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.
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.
2/28
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.
3/28
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.
4/28
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.
5/28
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.
6/28
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.
7/28
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.
8/28
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.
9/28
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.
10/28
Is this the real life, is this just _____?
[C] fantasy | Queen opens their rock opera with this one surreal word hanging in mid-air.
11/28
I read the news today, oh _____?
[B] boy | The Beatles made history with this opening line. "Boy" creates that perfect exclamation mark, turning news into pure rock poetry magic.
12/28
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.
13/28
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.
14/28
Billie Jean is not my _____?
[C] lover | Michael Jackson swears this title is wrong, which only makes the story feel messier.
15/28
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.
16/28
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.
17/28
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.
18/28
Just a small town girl, livin' in a _____ world?
[A] lonely | Journey sets the mood in one word, turning the whole song into a midnight train confession.
19/28
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.
20/28
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.
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
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.
23/28
Jeremiah was a _____?
[D] bullfrog | Three Dog Night's amphibian friendship defies biology. Bullfrogs apparently make excellent drinking buddies in the right circumstances.
24/28
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.
25/28
I wanna feel the heat with _____?
[B] somebody | Whitney Houston makes the dance floor a quest to find one person who actually matches her energy.
26/28
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.
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
Here we are now, entertain _____?
[C] us | Nirvana yells this like a dare, turning bored teenagers into the loudest choir in the room.