The 67 Challenge leaderboard is updated in real time from the app. Thousands of players around the world have submitted scores — but only a handful sit at the very top.
Here’s what we know about the fastest wavers in the world.
The score ceiling
The 20-second leaderboard is scored out of a theoretical maximum that no one has approached yet. The highest legitimate scores cluster around the high 70s and 80s for elite players. Sustaining over 4 reps per second for a full 20 seconds represents something close to the human physical limit using current detection methodology.
The 40-second and 60-second modes produce higher raw scores — but they are also harder to sustain. A player who hits 80 in 20 seconds rarely maintains that pace to 160+ in 40 seconds. Fatigue is real.
Countries that dominate
Based on leaderboard data, the highest average scores come from:
-
Brazil — consistently the most active country by install count and has produced multiple top-50 entries. Brazilian players tend to use very smooth, rhythmic technique.
-
Poland — a smaller player base but a surprisingly high concentration of Elite-tier scores.
-
Australia — home market, solid representation across all tiers.
The geographic spread suggests this isn’t culturally specific — fast wrists are universal. What differs is the technique that players stumble into naturally.
What does a top-scorer’s technique look like?
From player-shared videos, a few things are consistent among high scorers:
- Small, controlled movements — not wild arm flailing. Top scorers look calm.
- Both hands moving in rhythm — the hands are nearly synchronized, moving together rather than alternating.
- Phone propped or held steady — almost all top scores are done with the phone propped, giving both hands freedom.
- Close camera distance — roughly 30–40cm, not arm’s length away.
The technique gap between a 40-rep player and a 70-rep player is often entirely about form, not raw physical speed. The 70-rep player looks like they’re barely trying.
Can the record be broken?
Yes, and it will be. The leaderboard is still young and the player base is growing. As more players develop technique rather than just trying to “go fast”, scores will keep climbing.
The 67 Challenge records are broken routinely — check the live leaderboard to see today’s top scores. A score that was top-10 a month ago may now be outside the top 50 as new players push the ceiling.
Get on the board
The leaderboard is open to any verified (non-guest) account. Create a free account in the app, submit your score, and see where you rank globally.
The record is there to be broken. Download the app, master the technique, and come for it.
This post is updated monthly with fresh leaderboard data.