I found this Word Search puzzle on the Browse By Type page.
Introduction:
I love the poem you placed as a introduction of the subject matter of the puzzle, "Soft Paws." It has to do with a wolf pack and particularly the Alpha wolf who guides and trains the younger wolves. They learn respect and trust for their Alpha whose job it is to keeps them safe.
The Puzzle:
This puzzle has 25 words to uncover related to the poem above the tile. Words to do with learning as pups and trusting the command of the Alpha in their pack.
Furthermore:
I could actually picture the youthful wolves around their Alpha. I love wolves.
I moved along fairly quickly as I solved the puzzle. It held my interest all the way through. The words appropriately describe a wolf pack and their survival which is dependent on their Alpha, and trust in him.
Conclusion:
Look what I found under Browse By Type--Word Search scroll!
Shenanigans:
All things having to do with fun, mischief and other playful things that go on in our world with fellow pranksters. It is especially fitting with April Fool's Day coming up next month.
Furthermore:
This puzzle has 25 words to uncover on the tile. They are indeed fun words related to the pranksters' fun and games. I attacked this puzzle by trying to find listed items before looking at the list. Your introduction set the theme and mood of what to expect. I must say, I did a great job uncovering those words. There were about six words left when I checked the list. So I was so proud to have found 19 out of 25 words without peeking!
Parting Thoughts:
I enjoyed the subject matter because I'm all about fun and laughter. It was such a pleasure solving the puzzle. I really loved your little poem above the tile. It sets the mod for the players.
Conclusion:
Great job!
I would have been here quicker if I got tagged. But, I tend to check the Browse By Type when it appears Word Search puzzles aren't showing up on the Newsfeed for my playing pleasure.
I am reviewing your entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" Thank you for entering our annual Cupid Slam, 1-star worthy poetry contest in February.
Oh, My! Where To Begin?:
The purpose of this contest is to write the worse of the worse poetry slamming that diaper wearing nuisance, Cupid. I can clearly see this is definite slamming of Cupid in poetry form.
A ONE-STAR RATING is the ultimate goal, here. We will award the "best" one-starred poems as the winners. (Will yours be among them?)
You have placed the line count as per the rules.
Which leads to ...
Love Cupid's Resume!
Your resume is a list of disasters: “Expert in creating awkward stares,”
“Specialist in mismatched hearts,”
“Proven record of unanswered prayers.”
That's unique including his resume!
Furthermore:
This irritating arrow flinger is given a pretty bad rap throughout the lines of your poem--which is the point, of course!
Parting Thoughts:
Excellence in alliteration: True love is patient, and thoughtful, and kind,
It doesn’t need your glittery, false, fleeting flame. (Who says bad poetry can't be good with its presentation while doing its darnedest in bashing the very existence of Cupid?)
Thus, you're good at being bad.
BUT...is your bad, bad enough to be one of the baddest entries in this bad poetry contest?
I really don't know anymore! Okay, I'm back to my senses.
I am reviewing your entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" Thank you for entering our annual Cupid Slam, 1-star worthy poetry contest!
Initial Thoughts:
Love the defiance! Cupid-stupid. Yeah, that has been used to obsession throughout the years. There's no rule against it. We just got tired of seeing that line in every bad poem we read.
This horrible poem emphasizes just how stupid that pesky Cupid is!
Pointing Out The Terrible:
Just a few to get the badness of the poem...
You aim your bow with smirky grins,
Then shoot two souls in matching sins.
You fling your darts like stinky farts,
You shoot red hearts with sticky arts,
You make folks pine beside a vine,
You steep their brains in cheap wine.
Okay, so it rhymes. How very poetic... Terrible can rhyme too!
Furthermore:
The purpose of this contest is to give us your very best worst poetry slamming Cupid. (I'd say you managed to do that!) You Slammed Cupid like a Sumo wrestler trying to dispose of the critter who took away his double Kobe double burger!
You also managed to stick "stupid" into it multiple times. I guess you figured that would stir up some annoyance in us. Nah! That doesn't bother us that bad.
You placed the Line Count as per the rules.
Parting Thoughts:
I must admit this was absolutely terrible! But, we have some heavy competition to those who are trying to create the worse of the worst 1-star poetry.
Conclusion:
Does this poem rise to the lowest depths required to be a winner?
I'm reviewing your entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" Thank you for entering our World Famous, annual Cupid Slam contest in February.
