diff --git a/seed_data/challenges/basic-html5-and-css.json b/seed_data/challenges/basic-html5-and-css.json
index b5ca05013e..f5f92f61fa 100644
--- a/seed_data/challenges/basic-html5-and-css.json
+++ b/seed_data/challenges/basic-html5-and-css.json
@@ -645,7 +645,7 @@
"name": "Waypoint: Override Styles with Important",
"difficulty": 0.025,
"description": [
- "Create a \"blue-text\" class that gives an element the font-color of blue. Also create an \"urgently-red\" class that gives an element the font-color of red, but add !important
to the class to ensure the element is rendered as being red. Apply both classes to your h2
element.",
+ "Create an \"urgently-red\" class that gives an element the font-color of red, but add !important
to the class to ensure the element is rendered as being red. Immediately below your \"urgently-red\" class declaration, create a \"blue-text\" class that gives an element the font-color of blue. Apply both classes to your h2
element.",
"You can add more than one class to an element by separating the class declarations with a space, like this: <h2 class='green-text giant-text'>This will be giant green text</h2>
.",
"Sometimes HTML elements will receive conflicting information from CSS classes as to how they should be styled.",
"If there's a conflict in the CSS, the browser will use whichever style declaration is closest to the bottom of the CSS document (whichever declaration comes last). Note that in-line style declarations are the final authority in how an HTML element will be rendered.",