About Partyguesser
Last updated: November 2026
Partyguesser is a free, daily browser game in the Wordle / Connections family, inspired by the UK's Guess the Party. Once every 24 hours we publish five well-known American public figures and ask you to identify each one's political party affiliation: Democrat, Republican, or Independent.
Who's in the roster?
A deliberately broad cross-section of American public life: actors, pop / rock / country / hip-hop musicians, professional athletes, technology founders and venture capitalists, cable news hosts, late-night television comedians, novelists, and reality-TV personalities. Sitting elected officials are excluded — their affiliation is already obvious.
Why daily?
The daily-puzzle format was popularized by Wordle and copied for a reason: it creates a low-friction ritual. You play once, see your score, share your emoji grid, come back tomorrow. The game serves the same five names to every player in the world on the same date, so share grids line up with your friends'.
What about people whose politics changed?
Affiliations evolve. Each entry reflects the most clearly documented public position at the time the entry was written, and the rationale on the reveal screen tells you what evidence we're relying on (most often a specific endorsement, donation, or campaign appearance).
How do I report a wrong entry?
The full source code and roster data live on GitHub at github.com/Adrian-Ahmetspahic/Partyguesser. Open an issue with a primary source that contradicts the listed affiliation and we'll re-evaluate it.
Is this affiliated with any party or campaign?
No. Partyguesser is independently operated and accepts no money or favors for the inclusion, exclusion, or classification of any individual on the roster.