Fun typing practice that holds your attention
Typing practice has a reputation problem. The usual options are dry word lists, ad-cluttered websites, or kid-only games that adults bounce off immediately. Keyboard Rush is what happens when you build a rhythm game around typing instead.
Why "fun" matters for practice
Speed and accuracy come from repetition, and repetition only happens if you keep coming back. Anything that makes the next session feel like something you want to do, instead of something you have to schedule, is doing real work. A song you enjoy is a strong pull.
Works for adults building real-world typing speed
Picking up touch typing in your thirties. Trying to break a plateau. Rhythm-based practice lets you slow down without feeling embarrassed, because the song is setting the pace, not a timer counting mistakes. Start on easy, add letter rows as your hands learn them. The game supports the standard English QWERTY layout.
Works for kids too
The game is family friendly. There are no third-party ads, no accounts to create, no chat features, and no behavioral tracking. Gameplay is keyboard-driven. Parents can sit a kid in front of the demo and walk away. The game contains mild flashing visual effects, which can be turned off in the in-game settings.
Free in your browser
The demo runs without an account or a download. If the family sticks with it, the full version is a single $7.99 purchase that unlocks every song and every difficulty across all your devices.
Related reading
- How music helps you learn typing Why music-paced practice sticks where drills do not.
- Average typing speed by age Where typical numbers land, from kids to older adults.
- How to improve typing speed The boring advice that actually works.
- A typing game with no ads A clean alternative to ad-cluttered typing sites.