How do you score a word that begins on a triple word space, ends on a double word space and uses all seven of your tiles?
8,570 11 11 gold badges 42 42 silver badges 87 87 bronze badges asked Mar 30, 2017 at 20:34 11 1 1 gold badge 1 1 silver badge 2 2 bronze badgesAre you asking whether it's possible, how to establish a situation to enable it, are you looking for examples, or something entirely different?
Commented Mar 30, 2017 at 21:07You score zero, because it's apparently impossible in the rules and therefore cheating if you've done it regardless.
Commented Mar 31, 2017 at 5:49My best score ever was tzarinas over two triple word score squares. That rocked. Put that in your pipe and smoke it! Triple and double words count, so you multiply those. Bingoes only count once. I'm suspicious that your scenario could actually happen.
Commented Mar 31, 2017 at 15:06Note that this is something that is impossible to pull off in a standard game as the only row/column that has both a triple word and a double word is the one with the starting space and you need 8 tiles to get from the double word space to the triple word space.
According to the Scrabble rules you would take the value of the word and multiply by by 6, and then add 50 points. (The rules don't explicitly state this due to it being impossible, but they do account for 2 doubles or 2 triples so there is no reason to think that a triple and a double would work differently)
answered Mar 30, 2017 at 20:46 20.1k 2 2 gold badges 54 54 silver badges 95 95 bronze badgesIt depends on which letters were already on the board, and which ones you added.
When you place a word in Scrabble, it must attach to existing words (except for the very first play of the game). When you add to an existing word, you score any letters that were already on the board again, but you do not score any triple or double word or letter points for the spaces underneath already-existing letters; only for spaces that you just covered up for the first time.
If you mean a situation where your own letters were used to cover up both the triple and double word spaces, then this is impossible. The only places on the board where a double and triple word score exist on the same row or column use the center space; and if you were going there as your first move, you cannot reach a triple word score with only 7 letters.
Either way, you would add 50 points to the normal word score for having used all 7 of your letters.