The Intent:
Of course the intent of this contest is to write your very best worse poem Slamming that dastardly creature known as Cupid.
The objective is to achieve the envied 1-star rating. Yes, it must be that bad!
Line count given in accordance with the rules.
Furthermore:
You have created quite the big picture of Cupid trying yet again to trap folks into the wrong relationships. The use of online love traps is a new approach to the sneaky way Cupid works. This time, it is Cupid himself trying to fix himself up with a blogger online by sending a pic and love quotes.
Interesting scenario, indeed!
This Stuff!
I replied, “I’m not that kind of girl.”
He said his intentions I had misconstrued
And that I should give him a whirl.
It was then I saw his quiver
Full of red arrows and stuff.
I frowned and started to shiver
And a strong finish!
"Clear off to Tinder where you’ll be admired
And fire off an arrow or two,
I’m sure there you’ll find your skills are required,
I’m deleting this chat, Cupid. Shoo.”
Parting Thoughts:
I loved the very melodic verses about the Cupid curses! It was just terrible! May I remind folks that Tinder won't be safe for anyone if Cupid's looking for a date!
Conclusion:
Good job with the prompt! But is it bad enough to beat the baddest of the bad 1-star entries?
I am reviewing this godawful poem written by you and entered into the "The Bard's Hall Contest" as a judge. Thank you for entering our World Famous, Cupid Slam contest in February!
What I'm Raven About:
Poor Poe dragged into the slamming of Cupid. He must be rolling over in his grave that he, himself didn't write a story based on the horror of Cupid himself!
Your terrible poem ripped from the Raven, shows how Cupid is not to be trusted. Eleanore would never be the love that he is raven for. Cupid instead flung his arrows away from her heart for evermore! Well that's no very fair!
The Awfulness:
Tis true as I sit here on the loo (Seriously not the place to get the desired result with Lenore from Cupid.
You say you aim to please
As I pull my pants up my knees
Now it’s gone in the toilet’s tight squeeze
I feel flushed if you want the truth
What I need is a swallow of Vermouth
Just to quoteth a few lines of disgusting affects that Cupid has on even the most literary giants in the middle of the call of nature.
Parting Thoughts:
This poem does place blame and shame upon Cupid. It was more indirect, but the impact of it still ferments my brain--and not with grade A fermentation products, that's for sewer, sure!
Conclusion:
Line Count given
raunchy 1-star worthy poem
But ...Is it horrible enough to rise above the other terrible 1-star poetry masters in this competition?
I am reviewing your entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" . Thank you for entering our annual Cupid Slam Poetry contest. You have exposed your disdain for that pesky little rascal--Cupid. Now everyone will know!
Our Mission:
It is our mission as judges to sort through the silt and then go deeper to find the worse of the worse!
Your poem does indeed rip on on that diapered lunatic who runs around shooting arrows in the most unusual places upon a person's person. Yes, bad stuff like that!
Furthermore:
Haunting couples in the park?
Where you lurk, waiting, your disease to send.
For lovers' hearts are sore and rent,
Oh how I'd wish you'd go, get bent.
Just horrible that miserable creature be!
Parting Thoughts:
You followed the rules by presenting us with a fine terrible, yet melodic poem Slamming of that dastardly critter--Cupid.
Poetry Line count is included.
Conclusion:
But, is it awful enough to beat our the other awful entries?
I am reviewing your entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" Thank you for entering February's annual Cupid Slam poetry contest. It' where you are best showing off your 1-star worthy poem.
First Impression:
Oh, my--this is an absolutely horrible, nasty, unforgiving poem slamming that sickly sweet creature that wreaks havoc upon relationships for one reason or another. Most note worthy, is that beastly arrow hitting anyone in its sight trying to make them fall in love will an ill-suited-suitor!
Furthermore:
Your poem hit all the marks of being very bad. But it is what Cupid deserves!
Love this:
I was chillin,' mindin' my business,
Then bam!--I love Deb from HR.
And my goldfish? Head over fins-
Loves the vacuum. It's where it always begins.
My fridge proposed to the garden gnome,
Parting Thoughts:
You definitely hit the terribleness with your Slam poetry. Rules Followed?
You Slammed Cupid
You put down the line count
But what do my eyes reveal? This February entry was created on January 31st. What will the Slam gods think about this little faux pas? It shall be seen ...
