Type Fast, Beat the Room, Win a Porsche

Type fast. Win a Porsche.
Type Fast, Beat the Room, Win a Porsche is what happens when a boring typing test gets a Fast & Furious makeover. Wispr Flow turned a simple speed test into a full-blown race track, complete with a sleek Porsche hero shot, neon buttons, and a prize board that feels like a video game lobby. The actual competition is closed, but the page still screams: hit Start, gun it, and see if your fingers deserve a trophy.
Turning a Typing Test into a Race
The hero image is a cinematic Porsche parked dead center on a dark, gridded background, instantly framing typing speed as a performance sport. The headline asks “How fast can you type?” instead of explaining features, so your brain starts competing before you even see the Start button. That big pastel Start button under the car is the ignition switch: one click, and you’re proving if you can actually “beat the room,” not just read about it.
The Psychology Behind This Layout
- Race-car hero image makes speed feel tangible and aspirational, not nerdy.
- Short, cocky microcopy like “How fast are you?” and “Proof you showed up” adds playful pressure.
- Closed-competition notice keeps urgency but reframes the test as a low-stakes, just-for-fun challenge.
- Prize cards look like collectible badges, turning every reward into a status symbol instead of a boring giveaway.
How Wispr Flow Sells Speed Without Saying Much
Wispr Flow uses the Porsche hero image to visually equate typing speed with high-performance racing and luxury.
Wispr Flow lays out the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and Bonus prizes as bold cards with icons so visitors instantly scan what they could win before they even think about the test.
Wispr Flow keeps a single, centered Start button beneath the headline and car, making the primary action obvious and impossible to miss.
