🧠 Memory 1v1
1v1 is the most honest format in gaming — no team to carry you, no RNG loot, nobody else to blame. Memory 1v1 distils that: two people, the same challenge, and a scoreboard that remembers. Best of 5 rounds, 30–40 seconds, and one player leaves with proof.
The duel format
Every duel runs best-of-5 across shuffled mini-games — Memory among them — so a true 1v1 win means beating the same person at several kinds of fast. Take on the world through quick match (real opponents, ELO on the line) or a specific human through a challenge link (reputation on the line, which is worse).
ELO: the referee that ends arguments
Ranked 1v1s move your ELO — the chess rating system, applied to working memory. Beat someone stronger, gain more; lose to someone weaker, lose more. Over enough duels it converges on the truth about who's better, which is precisely why some people refuse to play ranked. Your number lives on the country leaderboards for as long as you can defend it.
How to play Memory
- A sequence of blocks lights up, one by one. Watch — it plays once.
- Repeat the sequence by tapping the blocks in the same order.
- Accuracy first: a wrong tap ends your attempt.
- Correct and faster than your opponent wins the round.