Stats
2018 Competition Results – Are you in the top-25,000?
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The year 2018 has come to an end. Today we’re announcing winners of the 2018 Yearly competition.
Congrats to Belinda (wordracer888 – TRData), Michael (deroche1 – TRData), and Shoemaker (atthetop – TRData) for taking the top-3 in both points and races completed. These guys completed around 50,000+ races each in 2018 alone!
Congrats to Henry (ghosthenryzhou – TRData), Waleed (arxanas – TRData), and Izzy (izzy5468 – TRData) for taking the top spots for averageWPM. These guys, among the fastest typists in the world, achieved an average speed of 200+ wpm on at least one of their accounts. (Note that premium racers can save practice or “ghost” races, giving them an advantage over free users and helping achieve these unbelievable speeds; additionally, Arxanas is a Steno typist).
The blog post below contains some highlights of the 2018 competition statistics, as well as a number of links to larger data sets. Us “normal” folks might not see ourselves in the blog post below, but check out the stats for your country to see where you stand!
If you did more than 110+ races or averaged more than 75+wpm during 2018, you should be able to find yourself as a top player in your country! Check out the links below.
Prizes will be announced soon.
Points/Speed/# of Races – Worldwide TypeRacer Champions

Leaders in “points”, “avgWPM”, and “nRaces”. Click the picture to expand to the top-500 in each category (Google Sheets). The cutoff for inclusion in the top-500 is 224,000+ points, 130+ wpm average, or 3100+ races in 2018.
2018 Champions by Country – Points/Speed/# of Races
Veteran racers will know that the Pit Stop Competitions results page shows a maximum of the top-100, and on a site with millions of typists, even if you’re a talented and dedicated typist, chances are you didn’t make the cut.
To recognize more typists, and let people know how their 2018 performance stands, we crunched the numbers for three key categories, breaking the results down by country.
Note: Find your country by choosing the corresponding sheet at the bottom of each spreadsheet linked below.
(1) points leaders by country – (speed * characters typed); (Google sheets – Click here to find yourself!)
(2) WPM leaders by country; (Google sheets – Click here to find yourself!) and;
(3) races completed leaders by country; (Google sheets – Click here to find yourself!)
The points category is broken down by country for TypeRacer’s top-35 countries (by points); averageWPM and nRaces are broken down by country for TypeRacer’s top-15 countries. If you’re from a smaller country, you’ll need to check the bottom of this post to see how to see the stats for your country.
The leaders from TypeRacer’s big-5 countries are below.
Top-25 Points Champions in the Top-5 Countries
#1 US
#2 Canada
#3 Australia
#4 India
#5 UK
Top Countries by Points
On the topic of top countries, here are the top-25 countries by points (click the image to see top-100).
Notes
- The results in this post have been generated based on a list of the top-50k racers by points. The raw data is linked below (Google Sheets) and stats enthusiasts can feel free to manipulate the data in whatever way they wish.
- The files are quite large.
Raw data: (Note: These are large files not recommended for slower computers!)
Top-25k – Fastest WPM (15+ races)
- The top-WPM list has been manually reviewed to ensure the top-100 racers do not include anybody banned for cheating. Approximately 30 users were removed to achieve this. From #100 onwards, banned users will appear in the data.
- The WPM and nRaces data is referred to as top-25k, but actually contains 50k rows, and data should be considered highly accurate only for the top-25k. This is because these lists were generated by using the top-50k racers by points, and sorting by WPM and nRaces.
- For the same reason as above, some of the fastest racers on TR will be excluded from the WPM data entirely if they completed fewer than ~15 races during 2018.
- If there were multiple countries associated with your account during 2018, only one is used for the data in this post.
- If you live in a smaller country which isn’t included in any of the “by country” stat sets above, you can save any of the three spreadsheets above to your own Google Drive and add your country yourself. Go to the far right tab of any data sets and look for the “OTHER COUNTRY” tab. Edit cell B2 to include your lowercase two letter country code in the formula. Example for the nRacers champions in Switzerland (ch):
Replace this (from “OTHER COUNTRIES cell B2”)
=query(importrange(“1AwaDms1e0nbj3t-QqwLsDcctLMeAq4oZcE1MgeOsbLE”,“Sheet1!A2:K12000”), ” Select * where Col4 =’ENTER_COUNTRY_CODE_HERE‘ “,0)
With this:
=query(importrange(“1AwaDms1e0nbj3t-QqwLsDcctLMeAq4oZcE1MgeOsbLE”,“Sheet1!A2:K12000”), ” Select * where Col4 =’ch’ “,0)
This will return results based on the first 12000 lines of source data (a Google Sheets limitation), which may be enough for you. For smaller countries this may only be a few dozen results; to show more results you’ll need to scroll to the first empty row and copy the formula above, updating the source data to populate from the next 12,000 rows. In the above example, that would mean you paste the exact same formula into column B of the first empty line, but change Sheet1!A2:K12000 to Sheet1!A12001:K24000.
Read Full Post | Make a Comment ( 4 so far )January 2018 Competition Results
Chat with other typists on the TypeRacer Discord chat!
Congrats to the January 2018 monthly competition winners!
This month’s contest was sponsored by a donation from ⦗𝐄𝐂𝐎𝐋⦘𝘋𝘢𝘯𝘬𝘕𝘪𝘴𝘴𝘢𝘯 (osubora – TRData) — which I have matched — so we’re distributing small cash prizes to the top typists. Donations are greatly appreciated, so thanks to DankNissan! If anyone is interested in sponsoring the February contest, let us know. 🙂
Jan 2018 Champion Typists
Typingartist2 (Profile / TRData)

Click here – Official archive of TypeRacer Speed Records and Competition Winners (Monthly/Yearly)
Congrats to Michael, Nihad, and Vielle!
Notes:
- The top-25 in January are listed below.
- The full-100 are in the Pit Stop, and in the official archive of Speed Records and Competition Winners
- Prizes for the 2017 Yearly contest have been distributed – congrats again to the winners.
Good luck in the February competition; see you on the track!