I saw this Word Search when I was tagged in the 7/7 Forum. I've been trying to get to this one for a couple days. In fact, I was looking forward to sinking my teeth into this one!
Jumping Right In:
I love your introduction into the wild and wonderful fantasy-filled creative words and rhymes created by Dr. Seuss. Seuss has created beloved books that were in our households as kids as well as adults when our own children came along. I loved reading them to my kids and them being able to read them on their own. It always brought a smile and laughter. He was such a literary icon in his authoring of children's books.
Furthermore:
The many words pulled from his various books were a blast from the past. I was all-in on finding those words as memories of my children flooded my memories. For the most part I was able to catch several of them right off the bat as I proceded to solve the puzzle. Let me tell you, those several may have been a quick find as Z's, Y's and W's have a tendency to be blaring back at you as they lay on the tile. However, "Flunnel" remained hidden until it was the last word I was tracking down.
Parting Thoughts:
The puzzle was indeed a full one filled with 25 whimsical words by the master himself, Dr. Seuss. As mentioned, those words took my mind to the books they were inside. I could picture the book covers of each of them. It truly made me smile.
Conclusion:
Absolutely delightful!
Thank you for creating such a nostalgic puzzle with all things Seussical!
Thank you for tagging me to this Word Search puzzle. You know I kind of like these things.
Jumping Right In:
Love Songs of the 70's. Another trip down memory lane with "Lady" by Styx. Very powerful song played during Valentine's Day dances in schools somewhere in the way-back machine. Yet, still enjoyed over the decades.
Furthermore:
This puzzle contains 25 words to uncover on the tile that are pulled directly from the lyrics to "Lady." Yes, I did sing along while working the puzzle. Having the video playing in the background helps drown out my non-singer voice.
The words do come back when the music is playing. Music memory does go a long way into through the decades.
Parting Thoughts:
I try to get rid of short words like shy, saw, arms. They definitely would have got lost in the grid if not disposed of early on. Once those were handled, the rest of the words slipped into place with ease. Love & lovely were interwoven and I try to keep a sharp eye on the words within another word when it comes to solving the puzzle.
Conclusion:
You do a great job finding videos and pairing them with the puzzle to entertain the player. And, bring back fond memories. This one is no different.
I found this story when I was perusing the Comedy Genre page. It's been quite the winter so far! I had to laugh when your character was thinking about Florida for warmth. It's the first winter since I've wintered here that it fell below freezing for several days. I had to wrap up my orchids so they wouldn't freeze to death--in the tropics!
Your story hits many vacation spots that are warm to hot to desert dry...I guess Alaska is not so bad when an alternative would possibly be facing hurricanes for a half a year.
Anyway, I found this story amusing--and much of it in relation to several places you mentioned--SO TRUE!
Conclusion:
I am highlighting this story in the upcoming Comedy Newsletter!
I am reviewing your entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" . Thank you for entering our Poetry & Word Search prompt in January.
The Poetry:
This poem describes the vibrancy of cats enjoying the Caterella ball. This ball is not unlike the Cinderella Ball, except the guests are all felines.
I love the words chosen to bring the fantasy to life.
With paws tipped in velvet and gowns spun of light.
A tom in a tux with a confident twirl,
While magic stays stitched in their laughter and eyes,
For here every kitty may sparkle and stand,
There is an AB rhyming in the three quatrains followed by a couplet ending the poem. The line count is given according to rules.
The Word Search:
The puzzle contains 25 words and thus within rules of at least 20 words to uncover on the tile.
All of the words are taken from the poem above. There were man diagonals the way this puzzle randomly fell onto the tile. Diagonals give it more of a challenge when playing. I like that!
Parting Thoughts:
I love the cover image that gives the player a glimpse into the Caterella ballroom and lets their imagination carry through from poem to puzzle. Great connection in its entirety.
I am reviewing your entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" . Thank you for entering our Poetry & Word Search prompt in January.
The Poetry:
The poem itself can chill one to the bones. I love the DnD theme and the well-chosen words that pain a huge image in the reader's mind.
The rhyming is smooth and the rhythm is fine--line after line.
Loved this:
This is the stuff nightmares are made from!
Eyes glint in the darkness.
Something slithers close by.
A growl echoes down the hall,
Good job on the poetry part. Plus, the cover image is a good addition for eye appeal.
The Word Search:
There are 23 words which is within the rules of at least 20.
