Rules are bare-bones: a song title plus its year. Four female names show up—pick the voice behind it. No lore, no trivia rabbit holes; just your radio memory doing work.
We shuffle decades and styles so the lane keeps moving. The year tag helps and tricks. Barracuda points Heart, Umbrella screams Rihanna, Walk Like an Egyptian frames the Bangles. Easy then spiky, but fair.
Quick habit: glance the year first, then the title; hum the hook; cross out the sound-alikes. If stuck, pass once and come back fresh. Chase a three-in-a-row streak, then reset. Small errors allowed; vibes matter.
[D] Lizzo | This belated smash became a self-love breakup anthem, turning Lizzo's sharp one-liners into some of the most quoted lyrics of the decade.
2/30
Rolling in the Deep (2010)?
[A] Adele | The lead single from Adele's second album turned her heartbreak into a stormy soul hit, earning multiple Grammys and massive radio airplay.
3/30
Kids in America (1981)?
[C] Kim Wilde | Daughter of 50s rocker Marty Wilde, Kim's new wave debut became Britain's best-selling single by a female UK artist in 1981, launching her international career.
4/30
Ain't No Mountain High Enough (1970)?
[C] Diana Ross | Diana Ross's solo version became her first #1 hit, reimagining Marvin Gaye's duet into an empowering anthem that showcased her transition from Supremes superstar to solo icon.
5/30
My Immortal (2003)?
[A] Evanescence | Amy Lee wrote this haunting piano ballad about losing her younger sister, its gothic vulnerability connecting deeply with emo audiences and reaching multi-platinum status.
6/30
Come to My Window (1994)?
[D] Melissa Etheridge | Melissa penned this passionate plea during a tumultuous relationship, its raw vulnerability earning her a Grammy and becoming an anthem for unrequited longing everywhere.
7/30
Hollaback Girl (2005)?
[D] Gwen Stefani | Gwen's cheerleader-inspired clapback at Courtney Love became the first digital download to sell one million copies, with that spelling-bee bridge becoming instantly iconic.
8/30
Barracuda (1977)?
[A] Heart | Ann Wilson wrote this fierce rocker after a sleazy record promoter spread rumors about her relationship with sister Nancy, turning anger into one of rock's most powerful anthems.
9/30
Bad Romance (2009)?
[C] Lady Gaga | This dark electropop anthem became one of Gaga's signature songs, showcasing her theatrical style and cementing her global superstardom.
10/30
Wannabe (1996)?
[B] Spice Girls | Recorded in just thirty minutes, this friendship-over-romance manifesto launched Spicemania worldwide, selling seven million copies and redefining British pop girl group success.
11/30
Wrecking Ball (2013)?
[B] Miley Cyrus | Miley's emotional breakup ballad, paired with its provocative video, marked her dramatic transformation from Disney alumni to adult pop icon.
12/30
Ring My Bell (1979)?
[A] Anita Ward | Originally written for Stacy Lattisaw as a childlike jingle about telephones, Anita's sultry interpretation transformed it into disco's most playful double-entendre hit.
13/30
Fast Car (1987)?
[A] Tracy Chapman | Tracy's debut single about escaping poverty resonated universally, her sparse acoustic guitar and storytelling genius earning three Grammy nominations at age twenty-four.
14/30
Call Me Maybe (2011)?
[A] Carly Rae Jepsen | This irresistibly catchy pop track went viral worldwide, turning a Canadian Idol alum into a global one-hit wonder turned cult pop favorite.
15/30
Dark Lady (1974)?
[A] Cher | This fortune-teller revenge tale became Cher's third solo #1, proving her ability to dominate multiple decades with theatrical storytelling and that unmistakable contralto voice.
16/30
Heart of Glass (1979)?
[D] Blondie | Debbie Harry's disco-punk fusion initially alienated some punk fans but became Blondie's first #1, proving new wave could dominate both underground clubs and mainstream radio.
17/30
Don't Speak (1996)?
[C] No Doubt | Gwen Stefani rewrote these lyrics about her breakup with bassist Tony Kanal during recording, transforming band tension into their biggest hit and most heartbreaking ballad.
18/30
Midnight Train to Georgia (1973)?
[D] Gladys Knight | Originally about a midnight plane to Houston, Gladys and the Pips transformed it into this soul masterpiece about following love anywhere, winning their second Grammy.
19/30
Dancing Queen (1976)?
[D] Abba | ABBA's only US #1 hit celebrates the joy of being seventeen, though Agnetha was actually twenty-six when recording this timeless disco-pop masterpiece.
20/30
Straight Up (1988)?
[A] Paula Abdul | Former Lakers cheerleader Paula transitioned from choreographing Janet Jackson to pop stardom herself, this debut single spending three weeks at number one.
21/30
Umbrella (2007)?
[A] Rihanna | After Britney Spears rejected it, Rihanna claimed this rain metaphor for loyalty, spending seven weeks at #1 and establishing her as pop's most reliable hitmaker.
22/30
Something to Talk About (1991)?
[B] Bonnie Raitt | Shirley Eikhard penned this sly suggestion about office romance rumors becoming reality, Bonnie's bluesy delivery earning her a Grammy at age forty-two.
23/30
Me and Bobby McGee (1970)?
[A] Janis Joplin | Released posthumously after her tragic overdose, Janis's raspy, freewheeling take on Kris Kristofferson's song became her only #1 hit, a bittersweet final triumph.
24/30
No More Drama (2001)?
[A] Mary J. Blige | Sampling Young Hearts Run Free, Mary delivered this autobiographical anthem about shedding toxic patterns, solidifying her title as hip-hop soul's undisputed queen.
25/30
Heaven is a Place on Earth (1987)?
[A] Belinda Carlisle | After leaving the Go-Go's, Belinda achieved her biggest solo success with this euphoric love song, which Rick Nowels originally wrote with different lyrics.
26/30
Stay (I Missed You) (1994)?
[C] Lisa Loeb | Lisa became the first unsigned artist to top Billboard's Hot 100 with this Reality Bites gem, her nerdy-cool glasses becoming iconic 90s fashion.
27/30
We Got the Beat (1980)?
[D] Go-Gos | The Go-Gos' infectious new wave anthem about dancing showcased their all-female rock credibility, proving women could write, play, and dominate charts completely independently.
28/30
Say My Name (2000)?
[C] Destiny's Child | This infidelity confrontation won two Grammys and featured the newly reformed trio after lineup changes, Beyoncé's production genius shining through every harmony layer.
29/30
Stronger (What Doesn't Kill You) (2012)?
[B] Kelly Clarkson | Kelly's empowerment anthem became one of her biggest hits, with its Nietzsche-inspired hook blasting from gyms and radios everywhere.
30/30
Listen to Your Heart (1989)?
[B] Roxette | Swedish duo Roxette's power ballad topped charts across Europe and America, Marie Fredriksson's soaring vocals making it their second consecutive US #1 single.