Why not? It's all the rage.
I wrote Wikipedia over DNS a long time ago. It's amazing how much can be put into TXT records. They are sadly, although in keeping with their name designed for text and characters outside the ASCII range will be escaped by most tools. However it's easy to write a shell function to reverse that and do unescaping. Then we can serve that command over DNS too, so it's easy to get hold of!
So, here is Wordle over DNS:
$ host -t txt wd.ip.wtf
wd.ip.wtf descriptive text "Welcome to Wordle over DNS! Today's puzzle is #1: <guess>.1.wd.ip.wtf"
wd.ip.wtf descriptive text "This shell function makes it easier to play" "wd() { dig +short txt $1.1.wd.ip.wtf | perl -pe's/\\([0-9]{1,3})/chr$1/eg'; }"
For the sake of this example I've replaced the 1
with example
which is one
I prepared earlier so I'm not revealing an actual answer!
$ wd() { dig +short txt $1.example.wd.ip.wtf | perl -pe's/\\([0-9]{1,3})/chr$1/eg'; }
$ wd crane
"⬜⬜🟨🟨🟨"
$ wd reads
"⬜🟨🟨⬜🟩"
$ wd sense
"🟨🟨🟨⬜⬜"
$ wd names
"🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩"
[Note crane was considered one of the best openers, but this is using its own list of words, so that's not really true here.]
If you don't have easy access to DNS, you can use the shell at http://ip.wtf/sh
to make DNS queries using the host
command.
This is implemented as a very simple standalone DNS server in Go using miekg's DNS library. Code is at https://github.com/dgl/wordle-dns.
WTFPLv2; no warranty, see COPYING.