Username | Points ![]() |
Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | deroche1 ![]() |
893,968 | 131.8 WPM | 220 WPM | 97.5% | 6033 |
2 | typingartist2 ![]() |
745,363 | 152.0 WPM | 214 WPM | 98.3% | 5503 |
3 | viellain ![]() |
640,725 | 148.9 WPM | 229 WPM | 98.3% | 4927 |
4 | osubora ![]() |
509,625 | 119.2 WPM | 193 WPM | 97.9% | 4823 |
5 | wordracer888 | 456,236 | 126.9 WPM | 168 WPM | 98.3% | 3908 |
6 | vinninq ![]() |
430,890 | 127.5 WPM | 204 WPM | 97.9% | 5770 |
7 | wintercore ![]() |
400,835 | 110.2 WPM | 164 WPM | 97.4% | 4332 |
8 | izzynew | 385,898 | 175.5 WPM | 224 WPM | 98.7% | 2378 |
9 | bblaise ![]() |
362,787 | 144.6 WPM | 198 WPM | 99.0% | 2988 |
10 | pjayys | 353,407 | 100.3 WPM | 132 WPM | 97.8% | 3931 |
11 | actuallymostlynonquit | 319,648 | 152.5 WPM | 213 WPM | 97.3% | 2683 |
12 | keegant ![]() |
311,442 | 113.0 WPM | 189 WPM | 97.1% | 3374 |
13 | mikerubby ![]() |
304,015 | 83.6 WPM | 132 WPM | 97.0% | 4089 |
14 | chimchimchim ![]() |
300,336 | 120.5 WPM | 171 WPM | 98.5% | 2759 |
15 | playscrabble ![]() |
280,861 | 135.4 WPM | 201 WPM | 98.6% | 2347 |
16 | p0sh ![]() |
262,234 | 133.7 WPM | 235 WPM | 98.5% | 2218 |
17 | actuallynonquitforlife ![]() |
261,625 | 113.7 WPM | 160 WPM | 97.5% | 2538 |
18 | lowda9 ![]() |
253,878 | 95.9 WPM | 131 WPM | 98.2% | 2880 |
19 | trihard7 ![]() |
239,716 | 90.4 WPM | 138 WPM | 97.8% | 3014 |
20 | atthetop ![]() |
239,135 | 120.0 WPM | 209 WPM | 96.7% | 2149 |
21 | mathandphysicsftw ![]() |
225,116 | 135.0 WPM | 175 WPM | 98.4% | 1872 |
22 | alanis ![]() |
207,891 | 118.1 WPM | 164 WPM | 97.7% | 1940 |
23 | defluvz ![]() |
190,898 | 111.4 WPM | 143 WPM | 98.1% | 2052 |
24 | nameless337 ![]() |
188,490 | 135.3 WPM | 165 WPM | 99.2% | 1526 |
25 | styrofoam ![]() |
182,307 | 107.8 WPM | 169 WPM | 97.3% | 1885 |
Read Full Post | Make a Comment ( None so far )
TypeRacerData.com Growth in 2017 — 39 million TypeRaces!
Come chat with other typists in the TypeRacer Discord!

Is your TypeRacer account on TypeRacerData yet? Click here to import it.
TypeRacerData.com is “a supplemental, third-party information center for TypeRacer” which is free and open to everyone for tracking stats in more detail, and building an even more engaging typing experience. It’s particularly great for statistic enthusiasts.
Import my account to TypeRacerData.com for free
Examples of what it can be used for:
- Track your typing speed on a month-by-month basis
- Find your fastest X races, see what texts they were on, and try to beat your scores on these texts (you’ll need a TypeRacer premium account if you want to save practice mode scores)
- Browse the shortest/longest and easiest/hardest texts on TypeRacer
- View other metrics, such as the variance among your scores, and the average of your fastest race on each text (a.k.a. “text bests“)
- Check your longest “marathons” — i.e. greatest number of races in any 24-hour period
- Much more!
Launching in late 2016, the year 2017 was the first full year that the site operated.
During 2017, the database grew to include over 39 million TypeRacer races and 23,000 accounts!
This may be a small fraction of the millions of registered TypeRacer users, but it is the largest third-party TypeRacer database in history (and yes, others have been developed!) and among the fastest competitive typists on the site, it’s a largely comprehensive and authoritative record.
Congrats to TypeRacerData, and a special thanks to its founder Noah (licahfox – TRData) who has poured a lot of sweat and blood into building and maintaining this resource for the TypeRacer community!
The growth charts are below and the full data are public on Google Sheets.

TypeRacerData doubled in size, indexing around 20,000,000 new races in 2017.

The number of accounts on TypeRacerData quintupled over 2017 — from fewer than 5,000 to almost 25,000.
Read Full Post | Make a Comment ( 3 so far )
2017 TypeRacer Competition Winners and Assorted Announcements
Chat with other typists on the TypeRacer Discord chat!
Today we’re pleased to announce the TypeRacer 2017 yearly competition winners. The concepts of Points and Competitions were introduced in July; for anyone who’s not familiar, points are earned by completing Type Races (calculated as Points = Typing speed * Text length) and competitions are conducted daily, weekly, monthly, and annually, with winners being calculated based on total points accumulated. The feature wasn’t applied retroactively, so today’s 2017 competition winners are those typists who accumulated the greatest number of points from 7/26/2017 to the end of the year.
The list of the top 50 typists in 2017 is below in this blog post (the full top-100 is in TypeRacer Speed Records and Contest Winners (Google Docs]). Coming out at the top were TypeRacer stars Wordracer888 (TRData) and Deroche1 (TRData) — both averaging between 124-125wpm this year — as well as newcomer Viellain (TRData). We’ll be sending them some TypeRacer T-shirts to say “Congrats!” — it’s great having you guys on the site.

What better way to let people know you’re serious about typing than sporting a TypeRacer T-shirt or hoodie?
We’ll also be sending a TypeRacer t-shirt to the guy whose last on the list below — Mr. Jon Lachney (jlachney – TRData) — for a couple reasons. (1) To thank him for doing a great job leading the TypeRacer moderation team, and (2) To congratulate him on his 2017 typing performance (after all, #50 may be last on the list below, but it’s definitely not shabby out of millions of registered users!).
We’re offering a free year premium subscription to the other leaders in the top-10 — although at least half of them have already supported TypeRacer by purchasing one. We’ll give them next year free if they want.
Congrats to everyone, and good luck in the 2018 contest! The winners are listed below, and a few additional announcements are at the bottom of the post.
