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CPS Test

How fast can you click?

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How fast can you click?

The CPS test is a simple measure of clicking speed, popular with gamers who need rapid clicks for combat or building. Pick a duration, then click as fast as you can — the timer starts on your first click and your score updates live.

Shorter bursts produce higher scores because you can't keep up peak speed for long. Try the 1-second mode for a raw burst, or 10 seconds to test stamina. Your best score for each mode is saved on this device.

About the CPS Test

The CPS test is a quick way to find out how fast you can click your mouse, measured in clicks per second. You start a short timed round, click as quickly as you can inside the test area, and the tool divides your total clicks by the seconds that passed to produce a single CPS number. It is a simple idea, but it gives you a clear, repeatable way to track your clicking speed and watch it improve over time.

CPS stands for clicks per second. The timer here starts on your very first click rather than on a fixed countdown, so there is no wasted reaction time and every round measures pure speed. As you click, your live score updates on screen, and when the round ends your best result for that mode is saved in your browser so you can try to beat it later.

Choosing a duration: 1 second, 5 seconds, or 10 seconds

Picking the right duration matters. A cps test 1 second round rewards a short, explosive burst, and most people post their highest numbers there because you do not have to keep the pace going. The 5-second mode is the common middle ground and a fair benchmark for everyday comparisons. The 10-second mode is a stamina test: holding a high rate for that long is genuinely hard, so scores drop. There is also a 100-click race that times how long it takes you to reach 100 clicks, which flips the challenge around. Trying each one shows you where your strengths are.

Clicking techniques that raise your score

Casual clickers usually sit around 6 to 8 CPS. Cross 10 and you are fast; dedicated players using practiced techniques can push past 14. Three methods come up again and again. Jitter clicking tenses your arm to create a rapid vibration that fires many clicks quickly. Butterfly clicking alternates two fingers on one button so the rate roughly doubles. Drag clicking smears a finger across the button so friction registers a burst of inputs. Each takes practice, and your mouse switches play a part too.

Spacebar, right-click, and keyboard variants

Clicking speed is not only about the left mouse button. A spacebar cps test or keyboard cps test counts key presses instead, which is useful if your game binds key actions to a fast spam. The same scoring logic applies on this page when you tap the test area, so you can practice rhythm regardless of input. A right click cps test focuses on the secondary button, handy for actions mapped there, while a cps test clicker mindset simply means treating the round like a focused drill. If you have ever searched for a cps test unblocked because a school or work network blocked one, the good news is this tool runs entirely in your browser with nothing to install.

Why do so many gamers care about CPS? In titles like Minecraft PvP, faster clicking can mean more hits landed in a combo or quicker block placement, and in many competitive games rapid inputs translate directly into an edge. Even outside gaming, people enjoy the simple challenge of beating their own record. Use the cps test spacebar option to warm up, switch between durations to find your peak, and check back to see your saved best climb as your fingers learn the motion.

Frequently asked questions

What is a CPS test?

A CPS test measures your clicks per second — how fast you can click a mouse over a set period. The tool counts every click during a timed round and divides the total by the seconds elapsed to give your score. Pick a duration above and click as fast as you can to see yours.

What does CPS mean?

CPS stands for clicks per second. It is worked out by dividing your total clicks by the time in seconds, so 50 clicks in 5 seconds equals 10 CPS. It is the standard way gamers and clickers measure raw mouse speed, and you can check yours right here in a few seconds.

What is the average CPS?

The average person clicks around 6 to 7 clicks per second with normal single-finger clicking. Shorter rounds like the 1-second mode push that number higher because you can manage a quick burst, while a 10-second round lowers it since peak speed is hard to sustain. Run the test here to see where you land.

What is a good CPS score?

Anything above 7 CPS is generally considered good, and most people score between 6 and 9 on a 5-second test. Cross 10 and you are fast, while skilled players using practiced techniques can sustain 12 to 14 or more. The 5-second mode is the fairest benchmark for comparing your result.

What is the highest CPS / world record?

The record for the most clicks in a 10-second test is held by Dylan Allred, who reached 1,051 clicks — about 105 CPS. That is far beyond what most people manage, but it shows what is possible with dedicated practice. See how your own clicks per second measure up using the test on this page.

What is jitter clicking?

Jitter clicking is a technique where you tense your forearm and wrist to make your finger vibrate rapidly on the mouse button. With practice it can reach roughly 10 to 14 CPS, well above normal clicking. Try it in the 5-second mode above and watch your live score jump.

What is butterfly clicking?

Butterfly clicking means alternating two fingers on the same mouse button so each press registers separately, roughly doubling your rate. Skilled players hit around 15 to 25 CPS this way. It takes some coordination, so use the test here to practice the rhythm and track your progress.

What is drag clicking?

Drag clicking uses friction between your finger and the mouse button to register many micro-clicks in a single drag, which can produce 20 to 30 CPS or higher. It depends heavily on the mouse coating and a few mice are far better at it than others. You can see the difference instantly with the timed test above.

Is jitter or butterfly clicking bad for your mouse or hand?

Done in moderation it is usually fine, but overuse carries risks. Jitter clicking can strain your hand and wrist and, over long sessions, contribute to fatigue or joint pain, so rest between rounds. Butterfly and especially drag clicking wear out mouse switches faster, so keep practice sessions short and stop if anything aches.

How can I click faster and increase my CPS?

Rest your forearm on the desk for stability, relax between rounds so your hand does not tire, and warm up with a minute of slow clicks before going for a record. A gaming mouse with light switches helps, and learning jitter or butterfly clicking can add several CPS over time. Use this test regularly to track your best score and watch it climb.