Mini Games

Type Rain

Type the falling words to destroy them!

How to Play

  • Press Start to begin the word rain.
  • Type the first letter to lock onto a word, then finish typing it.
  • Game over if a word hits the bottom.

Ranking

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US

Rankings reset daily at 00:00 (UTC+0 base).

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Type Rain is the typing practice game where words endlessly drop from the top of the screen and you destroy each one by typing it correctly before it hits the floor. The fall speed and the number of concurrent words ramp up as you score, so the late game becomes a pure showcase of your real typing skill. It's where the nostalgia of old-school typing tutors meets the snappy feel of a modern mini-game.

The entire input is the keyboard. Type the first letter of a word and that word becomes your "active target," then you must finish the same word letter-by-letter without errors. You can't switch targets mid-word, and every wrong key increments your miss count. The run ends when a single word hits the floor or your total misses cross the limit.

The first principle of high scores is "lowest word first." Among the drifting targets, prioritize the one closest to the floor to clear the screen, then take short words before long ones so your flow never stalls. Your eyes should track words already past the middle, not the newest spawn at the top. Keeping your fingers on home row alone speeds key transitions by 30% or more.

Because every keystroke is real input, your score correlates directly with words per minute (WPM) and accuracy. Most beginners start in the 20–30 WPM range; ten focused runs typically push you past 50 WPM, and serious typists in the 80+ WPM range can sustain infinite combos. The word pool is English, so it doubles as foreign-language typing practice for non-native typers.

Five minutes on your commute, ten after lunch, one round before a meeting — perfect length for a brain and finger warm-up. It's especially useful for sharpening focus before exams, breaking into a new keyboard layout, or building English typing speed. Share your final score as a challenge to compare under identical word pools, and since the spawn order reshuffles every run, memorization is impossible. Test the real ceiling of your fingers on OgleOgle Type Rain.