2017 TypeRacer Competition Winners
Username | Points | Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
1 | wordracer888 | 3,544,345 | 124.4 WPM | 172 WPM | 98.30% | 31627 |
2 | deroche1 | 2,901,098 | 124.8 WPM | 317 WPM | 97.80% | 34193 |
3 | viellain | 2,831,396 | 105.4 WPM | 222 WPM | 97.90% | 40325 |
4 | bblaise | 1,710,602 | 141.5 WPM | 203 WPM | 99.10% | 14674 |
5 | pjayys | 1,625,837 | 93.7 WPM | 132 WPM | 97.70% | 19663 |
6 | chimchimchim | 1,589,109 | 116.8 WPM | 170 WPM | 98.20% | 15227 |
7 | northern_lights | 1,511,745 | 99.1 WPM | 145 WPM | 98.60% | 16762 |
8 | mikerubby | 1,306,127 | 75.4 WPM | 136 WPM | 97.00% | 20465 |
9 | atthetop | 1,252,103 | 122.2 WPM | 232 WPM | 96.90% | 13796 |
10 | kayak1 | 1,158,499 | 114.8 WPM | 172 WPM | 97.50% | 11103 |
11 | khronic | 1,086,700 | 107.1 WPM | 200 WPM | 97.80% | 11766 |
12 | p0sh | 1,053,562 | 133.5 WPM | 225 WPM | 98.60% | 10434 |
13 | disclo5ure | 1,047,064 | 149.6 WPM | 222 WPM | 98.80% | 8702 |
14 | lithox2 | 1,001,555 | 128.4 WPM | 200 WPM | 97.60% | 8994 |
15 | crdm0 | 972,073 | 139.0 WPM | 209 WPM | 98.50% | 8453 |
16 | alpha_panda | 959,177 | 148.0 WPM | 285 WPM | 98.50% | 8665 |
17 | newkeyboardlove | 903,845 | 133.6 WPM | 243 WPM | 98.10% | 10105 |
18 | modest_ked | 891,694 | 132.8 WPM | 259 WPM | 97.10% | 8384 |
19 | mark40511 | 851,227 | 114.5 WPM | 164 WPM | 99.20% | 9867 |
20 | thunberg123 | 791,723 | 116.4 WPM | 168 WPM | 98.10% | 7936 |
21 | oneguardsam | 782,917 | 78.7 WPM | 117 WPM | 97.00% | 11300 |
22 | typingartist2 | 753,037 | 149.4 WPM | 207 WPM | 98.20% | 5825 |
23 | oooyay | 751,409 | 96.4 WPM | 137 WPM | 97.20% | 8703 |
24 | rportnoy | 749,107 | 88.6 WPM | 126 WPM | 98.70% | 9762 |
25 | tajiracer | 744,474 | 103.7 WPM | 160 WPM | 98.70% | 8221 |
26 | vdud3 | 743,565 | 129.6 WPM | 181 WPM | 97.90% | 7148 |
27 | vinniwooh | 739,708 | 133.0 WPM | 280 WPM | 98.60% | 11696 |
28 | smallchicken | 736,896 | 93.3 WPM | 165 WPM | 97.40% | 9214 |
29 | mcaso123 | 735,811 | 154.0 WPM | 246 WPM | 97.30% | 7403 |
30 | get_a_lif3 | 698,900 | 115.5 WPM | 177 WPM | 97.80% | 6775 |
31 | vinninq | 691,569 | 124.0 WPM | 205 WPM | 98.00% | 10976 |
32 | shariqueahmer | 690,667 | 109.9 WPM | 175 WPM | 95.90% | 7233 |
33 | vixt | 681,851 | 99.8 WPM | 175 WPM | 97.00% | 7701 |
34 | neopergoss | 679,803 | 104.9 WPM | 136 WPM | 98.40% | 7217 |
35 | mc0sta | 678,301 | 63.3 WPM | 96 WPM | 96.90% | 12850 |
36 | alanis | 657,551 | 115.2 WPM | 167 WPM | 97.80% | 6319 |
37 | hujala | 649,283 | 150.1 WPM | 222 WPM | 98.50% | 5594 |
38 | volhosis | 630,919 | 129.6 WPM | 249 WPM | 97.50% | 7107 |
39 | miket349 | 630,723 | 103.5 WPM | 144 WPM | 98.00% | 6950 |
40 | mattbierwirth | 624,798 | 102.7 WPM | 138 WPM | 97.20% | 6752 |
41 | ronakkaria | 619,250 | 74.6 WPM | 121 WPM | 96.60% | 9500 |
42 | mako640 | 608,723 | 155.6 WPM | 190 WPM | 99.10% | 4377 |
43 | amun | 598,470 | 127.5 WPM | 184 WPM | 98.30% | 5295 |
44 | shefakala | 595,091 | 92.1 WPM | 140 WPM | 96.30% | 7474 |
45 | justiceex | 588,105 | 88.2 WPM | 138 WPM | 97.00% | 7490 |
46 | stewiegriffin666 | 581,453 | 94.1 WPM | 140 WPM | 97.30% | 7310 |
47 | alyciahtollison | 560,395 | 109.3 WPM | 152 WPM | 98.40% | 5730 |
48 | dizo | 554,337 | 74.3 WPM | 103 WPM | 97.90% | 8499 |
49 | nameless337 | 546,723 | 132.8 WPM | 165 WPM | 99.20% | 4564 |
50 | jlachney | 543,211 | 124.8 WPM | 225 WPM | 97.40% | 6435 |
Monthly Competition Winners
DEC 2017
Username | Points | Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
1 | deroche1 | 939,780 | 150.5 WPM | 317 WPM | 98.60% | 6996 |
2 | bblaise | 496,608 | 143.1 WPM | 203 WPM | 99.10% | 4175 |
3 | newkeyboardlove | 459,383 | 129.9 WPM | 243 WPM | 97.90% | 4415 |
4 | wordracer888 | 388,218 | 128.7 WPM | 172 WPM | 98.30% | 3277 |
5 | pjayys | 381,254 | 98.4 WPM | 132 WPM | 97.90% | 4313 |
6 | viellain | 325,623 | 143.2 WPM | 222 WPM | 98.10% | 2779 |
7 | shariqueahmer | 316,345 | 112.1 WPM | 175 WPM | 96.00% | 3230 |
8 | trihard7 | 311,221 | 86.6 WPM | 123 WPM | 97.90% | 4089 |
9 | typingartist2 | 296,175 | 152.1 WPM | 207 WPM | 98.50% | 2191 |
10 | vinninq | 284,243 | 124.5 WPM | 205 WPM | 98.00% | 3872 |
11 | atthetop | 280,335 | 122.5 WPM | 232 WPM | 96.80% | 2728 |
12 | kayak1 | 266,717 | 113.1 WPM | 165 WPM | 97.40% | 2551 |
13 | lowda9 | 256,275 | 87.2 WPM | 122 WPM | 98.20% | 3296 |
14 | argyrwnt | 241,521 | 54.5 WPM | 87 WPM | 95.90% | 5571 |
15 | chimchimchim | 238,712 | 118.9 WPM | 170 WPM | 98.50% | 2189 |
NOV 2017
Username | Points | Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
1 | northern_lights | 777,667 | 100.2 WPM | 145 WPM | 98.50% | 8500 |
2 | deroche1 | 634,416 | 88.3 WPM | 308 WPM | 97.70% | 11568 |
3 | wordracer888 | 569,763 | 125.5 WPM | 170 WPM | 98.30% | 5043 |
4 | viellain | 511,373 | 142.4 WPM | 218 WPM | 98.00% | 4360 |
5 | smallchicken | 492,835 | 93.1 WPM | 159 WPM | 97.40% | 6180 |
6 | crdm0 | 369,829 | 140.8 WPM | 209 WPM | 98.40% | 3240 |
7 | bblaise | 347,570 | 143.8 WPM | 202 WPM | 99.10% | 2963 |
8 | mikerubby | 342,289 | 79.4 WPM | 136 WPM | 97.00% | 5351 |
9 | analternateaccount | 302,703 | 109.3 WPM | 168 WPM | 97.80% | 3111 |
10 | vinninq | 283,474 | 124.2 WPM | 202 WPM | 97.90% | 4851 |
11 | lithox2 | 281,471 | 129.9 WPM | 197 WPM | 97.50% | 2614 |
12 | p0sh | 281,302 | 134.4 WPM | 221 WPM | 98.60% | 2963 |
13 | pjayys | 278,058 | 96.9 WPM | 131 WPM | 97.80% | 3200 |
14 | y4mz | 263,551 | 98.5 WPM | 150 WPM | 96.50% | 2981 |
15 | tajiracer | 262,624 | 102.7 WPM | 137 WPM | 98.60% | 2815 |
