If you’ve ever found yourself staring at a screen for three hours straight, trying to nail one single jump, you probably know the drill. This project is a fan-made tribute to that specific high-stakes rhythm-platformer style. It’s all about the sync—if your tap is even a fraction of a second off the beat, you're back to the start. It captures that intensity where failure isn’t a setback; it’s just part of the rhythm.
Finding a way to play during a slow afternoon at school is basically a rite of passage for most of us. That’s where this version comes in. It’s designed to navigate around those annoying network filters that usually keep you stuck on a boring "Site Blocked" page. Whether you’re on a Chromebook or a managed office desktop, this setup is built to stay accessible so you can actually get a session in when you need a quick break.
There’s something about the seasonal levels that just hits differently. While the main game is all neon and sharp edges, the winter-themed maps add an atmosphere that makes the brutal difficulty feel a bit more chill. The music shifts, the visuals get a snowy makeover, and while the spikes are just as deadly, the whole experience feels more like a "vibe" than a pure stress test.
You’ve probably seen mirrors of this game popping up all over the web. While you can find it in plenty of places, we’ve tried to consolidate the best features of the web versions here. It’s the same core mechanics you’d expect from a browser-based platformer, but optimized to run smoother in a single tab without the massive ad-wrappers that usually slow down your response time.
Stability is everything when you’re dealing with frame-perfect jumps. We host this through a dedicated GitHub environment because it’s fast, reliable, and almost never goes down. It also means the code is clean and the performance is consistent, which is exactly what you need when you’re trying to beat a level that’s been kicking your teeth in for the last hour.
You might have first run into this on portals like 1Games or Crazy Games. Those sites are great for discovery, but they often come with a lot of overhead and tracking. Our version strips away the extra fluff to give you the most direct path to the gameplay. It’s the same challenge you know from those big portals, just refined for a more dedicated, lightweight experience.
Starting a new run is as simple as it gets. You don't need a manual; you just need a mouse button or a spacebar. The game handles the forward momentum, leaving you completely responsible for the vertical timing. It sounds easy until you're staring down a series of triple spikes at double speed. That’s when the real challenge of the game begins.
The community around these IO-style games is what keeps them alive. From custom levels to speedrun records, the ecosystem is constantly evolving. We keep an eye on the latest mirrors and updates to ensure you’re playing the most stable build available. It’s not just a game; it’s part of a much larger community of players who live for that one perfect, flawless run.
If you like Dashmetry, you may also want to play Geometry Dash unblocked, Geometry Dash Lite, Geometry Dash Meltdown, Geometry Dash Subzero, Geometry Dash World, and Geometry Dash Breeze. These related games keep the same rhythm-platformer style while giving search engines and players clear internal paths to the closest Dashmetry alternatives.
Since this is hosted on GitHub Pages, it usually slips through most standard school and workplace filters that block traditional gaming sites.
Absolutely. The game works great in mobile browsers with touch controls, though many players find a physical keyboard better for those tight jumps.
Most browser versions of Dashmetry save your progress locally in your browser's cache, as long as you don't clear your history.