A lyric shows up with one blank to fill. Tap the one correct word to finish it and move on. The format is the same for every song—it's a fast game with no homework. Just have fun.
When you're stuck, check for rhyme, flow, or syllable count. Think about the song's texture—is it a tight hi-hat or a jangly guitar? Keep an eye on the tiny guys—"the," "to," "of."
If it kinda rhymes but feels wonky, it's probably bait. If a word feels off, trust your gut. Missed one? No worries, you'll get another chance.
Hit start and let's see if you can keep the beat and get that high score.
[B] boy | The Beatles made history with this opening line. "Boy" creates that perfect exclamation mark, turning news into pure rock poetry magic.
2/28
Hello, hello, hello, how _____?
[B] low | U2's Bono stretches "low" like taffy in concert. This word becomes a sonic playground where rock meets soul confession.
3/28
Well we're all in the mood for a melody and you've got us feelin' _____?
[C] alright | Billy Joel's piano bar anthem needs this exact word. It's the verbal equivalent of everyone raising their beer glasses together.
4/28
My loneliness is killing me and I must confess I still _____?
[B] believe | Britney's confession works because "believe" rhymes perfectly with the upcoming "Give me a sign!" Pop perfection requires mathematical precision.
5/28
California girls we're unforgettable. Daisy dukes, bikinis on _____?
[A] top | Katy Perry paints beach scenes with just two syllables. "Top" bounces off your tongue like volleyballs on Venice Beach sand.
6/28
Georgia, Georgia, the whole day _____?
[B] through | Ray Charles turned state pride into gospel truth. "Through" stretches time like molasses, making one day feel like eternity.
7/28
I see the girls walk by dressed in their summer _____?
[D] clothes | The Rolling Stones capture voyeuristic summer in one word. "Clothes" lands soft but hits hard, like British rock should.
8/28
You must not know 'bout _____?
[B] me | Beyoncé's warning shot starts here. "Me" transforms from pronoun to proclamation, demanding respect with just one syllable of power.
9/28
I hear the train a comin', it's rollin' 'round the _____?
[C] bend | Johnny Cash's Folsom Prison geography lesson. Trains round bends in country songs like metaphors for freedom just out of reach.
10/28
Don't cry, don't raise your eye. It's only teenage _____?
[A] wasteland | The Who captured adolescent angst before it was trendy. "Wasteland" makes growing up sound like surviving nuclear fallout.
11/28
There's vomit on his sweater already, mom's _____?
[A] spaghetti | Eminem's nervous rapper eats Italian comfort food. This detail launched a thousand memes while keeping the rhyme scheme bulletproof tight.
12/28
If you're having girl problems, I feel bad for you _____?
[C] son | Jay-Z's paternal sympathy comes wrapped in street wisdom. "Son" transforms advice into hip-hop mentorship with old-school flavor.
13/28
There's a fire starting in my _____?
[A] heart | Adele's combustion begins at emotion's epicenter. Hearts catch fire in ballads like matches strike in darkness—instantly, inevitably.
14/28
What you want, baby I _____?
[D] got | Marvin Gaye's promise comes pre-delivered. "Got" implies abundance, turning romantic offerings into a warehouse of possibilities.
15/28
Tell me why, ain't nothing but a _____?
[D] heartache | Backstreet Boys made questions sound like accusations. "Heartache" rhymes with their next line, creating boy band algebra.
16/28
I like big butts and I cannot _____?
[A] lie | Sir Mix-a-Lot's honesty policy changed hip-hop forever. Truth-telling about preferences became a cultural revolution in four letters.
17/28
How does it feel to be without a _____?
[B] home | Bob Dylan asks the ultimate existential question. Homelessness becomes metaphysical when Nobel laureates write your displacement.
18/28
I've got a long list of _____?
[D] ex-lovers | Taylor Swift keeps romantic receipts like an emotional accountant. Her list probably has subsections, footnotes, and color coding.
19/28
But every song's like gold teeth, Grey Goose, trippin' in the _____?
[C] bathroom | Lorde's party critique peaks at porcelain fixtures. Bathrooms become confession booths where excess meets its reckoning.
20/28
Your candle burned out long before your legend ever _____?
[C] did | Elton mourns Marilyn with past-tense finality. "Did" closes doors that fame promised would stay open forever.
21/28
I've got sunshine on a cloudy day, when it's cold outside I've got the month of _____?
[B] May | The Temptations bottled spring in Motown harmony. May means flowers, warmth, and love—everything winter isn't supposed to deliver.
22/28
I remember when, I remember, I remember when I lost my _____?
[D] mind | Twenty One Pilots makes mental health sound like misplaced car keys. Casual phrasing makes heavy topics suddenly speakable.
23/28
And them good ole boys were drinking whiskey and _____?
[C] rye | Don McLean's American Pie serves grain alcohol with nostalgia. Rye whiskey tastes like the 1950s America never actually was.
24/28
You have my heart and we'll never be worlds _____?
[A] apart | Journey promises cosmic proximity despite physical distance. Space becomes irrelevant when hearts have their own gravity.
25/28
Oh, as long as I know how to love I know I'll stay _____?
[A] alive | Gloria Gaynor equates love with survival itself. Disco declares that feelings aren't just emotions—they're life support systems.
26/28
Jeremiah was a _____?
[D] bullfrog | Three Dog Night's amphibian friendship defies biology. Bullfrogs apparently make excellent drinking buddies in the right circumstances.
27/28
Make it last forever, friendship never _____?
[D] ends | Spice Girls promise eternal sisterhood through pop. "Ends" becomes impossible when backed by platform shoes and synchronized dancing.
28/28
I get so lonely I could _____?
[C] die | Hank Williams invented country hyperbole. Loneliness becomes terminal illness when steel guitars provide your medical diagnosis.