OCT 2017
Username | Points | Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
1 | wordracer888 | 1,103,479 | 123.1 WPM | 171 WPM | 98.30% | 9945 |
2 | viellain | 811,400 | 131.5 WPM | 213 WPM | 97.70% | 7673 |
3 | northern_lights | 599,526 | 97.8 WPM | 139 WPM | 98.70% | 6760 |
4 | deroche1 | 546,637 | 131.1 WPM | 287 WPM | 97.30% | 8827 |
5 | crdm0 | 523,935 | 138.3 WPM | 205 WPM | 98.50% | 4500 |
6 | lithox2 | 470,454 | 125.6 WPM | 200 WPM | 97.60% | 4199 |
7 | p0sh | 294,190 | 131.7 WPM | 213 WPM | 98.50% | 2462 |
8 | mikerubby | 273,533 | 77.1 WPM | 124 WPM | 97.10% | 4116 |
9 | largev | 272,617 | 121.0 WPM | 188 WPM | 97.70% | 3974 |
10 | bblaise | 260,967 | 143.5 WPM | 192 WPM | 99.20% | 2219 |
11 | kayak1 | 258,305 | 114.6 WPM | 163 WPM | 97.50% | 2477 |
12 | atthetop | 257,956 | 122.7 WPM | 226 WPM | 96.90% | 2644 |
13 | pjayys | 252,915 | 96.5 WPM | 128 WPM | 97.90% | 3031 |
14 | alpha_panda | 250,876 | 147.4 WPM | 271 WPM | 98.30% | 2288 |
15 | oooyay | 248,704 | 98.2 WPM | 137 WPM | 97.20% | 2817 |
SEP 2017
Username | Points | Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
1 | viellain | 1,142,533 | 86.4 WPM | 204 WPM | 98.00% | 25172 |
2 | wordracer888 | 782,754 | 124.2 WPM | 170 WPM | 98.30% | 7014 |
3 | deroche1 | 758,946 | 153.3 WPM | 300 WPM | 97.70% | 6599 |
4 | chimchimchim | 369,278 | 117.0 WPM | 163 WPM | 98.20% | 3521 |
5 | modest_ked | 367,990 | 131.6 WPM | 216 WPM | 97.10% | 3314 |
6 | mikerubby | 317,123 | 71.4 WPM | 109 WPM | 96.80% | 5209 |
7 | pjayys | 315,874 | 91.3 WPM | 126 WPM | 97.60% | 3979 |
8 | kayak1 | 280,721 | 116.5 WPM | 172 WPM | 97.50% | 2690 |
9 | thunberg123 | 277,777 | 115.8 WPM | 168 WPM | 98.20% | 2855 |
10 | vinniwooh | 274,627 | 133.2 WPM | 194 WPM | 98.70% | 4749 |
11 | disclo5ure | 271,543 | 150.1 WPM | 218 WPM | 98.80% | 2401 |
12 | wumpified8 | 265,723 | 136.2 WPM | 193 WPM | 97.60% | 2180 |
13 | dizo | 244,025 | 74.4 WPM | 101 WPM | 97.90% | 3741 |
14 | susavile | 220,000 | 85.0 WPM | 119 WPM | 97.80% | 2916 |
15 | primalknight | 218,547 | 129.5 WPM | 211 WPM | 97.70% | 2966 |
AUG 2017
Username | Points | Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
1 | wordracer888 | 620,240 | 123.3 WPM | 169 WPM | 98.40% | 5626 |
2 | vixt | 426,588 | 98.7 WPM | 158 WPM | 96.90% | 4880 |
3 | chimchimchim | 418,640 | 115.8 WPM | 165 WPM | 98.10% | 4131 |
4 | pjayys | 397,735 | 88.0 WPM | 118 WPM | 97.60% | 5140 |
5 | typingartist2 | 383,871 | 147.7 WPM | 206 WPM | 98.00% | 3055 |
6 | bblaise | 351,537 | 138.1 WPM | 192 WPM | 99.00% | 3134 |
7 | oooyay | 271,887 | 94.1 WPM | 134 WPM | 97.10% | 3233 |
8 | ultrashibe | 246,676 | 118.5 WPM | 180 WPM | 97.00% | 4158 |
9 | modest_ked | 245,952 | 132.2 WPM | 220 WPM | 97.30% | 2417 |
10 | vinniwooh | 242,717 | 130.2 WPM | 188 WPM | 98.60% | 3725 |
11 | atthetop | 240,046 | 121.4 WPM | 215 WPM | 96.90% | 3061 |
12 | dizo | 239,694 | 74.0 WPM | 103 WPM | 97.90% | 3690 |
13 | khronic | 223,622 | 106.0 WPM | 193 WPM | 97.70% | 2421 |
14 | mark40511 | 207,607 | 109.3 WPM | 160 WPM | 99.00% | 2148 |
15 | tencion | 202,495 | 102.6 WPM | 143 WPM | 97.10% | 2230 |
JUL 2017
Username | Points | Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
1 | erikjscott | 133,865 | 145.2 WPM | 219 WPM | 98.70% | 1113 |
2 | bblaise | 125,339 | 138.8 WPM | 183 WPM | 99.00% | 1090 |
3 | jlachney | 114,565 | 119.6 WPM | 196 WPM | 97.30% | 931 |
4 | playscrabble | 108,781 | 131.9 WPM | 182 WPM | 98.30% | 920 |
5 | vixt | 106,303 | 91.9 WPM | 131 WPM | 96.50% | 1316 |
6 | fastermart | 102,641 | 108.1 WPM | 159 WPM | 97.80% | 964 |
7 | atthetop | 81,944 | 121.3 WPM | 213 WPM | 96.80% | 991 |
8 | wordracer888 | 79,892 | 124.9 WPM | 170 WPM | 98.20% | 722 |
9 | alanis | 75,709 | 112.2 WPM | 156 WPM | 97.80% | 775 |
10 | typingartist2 | 72,901 | 148.3 WPM | 205 WPM | 98.10% | 578 |
11 | oooyay | 70,907 | 92.6 WPM | 120 WPM | 97.10% | 868 |
12 | jessegarcia | 70,849 | 135.3 WPM | 186 WPM | 97.70% | 609 |
13 | tereterna | 63,439 | 112.0 WPM | 145 WPM | 98.00% | 639 |
14 | elusoryx | 60,809 | 136.6 WPM | 174 WPM | 98.50% | 514 |
15 | tesla_diesel | 58,696 | 120.4 WPM | 153 WPM | 98.70% | 522 |
Other Announcements
We have a few additional announcements below:
- Typist⦗𝐄𝐂𝐎𝐋⦘𝘋𝘢𝘯𝘬𝘕𝘪𝘴𝘴𝘢𝘯 (osubora – TRData) has made a generous $20 contribution for the sake of sponsoring this year’s first monthly contest. I’ve personally matched his contribution, so we have a $40 prize pool for January. The prizes for the January competition are: 1ST PLACE – $20; 2ND and 3RD PLACE – $10. (Paypal account required). Good luck!
- The winner of TypeRacer Christmas art contest was been updated on the blog post here.
- As a quick “Christmas gift” to a few folks in the community who’ve been asking, we’ve made two recent changes to TypeRacer universes. (1) began a pilot of a new “marathon” universe dedicated to ultra-long texts — currently they’re between 1,500 and 8,000 characters. (The longest texts on TR today are around 850 characters). We included texts such as The Declaration of Independence (8,000 characters) and MLK’s “I have a Dream” speech (3,000 characters). This track is not for the faint of heart! Make sure you click “Change display format” and choose to display text on a single line. (2) The “code” universe, which features texts in various programming languages, has received some new texts. Feel free to submit texts for either universe!
That’s all for today – happy new years and good luck improving your typing in 2018!

