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Slate Pears Game 338: Jul. 18, 2026
United States🎭 Culture10 hr. ago

Slate Pears Game 338: Jul. 18, 2026

This article promotes Slate's 'Pears' game, a daily word puzzle featured on the publication. It highlights the latest edition, Game 338, and mentions the longest words from the previous game, including 'ASSHATS,' 'PASSATA,' and 'PAWPAWS.' The piece also announces that the full archive of Pears games is available to Slate Plus members, offering access to over 300 puzzles. Readers are encouraged to submit word suggestions via email, with recent additions like 'SPORTSWASH' and 'WHATEVS' noted. Additional links point to other Slate content, such as the July 18 mini crossword, the previous Pears game, and a crossword themed around a celebrity pinniped related to Australia.

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8 reports

Slate logoSlateIndependentCenterFactual 0Objective 0yesterday
Slate Pears Game 337: Jul, 17, 2026

This article is an advertisement for Slate's 'Pears' game, a daily wordplay feature where participants guess words based on clues. The headline references Game 337, which took place on July 17, 2026. The article highlights past games, mentions the longest word from the previous game ('BEDEWED'), and promotes access to the complete Pears archive for Slate Plus subscribers. It also includes links to other Slate features such as crosswords and quizzes.

Bias read (Center): The content is purely recreational and does not involve any politically charged subject matter. It is a promotional piece for a word-based game, which falls under the category of entertainment rather than politics.

Why factuality (0): This article is a promotional message for 'Pears Game 336' from July 16, 2026. It contains no factual information about any real-world event. It is solely advertising a feature of Slate's website.

Why objectivity (0): The article is not objective because it is a promotional piece with no attempt to present any real-world content. It is purely marketing language.

Slate logoSlateIndependentCenterFactual 0Objective 02 days ago
Slate Pears Game 336: Jul. 16, 2026

This article promotes Slate's daily 'Pears' game, highlighting the latest edition (Game 336) and noting the longest word from the previous game was 'TACTICALLY.' It invites readers to submit words for future games and mentions recent additions like 'CALLOUT' and 'DELICATA.' The piece also advertises other Slate content, including a crossword puzzle themed around '1984,' a soundbite segment, and a mini crossword puzzle.

Bias read (Center): The article focuses on promoting a word game and related cultural content without addressing any political issues, figures, or policies. There is no framing or slant detectable in the text.

Why factuality (0): This is a promotional message for a daily 5x5 crossword puzzle. It provides no factual information about any real-world event. It is solely advertising a feature of Slate's website.

Why objectivity (0): The article is not objective because it is a promotional piece with no attempt to present any real-world content. It is purely marketing language.

Slate logoSlateIndependentCenterFactual 0Objective 03 days ago
Slate Pears Game 335: Jul. 15, 2026

This article is an entry in Slate's 'Pears' daily game series, featuring wordplay and linguistic challenges. The headline references Game 345, which includes the longest words from the previous game, ASSESSES and SQUASHES. The article promotes access to the complete Pears archive for Slate Plus subscribers and invites readers to submit suggested words. It also lists related content such as SoundBites, Mini Crossword, and a larger crossword puzzle with a clue referencing historical treaties and entertainment figures.

Bias read (Center): The article is a feature promoting a word-based game and does not discuss any politically charged topics. It focuses on entertainment and engagement rather than politics, policy, or societal issues.

Why factuality (0): This article continues the pattern of promoting the 'Pears' game with no reference to real events or factual information. No primary source exists, and the content is purely entertainment-focused with no substantive claims.

Why objectivity (0): The writing style is promotional and lacks objectivity, as it does not attempt to report on any real-world issue or provide balanced perspectives.

Slate logoSlateIndependentCenterFactual 0Objective 05 days ago
Slate Pears Game 333: Jul. 13, 2026

This article is an entry in Slate's 'Pears' game series, which features daily word-based puzzles. The headline references Game 333, noting that the longest words in the previous game (Game 332) were BEJEWEL and BLOWJOB. The article promotes access to the complete Pears archive for Slate Plus subscribers and invites readers to submit suggested words via email. It also lists related content such as SoundBites and a Mini Crossword available on July 14, 2026.

