Finger zones
Left hand: pinky A, ring S, middle D, index F. Right hand: index J, middle K, ring L, pinky semicolon. Indexes also reach the top row; pinkies handle outer keys.
Return to home row after every key at first — slowness is normal. Muscle memory needs repetition, not exhaustion.
Our finger course introduces only a few new keys per stage so each finger has time to learn its job.
Effective practice rhythm
Close your eyes, place hands on home row, then open and start. That half-second reset prevents fingers drifting across the board.
On topzcphp.com each letter shows which finger to use. Follow the hints — they beat random drilling.
Two or three short rounds per day, five to ten minutes each, outperform a single hour on weekends.
Watch out for
One-finger hunting, never returning to home row, and looking down at keys — all three stall long-term gains.
Weak pinkies often drag the whole wrist toward A or semicolon. Train the pinky alone with short sets.
Stick to one keyboard when possible; switching devices may cost a day or two of readjustment.
From home row to full keyboard
After home row stabilizes, lessons add the top and bottom rows. Accuracy before speed — Leaderboard heroes built foundations first.
Ready check: can you place both hands on home row with eyes closed and name each finger's keys? Then move to the top row.
Advanced short-word drills bridge drills and real typing. Games add pressure only after accuracy stays above 90%.