In the Marathon Universe, the ultra-long texts might not fit on your screen unless you change your TypeRacer display settings to use one line only. Recommended for only the most serious typists 🙂
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New TypeRacer Record: Michael DeRoche (Deroche1) completes 200,000 races
Click here to join the TypeRacer Discord to chat with fellow TypeRacers
On 10/26/2017 Michael DeRoche (deroche1 – TRData) became the first typist to complete 200,000 races on TypeRacer!
On behalf of TypeRacer, I want to congratulate him on both his incredible skill and dedication to competitive typing. Michael is not only the most dedicated typist in TypeRacer’s 9-year history, but has also held a variety of records (such as the fastest speed ever in a single race when he achieved 300wpm on a short text), and the TypeRacer Marathon record for 3,097 races in 24 hours.

Click here to see the replay of Michael DeRoche’s 200,000th race – can you beat 148wpm?
(The Marathon leaderboard is here on TypeRacerData.com; more details on Marathons and how people actually achieve such feats are outlined in this blog post by ⦗𝐄𝐂𝐎𝐋⦘ ⦓☾✹✯𝚅𝚒𝚎𝚕𝚕𝚎✯✹☽⦔(viellain – TRData).)
Michael is a gifted typist, a TypeRacer moderator and active contributor to the community (back in the early days of moderation, he single-handedly researched and removed hundreds of cheaters and helped restore fair competition on the site), and most importantly, a good friend. Congrats Michael, and here’s to 100,000 more!
Read Full Post | Make a Comment ( 5 so far )Guide to TypeRacer Marathons
❝ A man on a thousand mile walk has to forget his goal and say to himself every morning,
“Today I’m going to cover twenty-five miles and then rest up and sleep.” ❞
— War and Peace (book) by Leo Tolstoy
Hi all – Our friend Vielle (Viellain – TRData) has made a number of headlines recently on TypeRacer. Today we’d like to introduce him as our newest Guest author on the blog — he’s going to explain what exactly it means to type 5,000 races in a day, aka a TypeRacer marathon, and also give us a bit of a TypeRacer history lesson! Thanks Vielle for taking the time to write for the TypeRacer blog and for helping us build the TypeRacer community. -David (valikor) TypeRacer
You may have heard a lot about Marathons these past couple of weeks on the TypeRacer blog. And you may in-fact have questions, such as “How do you do a race in a quarter of a minute? How do you do 5,000 in a day?” Today’s blog post will clear a lot of those aspects up, and no-better person to do so than the one that just got up after an intensive 5,590 race Marathon (you can look forward to a blogpost on that later).
To start things off: A marathon is the amount of races you complete in 24 hours. It doesn’t have to be a set time as it will always be matching your current race count from 24 hours prior.
Maintrack
For as far as TypeRacer history has been concerned, most races have been done through the maintrack — i.e., the standard track you get when clicking “Enter a typing race” on TypeRacer.com’s default play.typeracer.com universe. The idea of racing on short-text tracks for optimal race efficiency hasn’t been thoroughly theorized and implemented until recently starting with Michael DeRoche – March 31st, 2017. And no, there is no secret real world where everyone is racing on and you are all racing in the matrix (yes fast typists I know how depressing it is racing one or two real people for hours straight as well as having to race bots); it is never often really a thought that there is a “maintrack” to differentiate with [when you Enter a typing race], but this does become a natural distinction that is made when you race on private Racetracks [with friends].
For reference, the most races you can get by doing this is 2,000 races. The only person shown to execute this is Michael Deroche. This is about 80 races per hour. Very doable, and relatively easygoing. If you do one race per-minute, then you will that you can do 1,500 races in that given timespan. All marathons outside of the top 3 are mostly done through the maintrack.
Pros:
- Most optimal point efficiency
- Size-able amount of time between races to multi-task
- Hands are always focused on the keyboard
Cons:
- Least sufficient for Marathon records
- Loading times
Tip: You can click tab-twice then enter instead of having to manually click Race Again.
Private Race Tracks
Now we move on to Friends Track racing methods. As far as most people are aware, you just race with friends, while that is certainly not easily-arrangeable for extended periods of time, there is however – a solution. Thanks to Ted (who also does impressive work within the OpenSteno project; steno being attributable towards some of the fastest speeds on the site, one of them in-fact set by Ted himself!) we have a script that allows people to join races. All you have to do is install Tampermonkey. With the Tampermonkey script, when you go to TypeRacer you will notice it automatically joins a friend track and auto-joins your race. Now you don’t need friends!
Make sure to allow Tampermonkey in an incognito or private-window and make an account, and be sure to keep Tampermonkey disabled on the
account/window that you plan to race on (you can do that through clicking on the icon and then disabling it).
However we are forgetting something. As some typists may not be aware, TypeRacer “skill levels” dictate the length of texts that you type on TypeRacer. Therefore it is optimal if your friend’s account [or whoever is hosting the private race track] has a last 10 race average below 25 WPM [at Beginner level speeds]. This enables you to type the shortest texts — obviously a big help when trying to complete a lot of races in a short time.
Once you now have race-track hosting window(s) in the background you will join all of them using the friends link and position them however you wish. With this you can get around 3,000 races at most, this math adds up to 2 races per minute.
For reference I set a 3.8k Marathon record with only two different race tracks (joining the next race as soon as I could therefore stopping in the middle of the race). But you may question, why do you use multiple friend tracks if one is good enough? With only one you are forced to wait those 10 seconds, you bypass that by having another track that you can hop into immediately. But then it becomes cumbersome hence you start the race 2 races ahead of you once you just finished your race to keep the flow going.
A video for reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vu9i9LsV_jI
Tip: You may find watching videos or listening to music will make your races all the more faster – at least to make the time fly by faster.
With this you can get up to up to ~5,000 races [in 24 hours] maximum. Assuming you finish a text every ~17 seconds.
Pros:
- Up to 2-4 races per minute makes this the most thoroughly consistent way to optimize races for extended periods of time
- With beginner tracks you get to type short texts, depending on the workload you do this could end up being a more casual & easier method to race with for the endurance run
Cons:
- Shorter texts [assuming you use a beginner track] & starting races late make this the least point efficient method for racing
Ghost Races
The last method towards perfectly refining your race optimization is ghost races. This however requires premium in order to save those ghost races.
Let me give you a simple run-down about ghost-races:
- You can save twice per text
- You can race on any given text, meaning you can choose to do the shortest one-thousand races [2x per text]
- When you save they do count towards the leaderboards and your profile
- If you mess up then you can restart until you get the score you want
If all that sounds compelling, then do consider supporting TypeRacer [along with tons of more benefits!] by upgrading to Premium.
For a good list at a text directory look at www.typeracerdata.com/texts?sort=length
Ghost races, when using the shortest texts, can prove to be hyper-optimal. Michael Deroche was able to attain 333 races in 71 minutes [4.3 races a minute]!
You may find that navigating the texts may be difficult, but thanks to Pentalon’s Python script there is an entire directory of [current] ghost race links to make things easier.
https://pastebin.com/sJFHbcjQ (Longest races first to shortest races last.)
And if you are crazy enough to do so, you can open multiple links with a multilink program or app if you really need to refine your your marathon skills that much further.
