You're almost there to being a Yeezle pro if you've ever found yourself humming a tune from "The Life of Pablo" while trying to remember which track number it was. It's a daily task that makes being a music fan for years more fun and cool.
"What does Yeezle mean?""Louis Vuitton Don" Yeezle is a tribute to him. It uses the familiar reasoning of *Wordle* to push you to pick out one song from Kanye's huge catalog. It's not so much about "winning" as it is about having that "Aha!" moment when you realize the song you're looking for is that hidden gem from a 2004 mixtape or an anthem from 2011.
If you want to get it right in eight tries, you need to think like a boss. Yes, getting feedback helps you win:
The First Drop: Don't guess what song you like. Choose a "bridge" song from the middle of his career, like a song from Meat Beats The Force. It's easy to tell whether you need to go "Old Kanye" or "New Kanye."
Reading the "Mix":
That "sample" (green) is the one you need. It goes well with it.
"Yellow" means you're in the right area. If the Length is yellow, you should find a song that's about the same length. If **Features** is yellow, then both your guess and the truth share at least one guest artist.
These are the Arrows: These people are your best friends. You want to find something that came out later if the record column has a $\downarrow$. It shows how his art has changed over time based on real events.
What makes Yeezle more than just a list of songs?
The Spirit of Collaboration: Everything changes in the "Features" part. It reminds you of all the famous people Kanye has worked with, like Jay-Z and Kid Cudi. And it turns the game into a hip-hop business reality show.
What I do every day: It's like a quick five-minute coffee in the morning: it clears your mind. Every 24 hours, the "Master Tape" is cleared, and a new puzzle begins.
The Language of Pictures: As the colors change, the clean design gives you a pleasant "click" when you see a row of green.
The reason Yeezle works is that it gets music right. It's not enough to remember the song's title; you also need to remember what it's about. It takes you back to the time period, the length of time, and the people who worked together to make each time period unique.
Fans who stayed up late to listen to Donna Summer can play this game, but it's also easy enough for someone who just really likes "Gold Digger."" It's a tribute to a career that one guess at a time changed music for good.
Do you like to start with hits or do you go straight for deep cuts to see if you can catch the other team off guard?