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Speed Nerdle - beat the clock

What is Speed mode?

Speed mode gives you Classic Nerdle rules with a countdown timer. Same 8-column grid, same four operators. But the clock is ticking. You start with 90 seconds and solve as many puzzles as possible before time runs out.

Each completed puzzle immediately loads the next one. The game counts how many you solve in a single session and saves your personal best. Speed mode rewards pattern recognition and fast typing over careful deliberation.

How scoring works

Your score is the number of puzzles you solve before the timer runs out. Each completed puzzle loads the next one instantly. There's no bonus for leftover guesses - only total puzzles count.

1–2Beginner
3–4Intermediate
5+Expert

Your personal best is saved locally. Speed mode has no global leaderboard - you're competing against yourself. Most players improve by 1-2 puzzles after a week of regular practice.

Speed mode rules

Same math, new constraint: time.

90-second timer

The countdown starts when you begin. You can choose between 60, 90, or 120-second sessions. 90 seconds is the default. When the timer hits zero, the game ends regardless of where you are mid-puzzle.

8-column Classic rules

Every equation uses 8 columns and all four operators (+, -, *, /). 6 guesses per puzzle. The equations are drawn from the same pool as Classic mode.

Continuous puzzles

Solve one, the next loads automatically. No pause between puzzles. Your total count for the session is what matters.

All standard Nerdle rules apply during Speed rounds. The only difference is the timer - the math and equation validation are identical to Classic.

Tips for Speed mode

Memorize an opener

Type the same first guess every round without thinking. 12+34=46 or 9*8-7=65. Speed mode isn't about creative openers. It's about muscle memory for a solid starting point.

Don't overthink

If you're staring at the grid for more than 5 seconds, guess something reasonable and get more feedback. In timed play, an imperfect guess that gives you new information beats a perfect guess that takes 20 seconds to calculate.

Practice in Casual first

Build your pattern recognition in Casual or Classic where there's no time pressure. Once you can solve 6-column puzzles consistently in 2-3 guesses, Speed mode becomes much more manageable.

Speed vs Classic Nerdle

The equations are identical. Same 8-column grid, same operators, same rules. The only difference is the timer. Classic gives you unlimited time for one puzzle; Speed gives you limited time for unlimited puzzles.

The strategy shifts from careful elimination to rapid pattern matching. In Classic, you might spend a minute deliberating your second guess. In Speed, you need to commit within seconds. Most players solve 2-4 puzzles per 90-second session. Getting above 5 takes real practice.

Speed mode FAQ

How long is the Speed mode timer?
90 seconds by default. You can also choose 60 or 120 seconds before starting.
How many puzzles can you solve in Speed mode?
It depends on your skill. Most players solve 2-4 per session. Experienced players can hit 5-7 in 90 seconds.
Does Speed mode use the same equations as Classic?
Yes. Same 8-column format, same operator set, same equation pools. The only addition is the countdown timer.
Does Speed mode track personal bests?
Yes. Your highest puzzle count per session is saved locally as your personal best.
What happens when the timer runs out?
The game ends and shows your score (number of puzzles solved). You can start a new session immediately.
Is Speed mode harder than Classic?
The math is the same difficulty. The time pressure makes it feel harder because you can't take your time deliberating. It rewards fast pattern recognition.