Pros:
- Maximum race-per-minute efficiency up until 25~ plus second races [depending on your speed]
Cons:
- Only optimally efficient until the average races per minute is beaten out by multi-tracking
- Lots of manual clicking/hotkey usage – most error prone stage of the marathon
(Play TypeRacer in compact form with TypeRacer Companion for Firefox (Chrome Here) to watch videos while typing.)
Now that you have a thorough understanding of the three-different methods to approach you can have a true feel of marathons that puts those truly impressive accomplishments into perspective. Higher-end marathons typically use a combination of Private Racetracks and Ghost races with minimal breaks/interruptions.
While you’re at it you may want to take a look or read back on our previous blog posts:
https://blog.typeracer.com/2017/09/17/the-typing-marathon-to-end-all-marathons-5000-races-in-24-hours/
https://blog.typeracer.com/2017/09/09/new-single-race-speed-record-and-new-marathon-record-on-typeracer/
https://blog.typeracer.com/2013/07/01/typeracer-champions/
If you do ever have any questions, then do check the Discord, the resource and place I had used to refine marathon techniques beyond maintrack marathons. I couldn’t be impressed by the welcoming hospitality [of the Discord], thoughts and research that went into the carefully attentive and productive responses that went into my questions. Or simply use the comment section down below and I will address those questions myself.
Read Full Post | Make a Comment ( 2 so far )5,000 Type Races in 24 hours (the “marathon to end all marathons): 24 hours of continuous typing
If you love TypeRacer, please consider supporting us by upgrading to Premium!
Last week on the blog, we wrote about the new Marathon record —3,820 Type Races in 24 hours.
In a chat with him about that record, ⦗𝐄𝐂𝐎𝐋⦘ ⦓☾✹✯𝚅𝚒𝚎𝚕𝚕𝚎✯✹☽⦔ (Viellain – TRData) promised that “I will do a marathon to end all marathons later in September.” For Vielle, “later in September” meant exactly one day after we announced the first record. On Sep. 9-10 Vielle beat the Marathon record again (daily competition results for 9/10) , achieving 4,892 races within 24 hours. See the record on TypeRacerData.com.
In the TypeRacer Discord, he described his marathon as below budget and ahead of schedule. Congrats to ECOL/Vielle on setting what may really be a marathon that ends all marathons! Here’s what we know about the marathon:
- It required staying up for 24 hours of continuous typing
- It required skipping meals – he consumed only an energy drink between races.
- There was only one bathroom break (post-energy drink).
- His account was upgraded to Premium last week (as a congrats! gift), enabling him to squeeze out more races than he was last time with his basic account (i.e., he was able to save practice races or ghost races etc.)
Join us in the TypeRacer Discord to chat about typing, find out what it’s like to type for 24 hours straight, etc. 🙂

In Vielle’s words: “All hail and Glory to the Empyrean Forces, for we are the Conquering OverLords” -ECOL/Vielle
[Update: A previous version of this article indicated that Vielle had eaten minimal snacks during the record-setting marathon — it’s been corrected to say “no food”.]
Read Full Post | Make a Comment ( 7 so far )New single race speed record, and new Marathon record on TypeRacer
Today we’re pleased to announce new site-wide records by Michael DeRoche (deroche1 – TRData) and ⦗𝐄𝐂𝐎𝐋⦘ ⦓☾✹✯𝚅𝚒𝚎𝚕𝚕𝚎✯✹☽⦔ (Viellain – TRData).
Some of you will remember from this blog post in July that the all-time single race speed record on the site was 295wpm by Kathy (florentine – TRData). Just a tad shy of the ludicrous 300wpm barrier! Video is here — don’t blink, she blazes through it and the video is pretty much over as soon as it starts!
TypeRacer is pleased to announce today that on Sep. 6th, TypeRacer legend Michael DeRoche passed the 300 barrier, setting a site-wide speed record with 300.42 wpm. Great work Michael! (Note: keyboard typists only — excludes stenographers).
See the replay of the 300wpm record!
Race against Michael’s Ghost — Try to beat 300wpm!
While Michael’s typing record was set in 2.05 seconds, we also want to congratulate ⦗𝐄𝐂𝐎𝐋⦘ ⦓☾✹✯𝚅𝚒𝚎𝚕𝚕𝚎✯✹☽⦔ (Viellain) who beat the site-wide Marathon record with 3,820 races in 24 hours. Viellain started on Sep. 4th, 2017 at 9:12PM EST and did almost 4,000 races within the 24 hours following. Needless to say, Viellain won our daily competition on 9/5 (when he did most of his Marathon races), accumulating 200,761 points over the two days that his Marathon spanned. We’re pretty sure that’s a record too.
I chatted with Viellain on the TypeRacer Discord and asked if he had any comments for the announcement. He promised he would be breaking the record again by the end of September, with “a marathon to end all marathons.” He also stated “SECT won seasons 1” and “All hail and Glory to the Empyrean Forces, for we are the Conquering OverLords”
We’re not entirely sure what those last comments mean but are including them anyway 🙂 Congrats to Viellain! We upgraded his account to Premium for free to congratulate him. We’re impressed by his tenacity and glad to have such dedicated typists on the site.
In an interesting twist, Michael DeRoche was the previous holder of Viellain’s record. Below are the Marathon leaders from TypeRacerData.com. This announcement marks a new record for Mike — while he’s being simultaneously dethroned by Viellain on another record.
# | Racer | Most Races in 24 hrs. |
1 | 🏁 www.discord.me/typeracer 🏁 (viellain) | 3,820 |
2 | Michael DeRoche (deroche1) | 3,097 |
3 | Taro Yada (yada) | 1,619 |
4 | still type (mokori) | 1,320 |
5 | ♕ David ♕ (valikor) | 1,179 |
6 | F@§T£RPr0 (fastermart) | 1,000 |
7 | DUFOUR (Best Races) (119.83 WPM) | 999 |
8 | but thou must (pentalon) | 900 |
9 | Nadel (nadel1232) | 889 |
10 | Shoemaker-Levy 9 (atthetop) | 829 |
11 | Steve (haxmatix) | 802 |
12 | MadsFuldGas (swaax) | 778 |
13 | once upon a time in Chinois… | 777 |
14 | facebook.com/sumitbest (sum… | 737 |
15 | Alexander (nomak) | 734 |
Congrats!
TypeRacer
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August 2017 Competition Results
See recent news about the new Competition Awards feature, and drop by the TypeRacer Discord chat to connect with other typists!
Congrats to TypeRacer’s August 2017 competition winners!
WordRacer888 (Profile / TRData)
Chimchimchim (Profile / TRData)
In August, WordRacer888 dominated with 620,240 points, coming in over 200,000 points ahead of the next racer. Chimchimchim is a long-time TypeRacer legend and we’re glad to see him back on the site and typing up a storm, coming in second out of the hundreds of thousands of users who raced this month. As for Pjayys, we’re excited to see that fast typists outside the top 1% now have a chance to win on a more inclusive TypeRacer site — one of the goals for our rolling out the Points and Competitions features. Congrats!
The top-100 are listed below. Congrats to everyone — looking forward to seeing you on the track in September!
