As someone who picked the wrong first Demon — spent three weeks grinding it in practice mode, convinced persistence equaled readiness — I wasted real time and nearly burned out before I was ready. Today I’ll share everything I learned about how to actually approach this decision.
Probably should have asked for advice before jumping in, honestly.
Skill Assessment First
Before attempting Demons, you should be consistently beating content at this level without major struggle:
- Insane-rated levels with reasonable attempt counts — not grinding for hours on each one
- Electrodynamix and Clubstep, which sit at the top of the Insane tier and introduce mechanics that show up in Easy Demons
- Hexagon Force dual sections without practice mode — this is the clearest signal that your multi-input timing is actually ready for Demon content
If any of those are still difficult, spend more time there before moving forward. There is no prize for reaching Demons faster.
Recommended Progression
First Demons — Easy tier, lower end: The Nightmare, The Lightning Road, and Platinum Adventure are the community’s consensus starting points. They’re genuinely manageable for players who’ve cleared Insane content, and they teach timing patterns that appear across all Demon content.
After 5 to 10 Easy Demons: Move to the easier end of Medium Demons. Deadlocked is a good benchmark since most players know it from the main game. Decode and B are strong community Medium Demons with fair difficulty curves.
Comfortable with Medium Demons: Hard Demons are the first tier where raw skill starts mattering more than persistence. Nine Circles is the classic entry point — the mechanics are simple and it’s well-documented. Fairydust is another strong choice for players whose wave mode is solid.

When to Move Up
Move to the next tier when the current difficulty feels routine — not when you can complete a few Demons, but when they feel like the normal game rather than a serious challenge. If you’re grinding hundreds of attempts on every Demon you try, the tier is probably too high right now.
Attempt counts are a reasonable signal. Easy Demons should eventually take under 200 attempts. If you’re consistently hitting 500 or more per Easy Demon completion, spend more time on Insane content before progressing.
Matching Demons to Your Strengths
Demon difficulty ratings are averages across the player population. A level rated Easy Demon might play like a Medium Demon for you specifically if it focuses heavily on modes you’re weak in. Before committing to a level, look up what game modes it features and honestly assess whether those are strengths or weaknesses.
If ship is your weakest mode, avoid ship-heavy Easy Demons for your first few completions. Find cube-heavy or ball-heavy ones instead. Build completions and confidence before tackling your weak modes in Demon content.
The Mental Side of Demon Attempts
Managing attempt counts and emotional investment matters more than most guides acknowledge. Set a rough attempt budget before starting a level. If you hit 300 attempts without consistent practice runs reaching 50 percent or higher, the level is probably too hard right now. That’s not failure — it’s information. Come back to it after beating others. Your skill level changes faster than you think.
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