This mode adds extra characters and patterns so you can type more confidently in real life. Symbols, punctuation, and numbers often slow people down—training them boosts overall fluency. Keep your eyes on the text and let your fingers do the work—avoid hunting keys. Slow down slightly when you feel errors increasing, then speed up again.
In emails, passwords, addresses, and code, symbols and numbers are everywhere. Training them reduces pauses and improves overall consistency.
Practice in short, consistent sessions and focus on clean keystrokes. When accuracy improves, speed usually rises on its own. If you plateau, try a different mode (time, difficulty, or text type) to challenge new patterns.
The biggest speed killers are frequent backspacing, tense hands, and inconsistent rhythm. Relax your shoulders, keep a light touch, and aim for steady pacing rather than bursts.
Yes. You can practice as many times as you want.
Accuracy first. Reducing mistakes improves flow, which increases speed naturally.
A few minutes per day is enough for steady improvement. Track trends over weeks, not single runs.
Pick a different mode and keep practicing.