David (valikor)
TypeRacer
Username | Points ![]() |
Avg. speed | Best speed | Accuracy | Races | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | wordracer888 | 620,240 | 123.3 WPM | 169 WPM | 98.4% | 5626 |
2 | chimchimchim ![]() |
418,640 | 115.8 WPM | 165 WPM | 98.1% | 4131 |
3 | pjayys ![]() |
397,735 | 88.0 WPM | 118 WPM | 97.6% | 5140 |
4 | typingartist2 ![]() |
383,871 | 147.7 WPM | 206 WPM | 98.0% | 3055 |
5 | bblaise ![]() |
351,537 | 138.1 WPM | 192 WPM | 99.0% | 3134 |
6 | oooyay ![]() |
271,887 | 94.1 WPM | 134 WPM | 97.1% | 3233 |
7 | ultrashibe ![]() |
246,676 | 118.5 WPM | 180 WPM | 97.0% | 4158 |
8 | modest_ked ![]() |
245,952 | 132.2 WPM | 220 WPM | 97.3% | 2417 |
9 | vinniwooh ![]() |
242,717 | 130.2 WPM | 188 WPM | 98.6% | 3725 |
10 | atthetop ![]() |
240,046 | 121.4 WPM | 215 WPM | 96.9% | 3061 |
11 | dizo ![]() |
239,694 | 74.0 WPM | 103 WPM | 97.9% | 3690 |
12 | khronic ![]() |
223,622 | 106.0 WPM | 193 WPM | 97.7% | 2421 |
13 | mark40511 ![]() |
207,607 | 109.3 WPM | 160 WPM | 99.0% | 2148 |
14 | tencion ![]() |
202,495 | 102.6 WPM | 143 WPM | 97.1% | 2230 |
15 | shefakala ![]() |
199,662 | 80.5 WPM | 118 WPM | 95.8% | 2876 |
16 | d0wny ![]() |
193,813 | 79.0 WPM | 134 WPM | 95.1% | 2853 |
17 | swaax ![]() |
192,578 | 121.3 WPM | 160 WPM | 98.0% | 1776 |
18 | amun ![]() |
191,505 | 127.4 WPM | 184 WPM | 98.3% | 1753 |
19 | smarmyraptor ![]() |
190,416 | 85.9 WPM | 139 WPM | 96.3% | 2559 |
20 | playscrabble ![]() |
186,194 | 131.4 WPM | 175 WPM | 98.3% | 1597 |
21 | erikjscott ![]() |
185,955 | 149.1 WPM | 205 WPM | 98.7% | 1405 |
22 | vdud3 ![]() |
185,542 | 127.0 WPM | 164 WPM | 97.8% | 1849 |
23 | gochoo | 183,544 | 89.0 WPM | 121 WPM | 97.7% | 2367 |
24 | jessegarcia ![]() |
179,348 | 137.6 WPM | 189 WPM | 98.0% | 1488 |
25 | hateself ![]() |
172,577 | 87.8 WPM | 131 WPM | 97.9% | 2254 |
26 | fastermart ![]() |
171,597 | 106.8 WPM | 171 WPM | 97.8% | 1820 |
27 | p0sh ![]() |
169,730 | 133.7 WPM | 220 WPM | 98.6% | 1838 |
28 | mattbierwirth ![]() |
168,916 | 100.2 WPM | 138 WPM | 97.0% | 1889 |
29 | disclo5ure ![]() |
168,720 | 151.0 WPM | 214 WPM | 99.0% | 1454 |
30 | kimjongillmatic ![]() |
165,448 | 100.9 WPM | 139 WPM | 98.3% | 1870 |
31 | mikerubby ![]() |
158,538 | 67.7 WPM | 99 WPM | 97.1% | 2767 |
32 | thunberg123 ![]() |
157,750 | 117.7 WPM | 163 WPM | 98.2% | 1571 |
33 | leszczyn ![]() |
155,929 | 67.0 WPM | 102 WPM | 96.6% | 2726 |
34 | trueybluey ![]() |
154,714 | 123.6 WPM | 171 WPM | 98.7% | 1407 |
35 | wintersnowmagick ![]() |
150,442 | 130.0 WPM | 171 WPM | 98.5% | 1456 |
36 | bambusnippel ![]() |
141,467 | 74.4 WPM | 108 WPM | 97.0% | 2199 |
37 | siglemic | 140,164 | 120.0 WPM | 162 WPM | 98.6% | 1347 |
38 | miket349 ![]() |
140,046 | 102.2 WPM | 143 WPM | 97.9% | 1525 |
39 | kyeavnign ![]() |
139,134 | 111.0 WPM | 154 WPM | 97.7% | 1464 |
40 | alyciahtollison ![]() |
138,448 | 108.9 WPM | 145 WPM | 98.3% | 1438 |
41 | arenasnow2 ![]() |
136,956 | 177.1 WPM | 231 WPM | 98.8% | 850 |
42 | oneguardsam ![]() |
136,824 | 78.8 WPM | 104 WPM | 96.9% | 2000 |
43 | thebrownfoxquicklyjumpsoverthe ![]() |
136,536 | 131.8 WPM | 184 WPM | 97.7% | 1212 |
44 | tajiracer ![]() |
135,674 | 104.3 WPM | 160 WPM | 98.7% | 1642 |
45 | stewiegriffin666 ![]() |
135,530 | 92.5 WPM | 138 WPM | 97.1% | 1711 |
46 | realf0rce ![]() |
134,735 | 117.5 WPM | 162 WPM | 97.9% | 1375 |
47 | apoorv16 ![]() |
134,614 | 62.9 WPM | 95 WPM | 97.2% | 2528 |
48 | jlachney ![]() |
133,210 | 122.5 WPM | 215 WPM | 97.2% | 1488 |
49 | hujala ![]() |
130,707 | 152.6 WPM | 216 WPM | 98.7% | 1158 |
50 | newkeyboardlove ![]() |
125,145 | 127.6 WPM | 217 WPM | 98.0% | 1667 |
51 | gates250 ![]() |
124,992 | 53.2 WPM | 81 WPM | 95.2% | 2981 |
52 | neopergoss ![]() |
124,370 | 101.9 WPM | 131 WPM | 98.4% | 1368 |
53 | mercury80 ![]() |
123,121 | 77.3 WPM | 110 WPM | 96.5% | 1834 |
54 | stagadoosh ![]() |
119,816 | 98.4 WPM | 132 WPM | 96.5% | 1376 |
55 | tshafer3 ![]() |
116,400 | 103.8 WPM | 133 WPM | 98.0% | 1270 |
56 | mako640 ![]() |
115,850 | 154.5 WPM | 189 WPM | 99.2% | 855 |
57 | phmi ![]() |
115,506 | 67.7 WPM | 95 WPM | 97.3% | 2018 |
58 | ronakkaria ![]() |
114,549 | 64.5 WPM | 98 WPM | 96.1% | 2120 |
59 | aguilardenehra ![]() |
114,203 | 60.0 WPM | 82 WPM | 97.3% | 2304 |
60 | hlbentz ![]() |
113,312 | 124.9 WPM | 154 WPM | 98.6% | 1036 |
61 | valikor ![]() |
112,784 | 136.5 WPM | 173 WPM | 98.5% | 962 |
62 | tony82890 ![]() |
109,712 | 118.8 WPM | 161 WPM | 98.5% | 1098 |
63 | mathandphysicsftw ![]() |
108,368 | 132.2 WPM | 174 WPM | 98.3% | 959 |
64 | vincehardy2 ![]() |
108,143 | 147.6 WPM | 214 WPM | 98.6% | 880 |
65 | andreaak00 ![]() |
106,529 | 142.7 WPM | 199 WPM | 98.6% | 1142 |
66 | the__cpl ![]() |
