Audio recall
Sound Memory Test
Listen to a frequency, keep it in memory, then tune it back by ear. The game measures how close your answer is to the target sound.
What is a sound memory test?
A sound memory test measures how well you can remember a tone after hearing it once. MindRush focuses on frequency recall: you listen, hold the sound in your memory, then adjust a new tone until it matches.
This is different from a simple hearing test. The goal is not just to hear the sound, but to remember it accurately for a short period of time.
How to play
Each round plays one tone. After the memorization phase, move the frequency control until your recreated tone sounds as close as possible to the original.
The game uses five rounds and gives a final score out of 50. Headphones are recommended because they make small frequency differences easier to judge.
Why sound recall is difficult
Pitch memory fades quickly. Even when you remember whether a sound was low or high, the exact frequency can drift in your mind after a few seconds.
Small frequency errors can feel close, especially without a reference tone. This makes sound memory a strong test of attention and auditory precision.
Tips to improve sound memory
Listen for the tone height first, then compare whether your guess feels warmer, sharper, lower or brighter. Avoid moving too fast; small adjustments are usually better.
Playing with consistent volume and headphones helps your brain build a more stable reference for future rounds.