Helix Jump Leaderboard
The best scores ever submitted on HelixJump.world. Updated as players submit runs.
All-time top 10
| Rank | Player | Score |
|---|---|---|
| No scores yet — be the first to claim a top spot. Play now. | ||
This week
| Rank | Player | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly board fills as players submit scores between Monday and Sunday. | ||
Today
| Rank | Player | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Today's board resets at midnight UTC. Submit a score to appear. | ||
What the leaderboard tracks
The leaderboard records each player's best score per session. It doesn't track every run — only your personal best on this site is submitted, and your highest-ever submission is what ranks. This rewards consistent improvement rather than spamming runs.
Three boards run in parallel: today, this week (Monday through Sunday), and all-time. The all-time board is the headline; the weekly and daily boards make it possible for new players to land on a leaderboard without competing against the absolute records.
How scores are submitted
When you finish a run, your score is checked against your local best (stored in your browser). If it beats your previous high, it is submitted to the server with a short anonymous identifier. You can set a display name in the leaderboard widget so your runs show up with a label rather than a generated id.
The submission is automatic. There's no extra button to press, no account to make, no email to enter. If you don't want a score submitted you can mute the leaderboard widget — your local high score is still kept.
How players improve their ranking
Climbing the leaderboard is mostly about ONE good run, not many. Your slot is determined by your single best score. Practical implications:
- Warm up with three or four casual runs to calibrate your hand for the day.
- Make your serious attempts when you're settled — focused, not tired.
- Don't rush retries after a great run that almost broke your best. Take a 30-second break and come back fresh.
- Aim for the weekly board first. Getting to #1 weekly is much more achievable than #1 all-time and doesn't require breaking any records.
Practical scoring strategy: Helix Jump high score guide.
What separates the best runs
Looking at deep runs as a pattern, three things show up consistently:
- Smash discipline. Top players spend their charges on platforms they would otherwise have to dodge, not on free smashes through trivial wedges.
- Arrow capture. Top players almost never miss a powerup arrow that's within one wedge of their natural path. The 5–10 ring blast from a windowed smash is a significant fraction of their score.
- Deep-game patience. Past ring 100, the best players slow down. They rotate less. They take more clean bounces. They wait for the chain to set up rather than forcing one.