105,750 | 119.1 WPM | 166 WPM | 98.6% | 1036 |
67 | cippo ![]() |
105,655 | 103.7 WPM | 135 WPM | 97.3% | 1292 |
68 | cslarsenhhkb ![]() |
104,451 | 111.8 WPM | 163 WPM | 98.0% | 1070 |
69 | krisco ![]() |
103,416 | 122.5 WPM | 157 WPM | 98.5% | 1129 |
70 | argyrwnt ![]() |
103,286 | 59.9 WPM | 83 WPM | 97.2% | 2071 |
71 | dufour ![]() |
102,749 | 90.2 WPM | 113 WPM | 99.6% | 1731 |
72 | pokenonquit ![]() |
102,584 | 130.2 WPM | 181 WPM | 98.1% | 1266 |
73 | get_a_lif3 ![]() |
101,518 | 110.8 WPM | 147 WPM | 97.8% | 1032 |
74 | manithan ![]() |
101,372 | 55.3 WPM | 81 WPM | 95.7% | 2294 |
75 | yoojeen ![]() |
100,561 | 126.0 WPM | 166 WPM | 97.7% | 963 |
76 | kayak1 ![]() |
98,874 | 120.3 WPM | 170 WPM | 97.8% | 918 |
77 | rdtomgrcr ![]() |
98,618 | 65.9 WPM | 90 WPM | 96.5% | 1769 |
78 | nishimasa ![]() |
97,869 | 62.7 WPM | 100 WPM | 97.1% | 1851 |
79 | alanis ![]() |
97,814 | 115.8 WPM | 164 WPM | 97.8% | 956 |
80 | jaseem786 ![]() |
97,703 | 56.9 WPM | 87 WPM | 95.6% | 2201 |
81 | wumpified8 ![]() |
97,215 | 131.7 WPM | 173 WPM | 97.7% | 830 |
82 | vawl ![]() |
96,162 | 54.4 WPM | 76 WPM | 96.6% | 2210 |
83 | employ ![]() |
95,665 | 71.3 WPM | 96 WPM | 98.2% | 1565 |
84 | tereterna ![]() |
94,615 | 114.8 WPM | 145 WPM | 98.0% | 918 |
85 | alishah110 ![]() |
94,530 | 51.1 WPM | 76 WPM | 93.8% | 2413 |
86 | crims0nking ![]() |
94,189 | 110.8 WPM | 155 WPM | 97.8% | 958 |
87 | ppubalo ![]() |
93,506 | 82.6 WPM | 125 WPM | 97.9% | 1294 |
88 | chocolatepuma ![]() |
93,439 | 69.5 WPM | 96 WPM | 96.7% | 1558 |
89 | natfx7 ![]() |
93,246 | 74.2 WPM | 111 WPM | 97.0% | 1458 |
90 | phlofy ![]() |
92,706 | 103.3 WPM | 139 WPM | 96.8% | 1018 |
91 | numdegased ![]() |
92,600 | 79.4 WPM | 103 WPM | 97.3% | 1325 |
92 | steviebeans ![]() |
92,121 | 87.1 WPM | 133 WPM | 95.3% | 1179 |
93 | elements_in_space ![]() |
90,890 | 51.5 WPM | 78 WPM | 94.9% | 2248 |
94 | raoof ![]() |
90,588 | 116.3 WPM | 162 WPM | 98.0% | 1010 |
95 | grotesquevinny | 89,990 | 111.6 WPM | 167 WPM | 97.6% | 920 |
96 | moisturemob ![]() |
89,966 | 113.4 WPM | 135 WPM | 99.0% | 901 |
97 | smelons ![]() |
89,478 | 101.7 WPM | 163 WPM | 97.6% | 1032 |
98 | encasedthought ![]() |
89,282 | 84.4 WPM | 146 WPM | 96.4% | 1190 |
99 | tristanhilton85 ![]() |
88,654 | 89.2 WPM | 119 WPM | 97.8% | 1179 |
100 | intyper ![]() |
88,280 | 104.0 WPM | 143 WPM | 98.4% | 977 |
TypeRacer Reaches 3,700 quotes – how many have you typed?
In our TypeRacer quote survey (here), 94% of you told us that typing quality quotes is part of what makes TypeRacer fun, and that you want to continue to increase the breadth and diversity of quotes on the site. Today we added over 500 new quotes; a list of the top sources is below. We’d like to offer a big “Thanks!” to the 42 people who submitted quotes included in today’s update! Their names are at the bottom of this post.
TypeRacer’s main English universe now has over 3,700 quotes — because there are six different skill levels, most users will only come across a subset of the texts. Wondering how many of the 3,700 texts you’ve typed before? Check www.typeracerdata.com.
Congrats to Khronic (khronic) who, as of today, has typed 3,207 texts (#1 on TypeRacer) – pretty much every single quote on TypeRacer before today’s update! (Data from TypeRacerData)
Rank |
Racer |
Texts Raced |
1 | Type O Negative (khronic) | 3,207 |
2 | Shoemaker-Levy 9 (atthetop) | 2,854 |
3 | 🌮 discord.me/speedtypers… | 2,823 |
4 | blaise (bblaise) | 2,685 |
5 | 🌹 BlackRose 🌹 (typin… | 2,584 |
6 | 👉 Shibe 👈 (ultrashibe) | 2,525 |
7 | DANIEL WEGGA (dizo) | 2,453 |
8 | LarryJr (alanis) | 2,444 |
9 | Amen [Dvorak-Trainee] (amun) | 2,410 |
10 | but thou must (pentalon) | 2,403 |
11 | -MarkVS- (mark40511) | 2,374 |
12 | Jon Lachney (jlachney) | 2,344 |
13 | dahabieh (wordracer888) | 2,318 |
14 | ❤ (vixt) | 2,302 |
15 | Poke (poke1) | 2,291 |
16 | Michael Rubby (mikerubby) | 2,252 |
17 | Ed (edward12345) | 2,244 |
18 | Jo̅chö̈⚽👊 ō͡≡o… | 2,238 |
19 | K SY (a9088391) | 2,236 |
20 | sig (siglemic) | 2,236 |
Top sources from the quotes added today:
Quote contributors for this batch:
717ethan |
acdunn10 |
afregistry |
atthetop |
bijx |
blade5468 |
bonfuifui |
C4nn0nb411 |
CalebWhitey |
callmejije |
cinnamonspice |
cryptofu |
deroche1 |
Ducktypist |
enriquecollin |
estevaoima |
forerunner23 |
frederickw |
gchicoper |
GothamsOnlyHope
|
ItchyBum |
ItzAliFtw |
jeremy0d |
justinmccray |
kellysgreens |
kl_nyc_9 |
Lauren |
moltenberg |
nickelodeon_diesel
|
NotJimmy97 |
o0bananrama0o |
oceanhippie |
onehundredplus |
oztran |
Pentalon |
poke1 |
saculu |
Signal1 |
srefn |
swedeware |
the_hoarse_whisperer
|
TheBiggOne |
toching |
typeracerplays |
arenasnow2 |
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