A 60-second speed drawing game
Want a speed drawing game that actually keeps score? DrawDuel hands you and one opponent the same prompt and a 60-second clock. No erasing your way to perfect, no take-backs once the timer is up — you draw fast, commit, and an AI judge decides whose rushed masterpiece won. It is the timed drawing challenge built to be replayed.
Start a duel — it’s freeHow the 60-second duel works
Sixty seconds on the clock
The whole duel is one minute. The timer starts the moment the prompt drops and it never pauses, so every stroke is a decision: nail the shape now or run out of time second-guessing it.
You and a rival draw at once
There is no turn-taking. Both players get the identical prompt and race the same countdown, so it is a true head-to-head sprint instead of waiting around for someone else to finish their go.
Judged the instant time is up
When the clock hits zero an AI judge scores both drawings on prompt match, recognizability, effort, and creativity, then names a winner. No waiting for votes — you see the verdict in seconds and reach for rematch.
One minute. One winner.
Hit Play, get matched, and the clock starts. Same prompt for both of you, 60 seconds to draw it, and the AI judge settles it the instant time runs out.
Play a duelCommon questions
What is a speed drawing game?
It is a drawing game played against a tight timer rather than a blank-canvas free-for-all. On DrawDuel the limit is 60 seconds: you and an opponent draw the same prompt at once, and the rush of committing fast is the whole point.
How long do I get to draw?
Sixty seconds per duel. The clock starts when the prompt appears and never pauses, so a full duel is over in about a minute including the verdict — quick enough to squeeze one in between everything else.
Is the speed drawing game free to play?
Yes. DrawDuel runs in any browser with no download and no account needed to start. Make an account only when you want to keep your rank between sessions.
Does drawing fast mean drawing badly?
Often, and that is the fun. The judge scores how recognizable your drawing is, not how polished — so a quick, clear scribble usually beats a half-finished masterpiece. Speed rewards bold, simple choices.