This mode trains you on a specific text style so you can build rhythm and fluency. Different text types (paragraphs, quotes, sentences) challenge different pacing and punctuation habits. Aim for fewer corrections; smoother typing usually means faster typing. Practice in short sessions and repeat frequently—muscle memory grows with repetition.
Typing short sentences trains bursts and resets, while paragraphs train sustained rhythm. Quotes and dialogue often include punctuation and capitalization, which helps real-world typing.
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.