The keyboard fell apart, stack it back together. Tetris meets QWERTY.t's Tetris, except the blocks are keys and every single one has exactly one home. Drop the A on the A. The Z on the Z. You get it. Miss the spot, and that key turns into a useless gray brick that just sits there, bothering you until you explode it. Stack them right and the keyboard lights up blue, row by row, until the whole thing is whole again. Stack them wrong long enough and the junk piles to the top and it's over.
I think the difficulty is a little off and I can't see it straight anymore, I've played this thing roughly four thousand times, so everything feels "normal" to me now, which is exactly the problem.
My hunch: Level 1 might be too gentle, and the jump right after it too mean. But I'd rather hear it from you. If you bounce off a level, breeze through one, or hit the wall at a specific spot, tell me where in the comments. I read every single one and I'll be tweaking based on what you say. 🙏
If you pass level 8, congratulations, you are a Tetris master. I mean QWERTYS beast :p..
This looks simple in a dangerous way. I feel like knowing the keyboard layout and actually placing the keys under pressure are two diff skills. Are you tuning the difficulty based on player drop off points?
Are you planning different keyboard layouts too, like AZERTY or mobile keyboards?
This is a smart combination of two concepts. Finding the right spot on the keyboard layout while being under time pressure. As other posters mentioned muscle memory, do you provide QWERTZ as well?
the interesting design tension here is that most people have muscle memory for where keys are but not necessarily conscious knowledge of the layout. you might know where the A is without being able to picture the keyboard abstractly. curious whether people who type faster actually perform better at this or whether the spatial reasoning required is different enough from typing that it doesn't transfer. have you noticed any pattern in your playtesters
About QWERTYS on Product Hunt
“My keyboard fell apart. Now it's your problem.”
QWERTYS launched on Product Hunt on June 6th, 2026 and earned 127 upvotes and 7 comments, placing #4 on the daily leaderboard. The keyboard fell apart, stack it back together. Tetris meets QWERTY.t's Tetris, except the blocks are keys and every single one has exactly one home. Drop the A on the A. The Z on the Z. You get it. Miss the spot, and that key turns into a useless gray brick that just sits there, bothering you until you explode it. Stack them right and the keyboard lights up blue, row by row, until the whole thing is whole again. Stack them wrong long enough and the junk piles to the top and it's over.
QWERTYS was featured in Custom Keyboards (2.3k followers), Puzzle Games (4.3k followers) and Games (98.6k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 28.4k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted QWERTYS?
QWERTYS was hunted by Diego Dotta. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
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