The player must uncover words related to the DnD Bestiary. It covers the various "monsters" one will meet when playing the popular video game.
I had a fun time uncovering the words. I also imagined the monsters jumping out of the darkness. It made it all that much more fun.
Parting Thoughts:
You did a wonderful job bringing the combination of poem and puzzle together in a visual way that pulls the reader into the action thrugh the lens of imagination!
I am reviewing this entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" . Thank you for entering our Poetry & Word Search puzzle contest in January.
Introduction:
I loved the cartoons that appear above the tile. Perhaps that witch got a bad rap. At least she kept away from the water. But the flying monkeys took off on their own leaving the witch to analyze her life--or have it analyzed.
The Poem:
Simplistic and humorous. The perpetual beginnings of many a poem over the decades..."Roses are red, violets are blue."
The poem throws at us its own unique middle and end... If the Wrong Witch gets you;
You just might be through. Yeah, watch that stuff!
The Word Search:
In keeping with the flower theme, this puzzle contains 25 names of flowers to uncover on the tile. I enjoyed finding them--even the ones that had tongue-twisting names. I see that a favorite type of mine was not mentioned--orchids. They are on my mind right now since I've had to cover them and keep them protected outside where they grow, clinging to a small woody tropical tree, in the frozen tundra formerly known as tropical, South Florida. *tempc*
It was a fine chase all over the board, up and down, across and diagonal to uncover all the plants. (Which reminds me, I can uncover my orchids now that the raging cold has left the area.)
Parting Thoughts:
You followed the rules combining a poem and a word search puzzle. The puzzle contains 25 words which is within the required amount of at least 20.
I am reviewing your entry as a judge at "The Bard's Hall Contest" . Thank you for entering our Word Search Puzzle and poetry contest in January}
The Poem:
This poem contains eight lines about viewpoints and that some can be offensive. It's of course based on a subjective viewpoint since one person's agreement with a view may not be another person's. So is life amid strong points of view in this world.
This is a rhyming poem which kept a fine rhythm.
The Word Search:
The puzzle contains 22 words to uncover on the tile. Thus, within the rules of at least 20 words.
The words are about viewpoints and thus match the poem's subject matter.
I had a moment thinking I would find the word "king" within "talking." I find many Word Search puzzles tend to fall that way. However, "king" had its own special line on the tile.
Parting Thoughts:
Interesting subject matter. There are strong opposing viewpoints. Thus, the poem could apply to either side of views. People being people will always think their viewpoint is correct.
Conclusion:
All rules were followed with the poem, word/line count included -- and the WS puzzle, which kept within the same theme. Perhaps a little image or cover to add some eye-appeal to the entry would be all I could suggest. Otherwise well organized poem and puzzle.
This is a Sci-fi story about the fictional community of Xenom. Its leader Kiye. There are weird goings on as she tries to figure why part of the mostly dead community is still alive and flourishing. Not only that--but remaining ageless!
It's quite a concept, indeed. But what are the answers to the question of how? Kiye is determined to find out! When the inhabitants leave the protected area, they age quickly.
Furthermore:
It is explained that the former Extreme Leader at the time, "Yiumg decided only the rich and the wealthy would live there" -- Devoona explains. She's head of the GraveDiggers, a law enforcement group. However, there was also inhabitants who were downtrodden, and poor that were allowed to live there to do the menial work the wealthy needed done.
Observations: (Not a full list)
“I can’t stop thinking about this community,” says Devoona. She is now in front of this group of GraveDiggers, who are almost to this community. “It’s not just that this community is still on Xenom, There a four uses of the word "this" in the paragraph. I say not a full list mentioned because several paragraphs have the overuse of "this" and also "that". A good edit will help find and fix these repetitive words.
“I also ( want to know) what you are doing here.”
Suggestions:
Try reading the story out loud and you may find some areas that are distractions to the story. It is difficult for a reader to have a smooth read of the story when some paragraphs give them pause. Clarity is important when trying to relate a story plot.
Parting Thoughts:
You have a phenomenal imagination with your science fiction stories. I've discovered that each time I've reviewed your stories. The one issue that needs work is need for some revision. Write with clarity and a bit more concise flow. Sometimes there are too many things in a plot that make it a confusing read.
Conclusion:
The story was a good match with the picture prompt.
Keep on writing through your very creative mind. Stories like this one fascinate the reader. They can also be very scary to imagine!
