Nerdle is the daily math and logic puzzle where you guess an equation by placing numbers and operators. On 19 Nov 2025, the puzzle was especially tricky because operators and number placement made it deceptive. Below you'll find step-by-step hints to guide you and the full answer revealed for checking your solve.

Nerdle Hints for 19 November 2025

  • This equation uses multiplication (×) rather than addition, subtraction, or division.
  • At least one digit appears more than once — pay attention to repeated zeroes.
  • The result is a three-digit number (not one- or two-digit). The equation begins with a single-digit number on the left side before the operator.
  • Logic nudge: one factor is a multiple of ten, so the product ends with a zero — the other factor is a small single-digit number.

Nerdle Classic Answer: 19 November 2025

Here’s the correct equation for today’s Nerdle Classic:

Click to reveal Nerdle Classic answer

Answers: 79 - 43 = 36

Nerdle Mini Answer: 19 November 2025

Here’s the correct equation for today’s Nerdle Mini:

Click to reveal Nerdle Mini answer

Answers: 7 + 6 = 13

Nerdle Micro Answer: 19 November 2025

Here’s the correct equation for today’s Nerdle Micro:

Click to reveal Nerdle Micro answer

Answers: 1 x 5 = 5

Nerdle Maxi Answer: 19 November 2025

Here’s the correct equation for today’s Nerdle Maxi:

Click to reveal Nerdle Maxi Answer

Answers: 1 x 3² - 1 - 2 = 6

How to Play Nerdle

  • You must create a mathematically correct equation using 8 tiles.
  • Numbers and the equals sign are required.
  • Operators can include +, -, *, /.
  • Tiles change colors to show correctness and correct position.
  • The solution must obey standard math order.

How to Solve Nerdle Efficiently

  • Begin with a wide variety of numbers and operators.
  • Narrow down the equals sign placement quickly.
  • Use color feedback (green/purple/black) to eliminate possibilities.
  • Test whether the equation ends in a single digit or two digits.
  • When stuck, try rearranging operators.
  • Prioritize valid equations over random number strings.

Final Thoughts

Today's Nerdle felt operator focused and a touch tricky because placing the multiplication and the multiple of ten factor mattered more than individual digits. If you enjoyed this one, drop a comment with your solving path or come back tomorrow — we'll post hints and the next equation.