Memorize Notes On Guitar Fretboard
Use this tool for 5 minutes daily and you will memorize the fretboard.
You'll have 60 seconds to identify as many notes as possible.
- Each correct answer earns 1 point
- Difficulty increases after 5 correct answers
- See if you can reach the top of the leaderboard!
Quiz Complete!
Save Your Score to the Leaderboard
Show notes in order
| A | A# | B | C | C# | D | D# | E | F | F# | G | G# |
Fretboard Masters Leaderboard
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Master Notes on the Guitar Fretboard with GND’s Fretboard Memorizer
Struggling to remember notes on your guitar fretboard?
Let’s cut the crap—most players suck at remembering notes (that’s me), and it’s holding you back big time. Enter the Guitar Fretboard Memorizer: your no-BS ticket to owning the fretboard, flexing your skills, and schooling other guitarists in a showdown of epic proportions. Beginner stuck strumming open chords? Intermediate wannabe tripping over your own fingers? This tool slaps you with instant feedback to level up fast—whether you’re dodging easy open strings or the 12th fret crutch when the game gets real.
Next time you’re bored, don’t waste your life scrolling X to see a goat in a Lamborghini. Grab your axe, play a few rounds, and strut your high score like the legend you’re meant to be. Patterns are for posers—real players know their instrument. Memorize the fretboard, dominate your guitar, and laugh at the suckers still guessing where G# lives. Use this for 5 minutes daily and the fretboard will start to open.
Ready to play the best guitar fretboard memorization game and finally memorize notes on the fretboard?
Connecting Fretboard Memorizer to Your Real Guitar Practice
To transform your digital learning into practical guitar skills, try these methods to bridge the gap between the Fretboard Memorizer and your actual guitar practice:
Immediate Application Techniques
- Mirror Practice Sessions: After each Fretboard Memorizer session, grab your guitar and physically find some of the notes you just practiced. This creates a direct connection between digital learning and muscle memory.
- Scale Construction: Use some of the notes you’ve memorized to build scales. Start with the C major scale (C-D-E-F-G-A-B) and find these notes across the entire fretboard.
Practical Musical Applications
- Single-String Melodies: Create simple melodies using only one string, naming each note as you play it. This reinforces note recognition in a musical context.
- Chord Construction: As you learn notes, practice building chords from those notes. For example, once you know where all the C, E, and G notes are, you can form C major chords in multiple positions.
- Transcription Practice: Try to figure out simple melodies by ear, using your fretboard knowledge to find the notes more quickly.
GND’s Fretboard Memorizer – Future Updates
This is the first version of the tool, here’s some future updates:
Cosmetic
More realistic-looking fretboard and potentially more frets.
Progress Tracking
Track your last 20-round progress.
More Modes
1. String Focus Mode
- Description: Practice identifying notes on just one string at a time.
- How it works: Users pick a string (e.g., low E, A, D), and the quiz only asks for notes on that string.
2. Fret Range Mode
- Description: Focus on specific fretboard sections based on difficulty.
- How it works: Isolate parts of the fretboard to master.
3. Note Hunter Mode
- Description: Find all instances of a specific note across the fretboard.
- How it works: The tool asks users to locate every position of a note (e.g., “Find all E notes”) until all are identified.
4. Scale Mastery Mode
- Description: Identify notes within a specific scale.
- How it works: The tool picks a scale (e.g., C major, A minor pentatonic) and quizzes users only on those notes.
5. Chord Note Identifier Mode
- Description: Locate the notes that form a given chord.
- How it works: The tool shows a chord (e.g., “C major,” “G7”), and users click the positions of each note on the fretboard.
6. Reverse Quiz Mode
- Description: Name the note at a highlighted fretboard position.
- How it works: The tool marks a spot (e.g., 3rd fret, G string), and users pick or type the correct note.
7. Interval Challenge Mode
- Description: Find notes based on intervals from a starting point.
- How it works: The tool gives a note and an interval (e.g., “Find a perfect fifth above D on the A string”), and users locate it.


Super hard to break 36 points. I find this is faster to play on mobile.