This mountain climbing adventure can really take one's breath away. I have vertigo, so I almost lost my balance just reading it! Great job pulling the reader up the Matterhorn.
You paint a vivid picture of this dangerous sport as father and daughter face when a crampon snaps, leaving the dad dangling and the daughter trying desperately to secure another grip in the ice.
Furthermore:
The backstory about what happened on the mountain is told through storytelling at a local mountain climbers pub. Rose told all the details of what happened and how her father died that fateful day they were climbing together. The reader felt the sadness as Rose told of her father's courage to let go in order to save his daughter.
Observations:
crampon snapped first; then the second and I fell ten feet, pushing my dad into the air hanging from the rope.
He was swinging on the last clampon, The word was spelled both ways in the story. I believe Crampon is the correct spelling.
"Many time [times] I almost slipped. I forced myself to breathe, to move,"
Parting Thoughts:
This was quite an adventure story that kept the image of the photo prompt in the reader's mind. I pictured the summit with father and daughter climbing.
Conclusion:
Good use of the photo prompt.
Good luck with the contest.
I am reviewing your entry as a judge in "Short Shots: Official WDC Contest" . Thank you for entering the December Short-Shots contest.
Initial Thoughts:
I could clearly see by the first line that this was going to be a very magical story to read. Of course it is based on your favorite books to read, Harry Potter.
Furthermore:
I so enjoyed watching the surprise Christmas unfold for those children. It had been a lean year for the villagers because the crops failed. Parents couldn't afford to buy their children gifts and had to tell them Santa couldn't come that year. But some magic potions with the help of Harry, Hermione et al the children chosen to help deliver gifts became "Santa's little helpers that Christmas eve.
Observation: (Little typo)
As soon as he dismounted, Savita sprang into hs [his]arms.
Parting Thoughts:
I loved the magic woven into this story. The excitement of the children receiving gifts when they thought Santa wouldn't show up--priceless. Christmas is about the children and seeing it through their eyes.
It was a good ending as magic brought the crops to live and filled the fields with all they needed to make a living that year.
Conclusion:
This was what I call a happy-feeling story. The ending was great. The middle was fun and adventurous!
Hello John
I am reviewing your entry as a judgfe at "The Bard's Hall Contest" . Thank you for entering January's Word Search & poetry contest!
The Poem:
The poem has a quirky flair that could possibly make the reader get in the mood for a sandwich--possibly on the moon! The poem has 4 quatrain stanzas, with the rhyme hitting every other line.
Setting:
I like the outer space setting--Mars, Saturn and then back home. This poem shows just how convoluted dreams can be.
"What you dream about says a lot about what you're feeling, going through, or obsessed with" Indeed that is true. Untwisting troublesome dreams can be related to daily stresses at work or home or school. Weird happenings play with the imagination. If only we can awaken from the dreams with answers to everything. Well, I guess we can make our own bacon sandwich!
The Word Search:
The words search puzzle contains 24 words to uncover having to do with dreams or nightmares. Things seen, whether a fright or desire, it shows the bits and pieces of dreaming whether day or night.
I found the puzzle to be of near-medium difficulty level as this one lay on the tile. A couple words hid well for a while at the end. Of course sometimes the random fall of the words changes the level of difficulty.
Words that are family related, marriage, babies, money. Or, nightmare related such as accident, apes, alligators. (Although I've been close to an alligator or two in my taking nature photos in the Florida marsh areas.) Put that with reoccurring, then it really gets fright-night-ish.
Parting Thoughts:
I found this to be a very interesting subject matter for both poem and word search. You did a great job pulling the reader right into a dream world.
Thank you for tagging me to this Word Search puzzle!
Jumping Right In:
This is a puzzle inspired by a OneRepublic song Stranger Things. Here's when you are in your element with your love for music and one of your favorite groups.
Furthermore:
There are 25 words to uncover based on the above song. Also, the video is here for a player's listening pleasure.
I moved along a a pretty good clip in the solving part. I guess listening to the video puts one in the mood.
Words like constellation and technicolor filled the mind's eye with brilliance and color! But then, I have a great imagination!
Parting Thoughts:
May you always put words to your favorite music. May you take those words and share them in a Word Search puzzle. And, may you keep up your enthusiasm that shines through each time I play one.
Thank you for tagging me to this and the other Word Search puzzles that I have missed. I appreciate it!
Back In Wonderland:
It matters not the location when High Tea is being served. Wonderland just throws in a bit of magic to the mix.
