist Solver when you are racing the clock to find the bonus word and fill every length.

Because each tool is focused, you always know which one fits the game in front of you. And because they share the same fast, accurate engine, switching between games feels effortless.

Fair play and getting better

Away from official competition, game helpers are a superb way to learn. Seeing the words hidden in your tiles or on the board expands your vocabulary of valid plays, teaches you high-value letter combinations, and trains your eye to spot patterns faster. Over time you rely on the tools less and win more on your own.

In casual games, agree with your opponents on whether tools are welcome, and always confirm words against the official dictionary for sanctioned play. Used as a study aid, these helpers build real, lasting skill.

Pro tips

  • 1Pick the helper that matches your game — letter values and rules differ between Scrabble and Words With Friends.
  • 2Use blank tiles (?) in the Scrabble and Words With Friends helpers to unlock plays you'd otherwise miss.
  • 3In Boggle, type qu in a single cell for the special Qu tile so those words are traced correctly.
  • 4In Hangman, always guess the highest-percentage letter the solver suggests, then re-solve.
  • 5In Text Twist, find a bonus word first — it's usually the only way to advance the round.
Questions & answers

Game Helpers FAQs

References

Authoritative sources used to explain the concepts on this page.

Trusted referencesMerriam-WebsterWikipedia
Related searches

Explore related word searches

Continue exploring

More free word tools await

You may also like our full toolkit, every category and the learning hub — all free and no sign-up.