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You get six tries to guess the top autocomplete result. Each time you type something in, the tiles flip colors to show how close or how wildly off you are. Green means you’re onto something. Gray means you’ve wandered off into the weeds. It’s strangely satisfying watching the board react, especially when a guess lands exactly where you hoped.
What makes Feudle fun isn’t just the guessing; it’s realizing how bizarrely predictable people can be. Sometimes the top result makes perfect sense. Other times… You sit there wondering who on earth is searching for that. Still, every correct guess earns you points, and hitting the most popular phrase feels like winning a tiny battle against the collective mind of the internet.
There’s something addictive about trying to think like millions of strangers. It doesn’t take long to play a round, but each one feels different because the internet never stops surprising you. Feudle taps into that curiosity, "What are people Googling these days?" and turns it into a quick, clever challenge you can finish on a break.
Nothing about Feudle is complicated. That’s part of the charm. It’s the kind of game you open just to try one round, only to look up and realize you’ve played ten. And the best part? Every single round is based on something real, something people genuinely typed into a search bar somewhere in the world.



















