Play Hangman with songs from the United States iTunes Top 100

Play Hangman with song titles from the US iTunes Top 100 feed. This edition is built around one of the most globally recognizable music markets, so rounds can move from mainstream pop and hip-hop to country, R&B, rock, Latin, dance and crossover hits.

Each round uses a song title from the configured United States chart feed. When that feed changes, the available puzzle titles can change too; Play Hangman does not create or rank the chart itself.

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US music Hangman with the iTunes Top 100

This US edition uses the configured iTunes Top 100 feed for the United States as the source for song-title puzzles. The result is a broad music-market mix where American pop, hip-hop, country, R&B, rock, Latin, dance and global hits can all shape the game.

How the US iTunes chart feed works

This page uses the configured iTunes/Apple chart feed for the United States. Play Hangman does not compile the chart itself; the game uses song titles from the feed as puzzle material.

Song titles are not manually translated on this page. The title in the game comes from the US iTunes chart feed in the form supplied by that source.

Why local music charts change the game

What makes the US edition different is its scale and genre range. Pop, hip-hop, country, R&B, rock, Latin, dance and global hits can sit close together, so one round may be a short pop hook while another may include a featured artist, remix label or genre crossover.

The US edition often feels internationally recognizable because many global hits pass through the American music market. The actual puzzles still depend on the current configured feed, not on a fixed playlist.

If you want to compare editions, the language overview links to other versions of the same music hangman experience.

Why play hangman in English

As a practical starting strategy, E, A, O, T, N, R, S and L are often useful letters for English-language song titles. Short one-word titles, repeated words, featured-artist phrasing and remix or radio-edit patterns can also give you clues.

No lyrics, audio files or downloads

This game uses song-title metadata from the configured US iTunes chart feed. It does not use lyrics, does not play or host audio, and does not provide music downloads.

Apple, iTunes and Apple Music trademarks belong to their owners. Play-Hangman.com is not affiliated with Apple and is not endorsed by Apple.

Artists and song styles you may recognize

For US music-market context, think of artists and styles associated with names such as Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Drake, Morgan Wallen, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar, Olivia Rodrigo, SZA, Bad Bunny, Post Malone and Ariana Grande.

These are examples of music-market context, not a fixed playlist and not a guarantee that they appear in the current game. Each playable title depends on the configured feed.

Best letters to try first

For English-language titles in the US edition, E, A, O, T, N, R, S and L are practical early guesses. They often help with short pop titles, common words, featured-artist phrasing and radio-friendly title patterns.

US chart titles can also include Spanish words, artist names, abbreviations, remix labels and parenthetical versions, so treat these letters as a strong opening strategy rather than a rule for every round.

Why US song titles are fun for Hangman

American chart titles often include short pop hooks, one-word titles, collaborations, featured artists, remixes, radio edits and genre-crossovers. That gives the game a different rhythm from editions that lean more heavily on one local language or one dominant genre.

A round can be quick if the title is compact, but longer titles with parenthetical versions or collaboration wording can make the puzzle trickier.

Local music vs international hits

The United States chart feed can feel both local and global at the same time. American country, hip-hop, pop and R&B can appear alongside Latin hits, dance tracks, rock moments and international releases.

The exact title pool depends on the live configured feed and any cache used for reliability. Examples on this page are context only, not claims about current chart positions.

Transparency for this edition

Play Hangman does not use lyrics or audio on this page. The game is based on guessing song titles from the configured US feed.

This is not an official Apple or iTunes service. Apple, iTunes and Apple Music trademarks belong to their owners; artist and genre examples here are context, not a guaranteed playlist.

US chart personality

The US edition is one of the broadest chart games on the site. Pop, hip-hop, country, R&B, rock, Latin, dance and global releases can all shape the title pool when they appear in the configured feed.

That variety makes the United States page feel fast-moving: one round may be a one-word pop title, while another may include a featured artist, remix note, radio edit or cross-genre collaboration.

How to approach US title puzzles

For English-heavy titles, E, A, O, T, N, R, S and L are practical early guesses. If the title hints at Latin, country or hip-hop context, expect artist names, short hooks and collaboration wording to matter.

Examples of artists or genres on this page are music-market context, not a fixed playlist. Play Hangman uses the configured chart feed and never uses lyrics or audio.

What you see after the game

After a round, the game may show the full song title, artist name, chart rank when available, and an external Apple, iTunes or Apple Music link from the chart data.

Song titles are not manually translated on this page. The title in the game comes from the US iTunes chart feed in the form supplied by that source.

Quick questions

Why do many global hits appear in the US edition?

The United States is a large international music market, so global pop, hip-hop, Latin, dance and crossover releases can all appear in the configured US chart feed.

Can country, hip-hop, pop and Latin songs all appear in this game?

Yes. If titles from those styles appear in the configured US iTunes chart feed and are suitable for the letter-based game, they can be used as puzzle material.

Is this based on radio airplay or the configured iTunes chart feed?

This page uses the configured iTunes/Apple chart feed for the United States. It is not a radio-airplay chart, and Play Hangman does not calculate the ranking itself.

Does the game use lyrics or audio?

No. The game uses song-title metadata only. It does not display lyrics, play audio, host tracks or provide music downloads.

Are the example artists a current playlist?

No. Artist names and genres mentioned on this page are music-market context only. The current playable titles come from the configured feed.

Why are some US song titles short while others are long?

US chart titles can range from one-word pop titles to longer collaboration, remix or radio-edit names. That variety is part of what changes the guessing strategy from round to round.

Are song titles translated on this page?

No. Titles appear in the form supplied by the configured US chart feed.

Can I play the US edition on mobile?

Yes. The US iTunes chart Hangman game runs in the browser and can be played on mobile, tablet or desktop.

Related editions to try next

These existing country pages connect naturally with the US chart because of language, neighboring markets or shared pop-culture influence.

Popular Music Hangman editions

Try these chart editions next if you want another recognizable music market with a different mix of artists, languages and title styles.

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