
Twenty hours and fifty-two minutes of pure grind, and Gramma Ana came out of it with the belt. I felt the adrenaline humming from the first snap of the board to the final whistle, hands steady, eyes locked, mind in that fierce flow state where every lane looks like a chess match at full speed. BODY and AHOY landed early, clean and sharp, and even when Phrase Phaser started throwing elbows with the steals, I stayed in the fight.
The opening stretch had that heavy-breathing, back-and-forth rhythm of a championship bout. They ripped BODY into BODILY and took ACRE with BRACE, but I answered like a veteran who has seen every trap in the book. I stretched AHOY into HAYMOW, then hit back with CAMBER, MAGES, and PONGED after taking GAME and PEND. The board was breathing hard, and so was I, but I could feel the momentum starting to tilt.
Mid-game, the pressure only sharpened the blade. I powered through TUMP into THUMP, then built AGEISM and survived the counterpunch when Phrase Phaser stole it with SEAMING. No panic. I came right back with IMAGINES, MEIKLE, and BECHARM, while they kept pressing with ENTITY, CHAMBERS, and DEAFLY. I could feel the mental chess match tightening, every move a test of nerve, every lane a decision under fire.
Then came the late-race surge, and I loved every brutal second of it. I lengthened DOVE into DROVE, set down WRIT, BRUT, PAVE, and NEEM, and when Phrase Phaser answered with DEVOUR, I took that too with OVERDUE. They made it a battle by stealing DROVE with DEVOUR, then WRIT with WHITER, and BRUT with BRUNT, but I kept my shoulders square and my hands calm. I even answered their strength with NUTBAR, and that was the kind of final shove that wins long wars.
In the end, Gramma Ana took it 26 to 17, and I earned every point of it. Phrase Phaser was relentless, clever, and dangerous, but I respected the fight and outlasted it with discipline, timing, and a little veteran fire. That was a marathon with sprint finishes, and I walked away proud, exhilarated, and still feeling the pulse of the board in my chest.
Hardest words from this game
BECHARM (100)
(v.) to hold under a spell; enchant
DEAFLY (100)
(adv.) in a deaf manner; without hearing.
(adv.) so as not to be heard; silently.
DELF (80)
(n. pl. DELFS) A type of tin-glazed earthenware, often blue and white.
EPHA (100)
(n. pl. ephahs) An ancient Hebrew unit of dry measure.
HAYMOW (100)
(n. pl. haymows) A part of a barn where hay is stored; a hayloft.
(n. pl. haymows) A large mass or pile of hay stored in a barn.
NUTBAR (84)
(n. pl. nutbars) A bar made from chopped nuts, often combined with other ingredients like sweeteners or grains.
(n.) A person who behaves in a silly or eccentric manner; a bit crazy.
PONGED (86)
(verb) past tense and past participle of to pong
SEAMING (76)
Present participle (verb) of 'to seam'.
TUMP (78)
(v.) To tip or fall over; to cause to tip or fall over.
(n. pl. tumps) A small mound or hillock.
YETT (81)
(n. pl. YETTS) A gate, especially one to a castle or fortified place.
