A frequency matching game with a perfect pitch vibe. Listen to 3 tones, match from memory, then see your rank.
Ranks · total XP
Your total: 0 XP (saved in this browser)
Try other modes: Hz match (4 choices) · 5-tone memory · Balance game
Popular pages: Frequency game · Perfect pitch game · Frequency guesser · Hearing age test
Dialed Sound Game is a free browser sound game — no download, no account needed. Each run plays three pure tones; your job is to drag a slider and match the frequency you just heard from memory. The closer your guess, the higher your score.
Think of it as a frequency game meets pitch memory challenge. It is not about naming notes or knowing music theory — just remembering where a tone sat on the scale and placing it back as accurately as you can. The slider uses a logarithmic scale, which matches how your ears actually perceive pitch differences.
Practice mode runs whenever you want. Good for warming up, grinding ranks, or just killing five minutes. Each session is three tones; scores and XP save locally in your browser.
Daily Challenge gives the same three tones to everyone on Earth, once per day. Play, then share your result — a clean score card that works on any chat or social feed.
Six ranks unlock as your XP grows: Rookie Ears, Sharp Listener, Tone Hunter, Freq Master, Golden Ears, and Legend. Each rank opens a wider frequency range, so the game stays genuinely harder as your ear sharpens — not just faster.
Works on any device with a browser and audio output. Headphones recommended for the best experience. Keep volume comfortable — this is a sound game for fun, not a clinical hearing test.
Also play: Color Memory Game → Want more modes? Browse More games.
Same answers as in our structured data for search engines — quick reference for humans.
Browse short guides with stable URLs (easy to share). Entertainment context only; not medical advice.
A short introduction to browser sound games and frequency matching.
What “good” means in a casual frequency game — and what it does not mean.
Practical tips aligned with three-tone rounds and logarithmic scoring.
Low-stakes ideas for musicians and curious listeners — not a medical program.
A plain-English explanation of the viral “hearing age” idea — and its limits.
Practical, safe tips for building listening skill — not medical advice.