kanye west songs

The 10 Hardest Kanye West Songs to Guess on Yeezle

Since its launch, Yeezle has become the ultimate daily ritual for Kanye West fans. Combining the viral mechanics of Wordle with the deep-dive stats of sports guessing games like Poeltl, it challenges players to identify a mystery Ye song within eight guesses.

yeezlesong games

Since its launch, Yeezle has become the ultimate daily ritual for Kanye West fans. Combining the viral mechanics of Wordle with the deep-dive stats of sports guessing games like Poeltl, it challenges players to identify a mystery Ye song within eight guesses.

With a database spanning all 16 studio albums—from the soul-chopping nostalgia of The College Dropout (2004) to the raw, minimalist atmosphere of Bully (2025)—and over 237 playable tracks, maintaining a 100% win streak is brutally difficult.

While guessing megahits like "Stronger" or "Gold Digger" takes just a couple of tries, certain tracks act as complete streak-killers. Whether it is due to confusing track lengths, obscure guest features, or sudden shifts in sonic eras, here are the 10 hardest Kanye West songs to guess on Yeezle.

  1. "Skit #4" (Late Registration) Why it’s a nightmare: The ultimate trick question. Technically, Yeezle filters out most standard, non-musical filler, but certain narrative pieces and heavily discussed interlude-style tracks occasionally blur the lines or trip up players trying to remember exact track numbers. If you guess a song from Late Registration and your proximity indicators tell you that you are close on the album but way off on song length, "Skit #4" (or its neighboring skits) will ruin your metrics. Clocking in at under a minute and featuring zero formal instrumentation, it throws off your track-length deduction completely.

  2. "Low Lights" (The Life of Pablo) Why it’s a nightmare: The "ghost" track structure. When players think of The Life of Pablo, they immediately look for clues pointing toward massive anthems like "Ultralight Beam" or "Father Stretch My Hands, Pt. 1." "Low Lights" serves as a two-minute spoken-word testimony by Sandy Rivera. Because Kanye West does not actually perform a verse on the track, players frequently waste guesses looking for songs with specific Ye vocal styles or known hip-hop features, completely overlooking this transitional piece.

  3. "Send It Up" (Yeezus) Why it’s a nightmare: Overshadowed by experimental giants. Yeezus is a relatively short, cohesive 10-track album, which theoretically makes it easier to narrow down. However, while everyone remembers the aggressive industrial noise of "On Sight," "Black Skinhead," or "Blood on the Leaves," "Send It Up" sits quietly at track number 9. It features King L and a distinct dancehall-infused industrial beat. Players often burn through their proximity guesses switching between Yeezus and The Life of Pablo because the electronic textures feel similar, completely missing this penultimate track.

  4. "Guilt Trip" (Yeezus) Why it’s a nightmare: Uncredited, obscured features. One of the core mechanics of Yeezle is using the "Featured Artist" column to narrow down your choices. If you see Kid Cudi turn yellow or green as a feature, your mind immediately goes to 808s & Heartbreak, Kids See Ghosts, or massive hits like "Father Stretch My Hands." However, Kid Cudi famously provided uncredited, heavily processed vocals to the outro of "Guilt Trip." Because his feature on this track is more of a vocal texture than a traditional verse, it completely misleads players looking for standard collaborations.

  5. "Remote Control" (Donda) Why it’s a nightmare: Tracklist bloat and multiple versions. Donda is a massive hurdle for Yeezle players simply due to its scale. Boasting 27 tracks on the standard release (and even more on the Deluxe edition), guessing the exact track number is a statistical uphill battle. "Remote Control" is particularly tricky because it features Young Thug and the infamous "Globglogabgalab" sample at the end. The song's length and track position vary wildly in players' minds compared to the more dominant Donda cuts like "Hurricane" or "Jail."

  6. "I Am a God" (Yeezus) Why it’s a nightmare: The "God" feature metric. Yeezle relies heavily on data extraction. "I Am a God" features a very specific, sarcastic credit: "Featuring God." Depending on how the game's metadata interprets non-human or conceptual guest features, relying on your standard guest-artist logic will leave you stranded. Furthermore, its harsh electronic screams and fast-paced structure make its track length difficult to guess accurately if you haven't memorized the Yeezus layout.

  7. "Franks Track" (The Life of Pablo) Why it’s a nightmare: It’s under 40 seconds long. "Franks Track" is essentially an extension of "Wolves," featuring a beautiful, standalone vocal performance by Frank Ocean. On Yeezle, its minuscule track length is its greatest weapon. When your clue indicates a song length of less than a minute, most players panic and start guessing random interludes or intro tracks from older albums, forgetting that this tiny standalone piece exists right in the middle of The Life of Pablo.

  8. "Closed on Sunday" (Jesus is King) Why it’s a nightmare: The shift in era and sonics. Jesus is King is often neglected by casual fans, meaning its tracklist isn't as deeply ingrained in the collective memory. "Closed on Sunday" is infamous for its "Chick-fil-A" lyrics, but from a mechanical gameplay perspective, it is tough to pin down. It features an acoustic guitar-driven intro that transitions into a trap beat, making its sonic footprint confusing if you are trying to guess based on standard mid-era Kanye production styles.

  9. "Fade" (The Life of Pablo) Why it’s a nightmare: Deep house samples and triple features. "Fade" closes out the original tracklist of The Life of Pablo and relies on heavy deep-house sampling (notably Mr. Fingers' "Can You Feel It"). It features Post Malone and Ty Dolla $ign. Because it sounds radically different from the gospel-heavy rap that defines the rest of the album, players looking at the sonic clues often guess tracks from the Graduation or 808s eras, getting thrown completely off course by the modern feature set.

  10. "Drunk and Hot Girls" (Graduation) Why it’s a nightmare: The track everyone actively skips. To win at Yeezle, you have to remember the songs you usually avoid. "Drunk and Hot Girls" (featuring Mos Def) is widely considered one of the weakest tracks on the critically acclaimed Graduation. Because fans rarely replay it voluntarily, its exact track number (track 8) and its 5-minute-plus runtime catch players completely off guard. You might correctly guess the Graduation era based on the bright synth clues, but you'll likely exhaust your remaining guesses on "Flashing Lights" or "Barry Bonds" before remembering this dark horse.

How to Beat the Hardest Yeezle Puzzles To prevent these ten tracks from breaking your daily streak, keep these three tactical rules in mind:

Use an Era-Splitting Opener: Don't just guess your favorite song first. Start with a track right in the middle of his discography—like something from My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy (2010)—to instantly tell you if the mystery song belongs to Old Ye (2004–2008) or Modern Ye (2016–2026).

Watch the Length Gradients: If your song length arrow points sharply down after guessing a standard 4-minute track, stop guessing main album singles and immediately pivot to interludes, skits, or short experimental pieces like those on Ye or Yeezus.

Study the Collaborative Links: Pay close attention to the featured artists. A yellow box means the artist is featured on the album, just not on that specific song. Use that to instantly map out which album era you are trapped in.

Think you know every Kanye lyric?

Play Yeezle Today
v1.0
yeezle.xyz
support ❤