‘Dungeon crawler’ enters the Merriam-Webster dictionary alongside ‘touch grass’ and 200 other new words and phrases

A hand pointing at an entry in an open dictionary.


Earlier today, Merriam-Webster announced that it’d added 200 new words and phrases to its online dictionary in its latest effort to maintain relevance in the arms race against the ever-changing English language. We can only guess at what arcane metrics and procedures Merriam-Webster follows to determine when and why a term is worthy of entering its record, but I do know this: “dungeon crawler” is in there now, and that’s pretty neat.

To paraphrase countless essayists who weren’t sure how to start their school papers: Merriam-Webster defines a “dungeon crawler” as “a videogame where the gameplay is primarily focused on defeating enemies while exploring a usually randomly generated labyrinthine or dungeon-like environment.” According to the dictionary, its first known use was in 1989, which—considering that people were making games like dnd and Moria back in the ’70s—seems a little late to me, but I’m not Merriam or Webster.



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