Skip to main content

Has it come to this? “LOLZ,” “Emoji,” and “Newb” are all Scrabble-legal now

scrabble dictionary lolz
thebarrowboy/Flickr
As a further sign of the Internet’s corroding effect on language and culture, the Collins Official Scrabble Wordlist, which is endorsed by Mattel and WESPA as the official Scrabble reference for the English-speaking world (outside of North America), has added over 6,500 new words, including plenty of neologisms, abbreviations, and internet slang that will make Scrabble traditionalists lose it. This is the first update to the Collins list since 2011, the BBC reports. Here are a few standout examples:

  • Cahz – Short for casual (I have never tried to spell this).
  • Newb – Short for “newbie,” used as an insult in gaming circles, though I’ve mostly seen it spelled as “noob,” or the Scrabble-impossible “n00b”.
  • Lotsa – As in “lots of.” Come on.
  • Thankx – Like “thanks,” but worth a lot more points.
  • Hacktivist – A politically-motivated hacker.
  • Vape – Short for “vaporizer” and the verb for using one, these have rapidly gained popularity as an alternative to cigarette smoking in recent years, to the delight of surreptitious public weed-smokers everywhere.
  • Emoji – A visual icon used in digital text communications, originally from Japan.
  • Tunage – Meaning music, as in: “Sick tunage, brah!”
  • Facetime – A verb for talking with someone using Apple’s FaceTime application. Does turning a proper noun into a verb make it ok? I guess if “google” is a Scrabble-legit verb then there is precedent, but seems like a slippery slope.
  • LOLZ – …no comment.

Words like “emoji” and “hacktivist” make sense as neologisms to reflect our increasingly digital reality, but “lotsa” and “thankx”? Where do we draw the line? Kids these days!

Recommended Videos

Helen Newstead, the head of language content for Collins, says that the rapid expansion of dictionaries to include more slang in recent years is because of the proliferation of published examples available through social media and websites:

Please enable Javascript to view this content

“Dictionaries have always included formal and informal English, but it used to be hard to find printed evidence of the use of slang words. Now people use slang in social media posts, tweets, blogs, comments, text messages — you name it — so there’s a host of evidence for informal varieties of English that simply didn’t exist before.”

It’s important to note that the Collins list is the official resource for Scrabble everywhere except for North America, where the rights are held by Hasbro instead of Mattel. Official play in North America is governed by the Official Tournament and Club Word List (or “OWL”), which is published by Hasbro as The Official Scrabble Player’s Dictionary. The schism of ownership happened in the 1950s, with separate dictionaries appearing in the United States and United Kingdom in 1978 and 1980, respectively. Attempts to bridge the divide have thus far failed because many North American players are wary of Collins’ much more permissive stance. Collins tournaments have started to appear with greater frequency in the United States, however, suggesting that the tide may be turning.

For casual play, just be sure to agree beforehand on the dictionary you will refer to. That way you can avoid awkward situations like that time in college when a friend of mine stormed out of the room because he foolishly chose the enormous Oxford English Dictionary to shut down “opo,” an archaic form of “upon” recognized by the history-conscious OED.

Will Fulton
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
Apple has a bunch of new products coming, but not this year
Tim Cook Apple Unleashed

Apple may have a lot coming our way in 2023, if the latest rumors are to be believed. We could see everything from a 15-inch MacBook Air to an M3 iMac to a VR headset. While this is exciting, it may mean that the end of the year will be left more bare, with no Apple event scheduled for October.

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman dropped the report about the apparent lack of an Apple event in his weekly newsletter, Power On, over the weekend. Gurman is considered a highly accurate source for reports on future Apple products, so when he says there will be no Apple event next month, you can depend on it.

Read more
American Arcadia has all the markings of a future indie darling
The key art for American Arcadia features Trevor, Angela, and the show's evil host.

