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    As answered below, you input triplets even though your example doesn't have any. The beams connecting 3 8th notes hints at a 6/8 time signature, but maybe its just that one measure and 3/4 is fine otherwise. In 6/8 Musescore would default to those 3-note-beams, but you can also adjust that behavior: handbook.musescore.org/notation/rhythm-meter-and-measures/beams Commented yesterday
  • 1
    The tempo is fairly fast. Are you sure that you want 330 of the eighth notes every minute? If so, depending on why you want that, you might consider notating it in 6/8 with the notes you've shown here as 16th notes (which would cover only half of a 6/8 measure) and then set the tempo at dotted quarter = 120 (which is a bit slower, corresponding to 160 as notated here; to match 165 it should be 123.75 but even 124 is an odd metronome marking, as is 165 -- traditionally you have 120, 126, ... 160, 168). Commented yesterday
  • Call me suspicious, but what instrument are the notes meant for? These are the exact tones you'd play when arpeggiating the Em chord on a guitar. But surely nobody would write a guitar score as double staff, or would they? Commented 18 hours ago
  • @Divizna youtu.be/XXNwIeN7zDU?si=bw9YV9pEsvf_VqfY Check out the video description. It's a metal song, rearranged and played on piano. Commented 18 hours ago