Playing the X, Z, J and Q Like a Pro
The four heavyweight tiles — X and Z (8 points), J (8 points), Q (10 points) — are double-edged. Played well, one of them lands 30+ points in a single turn; stuck on your rack at the end, they're a painful penalty. The difference is knowing the short words. Here's the working vocabulary for each letter, and how to squeeze maximum points out of them.
All words below are valid in the major Scrabble dictionaries — if you play a specific app, its built-in dictionary has the final say.
Check any rack for hidden high scorers.
Open the unscrambler →X — the friendliest heavyweight
X is the easiest big tile to place because it pairs with every vowel:
Those five two-letter words are gold. Played on a double- or triple-letter square in two directions at once (say, AX across and EX down sharing the X), a single X regularly scores 25–50 points. Handy three-letter X words:
Z — one word to rule them all
The Z's best friend is a pizza slice: ZA (slang for pizza) is the only two-letter Z word, and it's a game-changer — ZA with the Z on a triple-letter square, played both directions, is 62 points from two tiles. Three-letter helpers:
J — the trickiest one
The J has just one two-letter escape hatch — JO (a Scottish sweetheart) — so it clogs racks more than X or Z. Learn the three-letter exits and play the J early rather than hoarding it:
Q — the tile everyone fears
Ten points, and famously useless without a U — except it isn't: QI (life force in Chinese philosophy) needs no U and is the most important Q word in modern Scrabble. QAT, QIS and SUQ round out the short list. We keep a dedicated guide to every Q-without-U word — if the Q haunts you, start there.
Q strategy in one line: play it the first chance you get, even for modest points — an unplayed Q at game end costs you 10 and often the match.
Placement: where the points actually come from
- Two directions at once. The classic high-value move: place a two-letter word so the big tile also completes a word perpendicular — the letter scores twice, and any letter-premium under it counts in both words.
- Letter premiums beat word premiums for big tiles. A Z on a triple-letter square is 30 points before you've counted the rest of the word — often better than stretching for a double-word square.
- Don't hoard for the dream play. Every turn a heavy tile sits on your rack, it's limiting what else you can build. Take the solid 28 now instead of waiting three turns for a theoretical 40.
Find them in your own rack
Holding a Z, four consonants and no ideas? Type your letters into unscrbl and every valid word appears instantly, longest first — including the short high-scorers you'd never think to try. It's the fastest way to learn these lists for real, because you see them in the context of your own games.
Never waste a 10-point tile again.
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