Voice challenge · free · no account needed
Name 100 games. Out loud. On the clock.
Say game titles back to back — every real game the judge recognizes drops into the pile. Near-misses get a hint, wrong answers count against you, repeats don’t count, and only 3 games per series make the board. The clock runs until the hundredth case lands.
WASD · left click · right click · middle mouse
On the clock
0:00
0 / 100
0 misses
Fastest 100s
Nobody has finished yet. The board is wide open.
This browser's run analysis
Finish a guest run to view the cover timeline here.
House rules
How the judge scores your hundred
- The judge is strict. Every title you say is matched against a real game catalog. If it can’t find the game, that’s a miss — misses stay on your scorecard next to your final time.
- Close only counts as a hint. Say enough of a title to be unmistakable and it lands; get close and the judge tells you which game it thinks you mean so you can say it in full.
- 3 per series, no repeats. Naming a game twice never counts, and each series caps at 3 entries — you can’t recite one franchise to victory.
- The clock never stops. Pausing the mic buys thinking time at full price. The timer runs from your first word until game number 100 drops, and the fastest verified runs make the public leaderboard.
FAQ
Name 100 Games challenge questions
- What is the Name 100 Games challenge?
- It is the challenge of naming 100 different video games from memory, out loud, as fast as you can. This page judges it for real: browser dictation hears each title, a strict judge checks it against a real game catalog, verified games drop into a 3D pile, and a timer runs until the hundredth game lands.
- Do I need an account to play?
- No. Anyone can start the clock and run the full challenge for free. If you finish as a guest, the browser keeps that completed run long enough for you to sign up and put it on the leaderboard.
- What counts as a correct answer?
- A real, released video game the judge can match in its catalog. Near-misses get a hint telling you to say the full title, wrong answers count as misses, repeats never count twice, and remasters or editions of a game you already named count as the same game.
- Why does the judge stop counting a series after 3 games?
- Rattling off every numbered sequel is the easy way out, so at most 3 games per series make your hundred. Once a series is capped the judge tells you and you have to reach for something else — that is where runs are won and lost.
- Does it work on my phone?
- Yes, as long as the browser supports dictation (the Web Speech API). Chrome and Edge on desktop and most mobile browsers work; the page tells you immediately if yours does not.
- Can I pause the clock?
- No. You can pause the microphone to think, but the clock keeps running the whole time — thinking time is part of your final time.
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