The goal is simple. You have six attempts to get a five-letter word. If  the tile turns green, you have a correct letter in the right place, if  it turns yellow, it is correct but in the wrong place. 

It is enough to get the gray matter going, and gray is also the color of a letter chosen that is not in the word. 

Upon completion, a box appears with your track record, which you can  share for bragging rights if you are doing well, or keep to yourself if  you have been struggling with it lately. Each day, the game refreshes 

The game was the brainchild of Josh Wardle, a software engineer who  started work on it in 2013 before perfecting it during the COVID  lockdown. 

His partner Palak Shah also helped with the game and whittled down the  number of five-letter words that can be used to around 2,500, enough for  more than seven years. 

Only a few dozen people played it when it was first launched in October  2021 but its popularity grew exponentially within a few months. 

Its global reach was assured when it was purchased by The New York Times and now more than 45 million people play the game as part of their daily routine. 

The word game has become so popular that it has inspired a number of other daily games like the music-based Heardle, and the math-based Nerdle. 

Wordle' #371 Five Hints for Saturday, June 25 Newsweek has put together five clues to help players solve today's Wordle. 

Each hint should reveal more than the last, so you can stop when you think you have enough to get the answer. 

Hint #1: Today's Wordle contains two vowels, which are both next to each other. 

Hint #2: The solution is an adjective which can describe someone with small eyes. 

Hint #3: The answer to today's Wordle starts with the letter "B." 

Hint #4: Today's Wordle rhymes with an adjective which describes someone who is selfish and wants possessions. 

Hint #5: Merriam-Webster defines Wordle #371 as "resembling beads" or "small, round, and shiny with interest or greed."