The 2D platformer and first-person puzzler genres are both pretty played out. From Super Mario Bros. 3 for platformers to Portal for first-person puzzle games, it’s unlikely that there are many surprises left in each genre individually. So why not mash them together as American Arcadia does?
American Arcadia | Announcement Trailer | Coming soon to PC and Console
The next game from Spanish developer Out of the Blue and publisher Raw Fury is about a typically unsuspecting worker attempting to escape from Arcadia. That place seems to be a capitalist utopia but is actually a demented The Truman Show-like reality show where unpopular characters or those who find out too much die. American Arcadia’s compelling story and genre mashup left the biggest impression on me out of anything at this year's Tribeca Fest.
Inside Arcadia
My demo started with Trevor, a lanky and nerdy worker, being interrogated over his attempts to flee from Arcadia. This immediately sets up an air of intrigue and gave the demo (and presumably the full game) a clever framing device. I then saw how this whole fiasco started. Trevor works for megacorp INAC as a lowly office worker helping to run a supercomputer called Ada.
Trevor comes into work one day to discover that his friend Gus won an all-expenses-paid trip to another country, but as he’s working, the devices around him are hacked, and a mysterious benefactor tells him that Gus is dead and that he’ll die soon too if he doesn’t run. Obviously, this scares Trevor, who follows this mysterious guardian angel’s instructions to a back room to find that there isn’t a supercomputer there, but a performance stage instead.
When playing as Trevor, American Arcadia plays out as a simple 2D cinematic puzzle-platformer. He has a weighty jump and usually needs to push or pull objects into place to help him climb high enough or jump far enough to progress. Those who’ve played games like Inside before know the deal.
Soon into his escape, we learn that the person helping him is named Angela and that she can help him by hacking into cameras to alter the environment and help Trevor move forward. For example, she can move a light backstage so Trevor can see where he’s going. This first gameplay twist reminds me of Republique, a game I adore that’s also about helping someone break free from an overbearing capitalist totalitarian society.

While Republique was a third-person stealth game, the formula works just as well with a 2D cinematic platformer, and is one’s first indication that this game is far from simple. I didn’t have to wait long for the next wild gameplay twist to emerge either. While Angela had hacked Trevor’s card to get him access to areas he shouldn’t be in, it stops working, and guards working for INAC become aware of his impending escape.
A shift in perspective
Until this point, the American Arcadia has just been a platformer, but when Trevor is about to get caught, Angela gets out of her seat to override the server room herself. This is when American Arcadia shockingly becomes a first-person puzzle game. The wide, cinematic shots and camera gameplay elements of the platforming segments already made me feel like an observer of Trevor’s bad day, and this Angela segment helped cement that feeling.
The shift in perspective really puts me in stage technician Angela’s shoes as she frantically tries to help Trevor. The puzzles in the section weren’t very hard. I simply had to walk up to three cameras and loop their camera footage and then input a code I could see through a window. Still, the bones of an excellent first-person puzzler are here.
Developer Out of the Blue’s previous game, Call of the Sea, is one of the most underrated puzzle games of the past couple of years. As such, the developers have room to build on an already solid puzzle game base and make the puzzles more complex and satisfying to solve. Angela’s efforts ultimately allow Trevor to get to the roof of the INAC building, but he’s still being pursued.

Read more
All the things the Perseverance rover has achieved in its first year on Mars
Perseverance snapped this view of a hill called “Santa Cruz” on April 29, 2021. About 20 inches (50 centimeters) across on average, the boulders in the foreground are among the type of rocks the rover team has named “Ch’ał” (the Navajo term for “frog” and pronounced “chesh”). Perseverance will return to the area next week or so.

It's been one year since NASA's Perseverance rover made its remarkable landing on Mars. Twelve months on, NASA has shared a roundup of all the achievements the rover has made in its quest to understand the Jezero crater, where it landed, and in its quest to search for evidence of ancient life.

One of the rover's major achievements was collecting samples of Mars rock, which proved tricky at first due to the rock being more crumbly than expected. However, despite the challenges the rover has managed to collect six samples so far which are sealed up in tubes and will be left on the planet's surface for a future mission to collect and eventually bring back to Earth for study.

Read more