
Dashmetry
What is Dashmetry?
Dashmetry is a one-touch rhythm dash in the classic auto-runner tradition: your shape hurtles forward automatically through neon obstacle courses, and a single well-timed input is all that separates a clean run from a restart. Every spike, gap, and gravity flip is placed on the beat, so the soundtrack is not background music — it is the level's instruction manual.

How to Play
Tap to jump as your shape auto-runs through each stage, and hold to chain repeated hops through staircase sections. Obstacles arrive in time with the track, so playing by ear beats playing by eye: jumps land on notes, hazards strike on accents. Death sends you back to the start instantly — runs are short, retries are immediate, and each attempt burns another bar of the song into muscle memory.
Controls
- Left mouse button, spacebar, or up arrow — jump
- Hold — repeated bounces through chained sections
- Portals — flip gravity or change your form mid-run
- Instant retry — restart the moment you clip an edge
Tips for surviving Dashmetry
- Trust the percussion: obstacle timing follows the drums more reliably than visual distance.
- Learn the opening ten seconds until they are automatic — consistency early prevents tilt later.
- After a gravity portal, invert your instincts immediately; hesitation is the real killer.
Why Dashmetry is hard to put down
Dashmetry understands what makes the dash genre eternal: total clarity. You always know exactly which note killed you, so every restart carries a plan instead of frustration. Add a distinctive neon look and levels short enough to demand one more attempt, and you get a runner that quietly eats an entire evening.
FAQ
Is Dashmetry free to play?
Yes. Dashmetry is completely free and runs directly in your browser — no download, install, or sign-up required.
What are the controls for Dashmetry?
One input does everything: click, tap, or press space/up to jump, and hold it to bounce continuously through chained obstacles.
Can I play Dashmetry on mobile?
Yes. Dashmetry plays smoothly on mobile — the one-touch control scheme maps directly to a touchscreen: press and hold anywhere to act, lift your finger to release. Many players actually prefer touch for this style of runner, since finger taps feel more immediate than mouse clicks. For the hardest precision sections, a desktop keyboard still gives slightly steadier timing.
