Typing game with music: practice on the beat
A typing game with music gives every keypress a place in the rhythm. Instead of staring at a list of words and racing a stopwatch, you settle into the tempo of a track and let the song pace the session for you. Keyboard Rush is built around that idea.
What makes music-driven typing different
Most typing tools treat music as background noise. A rhythm-based game treats the music as the thing that drives every action. The song decides when the next key arrives, how fast notes come, and when the round ends. You stop trying to type "as fast as possible" and start trying to type "in time with the music," which turns out to be a kinder way to improve.
A soundtrack that maps well to typing
The falling keys in Keyboard Rush follow each song's melody, so the rhythm of your typing rises and falls with the music instead of marching to a flat metronome. Every track has three difficulty passes, so the same song can feel both like a warm-up and a wall.
Designed for keyboards, not gamepads
No controller, no special hardware, no microphone. Gameplay runs on a standard QWERTY keyboard, and a mouse or trackpad handles the menus. Play on a laptop, a desktop, or a Chromebook. The browser demo loads in seconds and gives you a starter set of songs at no cost.
Try the free demo
Hit play, pick a track, and see what typing to music feels like. If you want the full song list and every difficulty unlocked, the full version is a one-time $7.99 purchase. No subscription, no account.
Related reading
- Best songs for typing practice What makes a track work as a rhythm-typing partner.
- How music helps you learn typing Why a beat is a more humane way to pace practice.
- What is a rhythm typing game? The genre in full, with how it works under the hood.
- How to improve typing speed Practical advice for moving your WPM number up.