Real NASA Landsat scenes
Every revealed letter comes from the public-domain NASA / USGS Landsat archive — rivers, fjords, salt pans and crop fields shaped like A through Z.
A free daily 5-letter satellite Wordle from the team behind Your Name in Landsat. Six tries. Every correct letter flips into a real NASA Landsat scene of an Earth landform shaped like that letter.
One puzzle per day. Same word for everyone, refreshed at 00:00 UTC.
Use your keyboard or the on-screen keys. Press Enter to submit.
Green = right letter, right spot. Yellow = right letter, wrong spot. Gray = not in the word.
Solve in 6 tries to unlock the day's Landsat letters — each one a real place on Earth.
Every revealed letter comes from the public-domain NASA / USGS Landsat archive — rivers, fjords, salt pans and crop fields shaped like A through Z.
The puzzle is generated from the UTC date, so every player sees the same five-letter word on the same day. Streaks roll over at midnight UTC.
Loved this satellite Wordle? Open the Studio to spell your full name, swap each letter's variant, and download a PNG.
Runs entirely in your browser, saves your streak locally, and never asks for sign-up. The original NASA Your Name in Landsat lives at science.nasa.gov.
The day's puzzle is identical for everyone, but your guesses are unique to you — that's why your keyboard heat-map will look different. The answer resets at 00:00 UTC.
The same alphabet that powers Your Name in Landsat — every entry is a real Earth scene from the NASA / USGS Landsat archive. Click any revealed tile to see the location, coordinates, satellite, and acquisition date.
Not yet. The first release plays like classic Wordle: any 5-letter word is accepted as a guess. We're testing a "Rare Earth" mode where only words spelled with rarer Landsat letters (glaciers, salt pans, volcanic flows) score full points.
Yes — it's responsive across desktop, tablet, and phone. The on-screen keyboard turns the game into a one-thumb puzzle.
No. NASA Landsat Wordle is a fan-made daily game inspired by NASA's Your Name in Landsat interactive at science.nasa.gov. Landsat imagery is in the public domain.