I absolutely adored High Tea when I was in Victoria, BC, Canada. It was the first time I experienced an authentic tea. Victoria of course is quite a British influenced area. (Hey, if you can't be in England this is a fine substitute for a High Tea.) Cobblestone streets, little specialty shops and a beautiful setting to enjoy a visit to a very English village.
Sitting For Tea:
This puzzle contains 25 words to uncover all having to do with the niceties of High Tea. Yes, cucumber sandwiches are served. The star of the show--marvelous tea brewed to perfection. Crumpets, cream cheese --so good. Enjoy some savories and then the Petit fours.
All Good Things Come to an End:
Before you know it--the Tea has ended and the relaxation left behind. But the good feeling remains for much longer. Time to amble through the cobblestone walkways and window shop.
This puzzle --Wonderland aside, has brought back vivid memories of my vacation in Victoria, Canada. Thank you for that!
Thank you for tagging me to the link of this wondrous land of wonder Word Search puzzle!
Down The Rabbit Hole:
Down the rabbit hole I went and explored. I was finding unusual things and words not to be ignored. There were displays of sports and tea time, too! There's a rabbit, a queen a duchess and a court in the hole I fell--it's Wonderland, after all!
Puzzling Forward:
I loved the subject matter! I could picture the scenes before my eyes. There's even a story to go along with Fluffy the Cat! The puzzle of course was part of the Alice In Wonderland themed contest created by iKïyå§ama. I've seen so many creative writings and puzzles coming through from that contest.
Parting Thoughts:
This puzzle contains 25 words related to the aforementioned theme. "Proprietary" characters are added to the mix of words to solve outside the regular cast of characters in "Wonderland."
It was a bit of a chase uncovering a couple words. All-in-all much fun was had!
I don't remember being tagged for this Word Search puzzle, but I found it in your Puzzle Folder. I had done mostly all of them I believe. I guess I missed it because it's been created a year ago.
The Eighties:
The band Chicago is playing. This puzzle has the lyrics from their song "You're The Inspiration." Of course I had to listen to the video which link you included with puzzle. It's a blast from the past.
The Puzzle:
There are 17 words to uncover from the song. It was a lovely quick and relaxing puzzle made all that much better with music to listen to. You do spoil me!
Parting Thoughts:
I'm so happy I found this amid the Word Search puzzles you had stored in your folder. I thought I got them all. What a lucky break this was!
Conclusion:
Great subject matter for Valentine's Day, even though a year later, the day will be upon us soon!
Thank you for tagging me with a reminder that I hadn't done this Word Search puzzle, yet! Well I'm fixing that right now.
This is a group that I know you love. It's a fave of my daughters, too. Yes, Imagine Dragons with videos included. It always makes the experience of the playing that much more fabulous with the back ground music.
This one is especially fun with the spookier them of their song "Bones." All of the words are pulled right from the lyrics. I mean, who doesn't like a zombie takeover of a Wall Street company to bring in the Spooktober fun!
( I see this was created October, 2025.) How did it take me so long to get here? It's the perfect theme for that month, too!
Furthermore:
There are 25 words pulled from those lyrics to uncover. I had fun finding the words. Also, the additional video included with x-ray style dancing skeletons, adds an extra layer of just plain wonderful to this puzzle!
Parting Thoughts:
I had fun solving this puzzle. Even this far away from October--it's still a classic enjoyment of Dancing skeleton bones and a backdrop of ID music!
I found this Word Search puzzle on Browse By Type. I notice this came out in June 2025. I don't know how I missed it.
Jumping Right In:
This puzzle is all about words that lead to ideas. Thus, ideas can lead to creativity. I notice painting, drawing, sculpture and even yarn tools by which one can create stuff.
Furthermore:
There are 25 words to uncover from nature, planets--the world, even. Scenery from mountains to forests. Fantasy can take the mind anywhere it wishes to go and words put in a book to experience it all. So many ways to develop ideas. It is indeed a treasure trove of creativity to uncover in this puzzle.
Parting Thoughts:
I know I must have been tagged for this when it came out and I somehow missed seeing it. I'm so happy I found one I hadn't already solved back in 2025. I'm usually right on top of these things.
This was a very interesting subject matter that covers a smorgasbord of things that someone can enjoy whether by putting their creativity to canvas, sculpture, crocheting, or writing. It's all good!