Flappy Typer for Arabic Typing Speed Benchmarks
How Flappy Typer's difficulty levels roughly map to real Arabic typing speed benchmarks, from beginner to advanced.

Wondering how your Flappy Typer performance with Arabic prompts compares to genuine Arabic typing speed? Here's how the game's difficulty levels roughly map to real-world Arabic WPM benchmarks.
General Arabic WPM benchmarks
Our full WPM benchmarks guide covers this in depth, but as a summary: under 20 WPM is beginner, 20–35 is developing, 35–50 is competent, 50–70 is proficient, and 70+ is advanced for Arabic touch typing.
How this maps to Flappy Typer difficulty
Beginner-level prompts in the game are forgiving of low speed — even under 20 WPM raw speed is enough to succeed, since timing is generous and prompts are simple single letters. As you move to word-based intermediate levels, comfortable play generally benefits from something in the 30+ WPM range. Advanced levels, with longer words and tighter timing, often require 50+ WPM to succeed consistently.
Why this comparison isn't perfectly precise
The game measures isolated prompt-to-keystroke reaction rather than sustained passage typing, so it isn't a direct WPM test. But the general correlation holds: players with higher genuine Arabic typing speed find higher game levels meaningfully easier.
Using the game as a rough gauge
If you're consistently struggling at intermediate levels, that's a reasonable signal your Arabic typing speed is still in the developing range — a good time to focus on structured practice through LearnType's Arabic 101 course rather than pushing game difficulty further.
Test your speed
Play at learntype.app/games/flappy-typer and see which difficulty level feels comfortable versus challenging.
FAQ
Can Flappy Typer replace a proper Arabic typing speed test? No — for an accurate WPM measurement, use a dedicated Arabic typing test rather than inferring speed from game difficulty alone.
What level should a beginner aim for first? Beginner-level prompts are the right starting point regardless of your general typing background, since Arabic key positions are likely new.
Does struggling at advanced levels mean my Arabic typing is bad? Not at all — advanced levels are genuinely demanding even for typists well above average Arabic typing speed.
Written by
LearnType Editorial Team
Typing Education Editors
The LearnType Editorial Team produces and reviews typing curricula for English, Bangla (Avro & Bijoy), and Hindi. Our lessons and guides are developed with experienced typing instructors and aligned to real government typing-test standards, including SSC, CPCT, and state-level exams.
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