details - make a basic sentence better by adding details
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"details" starts with a simple daily sentence, then you have to make it longer by adding details. The details that you can add are limited by what "cards" you have (noun, verb, etc.). When you use up all your word cards, you win.
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details is a simple game. You start with a short sentence, then make it longer and better by adding details. The trick is, which details you can add is limited by what cards you have. At the start of every game you get five word cards. The cards correspond to the type of word you can add --a verb, a noun, an adjective, etc.
For example, if my sentence reads "The dog is hungry.", and I have an adjective card, I could add the adjective "black" to the sentence to make, "The black dog is hungry." Every time you add a word (or words) to the sentence, you get one extra word card, so try to add more than one word at a time.
The game isn't scored, your sentence isn't checked. There is no right answer. The goal is to make the best grammatically correct sentence you can, and then share an image or video of it. Show your friends and followers how clever you are. If you like Wordle or crossword puzzles, or magnetic poetry or "writing prompts", you'll probably like details.
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Another feature (currently only on the web version) is you can share a link to your game, and whoever gets the link will see a preview image of the game (via an og:image tag). If they click the link, details opens up in a browser to an identical game that you can play. This doesn't affect the original version --it's a branch. You can then take a turn and share it back.
The idea behind this feature was that a teacher could put a link to a sentence/game in a group chat with their students and ask them all to complete it. Each student student clicks the link, then posts their own version back to the group to be checked.
There's an option (web-only) called creative mode that lets you build any sentence/word card combination you want. This was added so that teachers could make custom starting sentences for homework/exercises.
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