Bias read (Center): The article is a routine feature of a puzzle game and does not address any politically charged subject. It focuses on entertainment and engagement with Slate's content rather than any political issue, policy debate, or social controversy.

Why factuality (0): This article is a crossword puzzle promotion with no factual content about any real-world event. No primary source document exists, and there is no cross-source consensus to reference.

Why objectivity (0): The article has no objective content as it is solely focused on promoting a puzzle with no attempt to present facts or balance perspectives.

Slate logoSlateIndependentCenterFactual 0Objective 07 days ago
Slate Pears Game 331: Jul. 11, 2026

This article is an entry in Slate's 'Pears' daily word game series, announcing Game 331 with no substantive news content. It highlights previous game results, promotes access for Slate Plus subscribers, invites word suggestions, and lists recent additions to the game's vocabulary. The piece includes links to related games and quizzes but does not cover any real-world events or issues.

Bias read (Center): The article is a purely recreational feature with no political or societal implications. It focuses on a word game and does not address any contentious issues or provide commentary on politics, policy, or public affairs.

Why factuality (0): This article is a crossword puzzle promotion with no factual content about any real-world event. No primary source document exists, and there is no cross-source consensus to reference.

Why objectivity (0): The article has no objective content as it is solely focused on promoting a puzzle with no attempt to present facts or balance perspectives.

Slate logoSlateIndependentCenterFactual 0Objective 09 days ago
Slate Pears Game 329: Jul. 9, 2026

This article promotes Slate's daily 'Pears' game, highlighting the latest edition, Game 329, and encouraging reader participation through suggestions and subscriptions. It mentions the longest words from the previous game and invites users to submit new words. Additional content includes a trivia question about a Greek letter representing magnetic flux, a mini crossword puzzle, and a main crossword clue related to paper where axes are thrown.

Bias read (Center): The article focuses on cultural content—specifically a word game and puzzles—with no mention of politics, policy, or public figures. There is no framing or slant detectable in the content provided.

Why factuality (0): This article is not about any real-world event but rather a fictional game called 'Pears' where players find long words. There is no actual event or factual claim being made. Since there is no primary source and no consensus among other articles about a real event, factuality cannot be assessed beyo

Why objectivity (0): The tone is promotional and enthusiastic, focusing on advertising the game rather than reporting on any real-world event. There is no attempt to present facts or maintain neutrality.

Slate logoSlateIndependentCenterFactual 0Objective 010 days ago
Slate Pears Game 328: Jul. 8, 2026

This article is an entry in Slate's 'Pears' game series, which features daily wordplay challenges. The headline references Game 328, noting that the longest words in the previous game included terms like GROGGY and GROTTO. The article promotes access to the complete Pears archive for Slate Plus subscribers and invites suggestions for new words. It also lists related content such as other games and puzzles available on Slate.

Bias read (Center): The article is a non-political entertainment feature focused on a word game. There is no discussion of politics, governance, or societal issues. The tone is purely recreational and promotional.

Why factuality (0): This item is not an article but a game. No factual claims can be assessed.

Why objectivity (0): Not applicable - this is a game, not a news article.

Slate logoSlateIndependentCenter10 hr. ago
Slate Pears Game 338: Jul. 18, 2026

This article promotes Slate's 'Pears' game, a daily word puzzle featured on the publication. It highlights the latest edition, Game 338, and mentions the longest words from the previous game, including 'ASSHATS,' 'PASSATA,' and 'PAWPAWS.' The piece also announces that the full archive of Pears games is available to Slate Plus members, offering access to over 300 puzzles. Readers are encouraged to submit word suggestions via email, with recent additions like 'SPORTSWASH' and 'WHATEVS' noted. Additional links point to other Slate content, such as the July 18 mini crossword, the previous Pears game, and a crossword themed around a celebrity pinniped related to Australia.

Bias read (Center): The article focuses on promoting a word game and does not address any politically charged topics. There is no framing or emphasis that suggests a particular ideological leaning.

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