Today’s Spelling Bee puzzle was a clever and satisfying challenge built around the center letter R, with O, G, I, D, N, and W on the outside. At first glance, the hive looked a little tight because it offered only two vowels, but that is exactly what made the puzzle interesting. Once the right patterns appeared, the board opened up beautifully.
The biggest highlights of the day were the pangrams DROWNING and WRONGDOING, along with the perfect pangram WORDING, which uses every letter exactly once. That combination gave today’s puzzle a strong solving arc: start small, notice the -ing pattern, and then build toward the longer breakthrough words.
Today’s Letters
How I Solved Today’s Puzzle
As always, I began by focusing on the center letter R, since every valid Spelling Bee answer must include it. The first step was to collect easy four-letter words and get a feel for the hive. Words like door, word, worn, iron, ring, rind, grid, grin, grow, and odor helped establish the most useful letter combinations.
Very quickly, one thing became clear: today’s puzzle strongly favored -ing endings. Once I found ring and grow, it felt natural to test longer builds such as rowing, growing, ringing, and wronging. That is often one of the best Spelling Bee habits—when a hive gives you a productive ending, keep pushing it.
The next big clue came from the word word. From there, wording emerged, and that turned out to be the day’s perfect pangram. It was especially satisfying because it uses all seven letters exactly once: W, O, R, D, I, N, G. Perfect pangrams always feel elegant, and this one was no exception.
After that, I kept testing the same structure with other roots. The letters supported several longer forms, and that led to drowning, another pangram that felt more dramatic and less obvious than wording. Finally, the longest and most impressive discovery was wrongdoing, which uses all seven letters and gives the puzzle a memorable finish.
What made this hive enjoyable was that the pangrams did not feel random. They were connected by natural word-building patterns, especially word → wording → wrongdoing and the broader -ing family. That kind of progression makes a puzzle feel rewarding rather than forced.
Tap to view the solving path
word → WORDING → WRONGDOING