How to Improve Your 67 Speed Score
Start With a Repeatable Baseline
Before chasing a high score, create a fair baseline. Use the same device, same room, same camera distance, and same lighting for at least three rounds. Your average score tells you more than a single lucky attempt.

Improve One Variable at a Time
1. Camera Position
Stand about 3-5 feet from the camera. Your head, shoulders, elbows, and wrists should remain visible during the full round. If your wrists leave the frame, the tracker has less information and the score can drop.
2. Lighting
Use bright front lighting. Avoid strong backlight from a window or monitor behind you. If your arms blend into the background, wear a shirt with stronger contrast.
3. Arm Rhythm
Many players start too aggressively and lose rhythm after a few seconds. Try a shorter, controlled alternating motion first. Once the tracker is stable, gradually increase speed.
4. Posture
Keep your elbows bent and your upper body stable. Excessive body movement can make your arms harder to track and wastes energy.
5. Recovery
Take breaks between attempts. Fatigue makes your motion smaller and less consistent, which often hurts both performance and tracking.
A Simple Practice Plan
- Round 1: Easy warmup
- Round 2: Focus on clear rhythm
- Round 3: Increase speed without shrinking the movement
- Round 4: Rest, then try for a personal best
When Faster Is Not Better
The counter does not simply reward the fastest-looking blur. In the current game logic, a repetition is counted only after the detector sees both wrists make a clear vertical movement relative to the shoulders. That detail explains why moving faster can sometimes produce a lower score.
Here is the simple version:
- The game tracks your wrists and shoulders from the camera image.
- It compares each wrist's height to the matching shoulder height.
- A movement must be large enough to pass the detection threshold; tiny shakes are ignored.
- Both arms need to register movement before the score increases by 1.
- If the wrists or shoulders are not visible enough, the game skips counting for that frame.
So if you speed up by making the motion extremely small, the tracker may see vibration instead of a clear up-or-down arm movement. If one arm moves clearly but the other arm barely changes position, the game may wait instead of counting. If your body bounces, your shoulder line moves too, which can make wrist movement look smaller relative to the shoulders.
This is why the best technique is usually fast but readable:
- Keep both wrists visible.
- Move both arms, not just your stronger side.
- Keep your shoulders steady so the wrist movement stands out.
- Use a short, clear vertical pump instead of random shaking.
- Increase speed only after the counter is rising smoothly.
If your score drops when you go faster, slow down for one round and watch whether each rep feels clean: both arms move, wrists stay in frame, shoulders stay stable, and the movement is big enough to be seen. Once that works, add speed in small steps.
