CPS Test
Measure click speed online over 5 seconds with live CPS and saved results.
Measure click speed online over 30 seconds with live CPS and saved results.
Measure click speed online over 30 seconds with live CPS and saved results.
The 30-second click page is where early burst stops being the whole story but the round is not yet a deep endurance grind. It is useful for spotting mid-run pace decay, recovery quality and whether your technique stays efficient once the first excitement disappears.
Use it as the bridge between short competitive click sprints and true endurance pages.
Yes. Recent runs can stay in local browser history so you can compare pace, burst and consistency over repeated attempts.
Short click modes reward opening burst more heavily, while longer timers show whether your rhythm and control actually hold up.
Use it as rough context only. Your own repeatable range is usually more useful than chasing one extreme outlier.
Measure click speed online over 5 seconds with live CPS and saved results.
Measure click speed online over 1 second with live CPS and saved results.
Measure click speed online over 2 seconds with live CPS and saved results.
The most useful comparison is usually not against a random peak score, but against a neighboring timer or related input family on the same setup.
A grounded introduction to CPS testing, timer families, repeatability and the difference between a useful benchmark and a random peak.
Why a fast opening burst is not the same thing as a stable pace, and how neighboring modes reveal the difference.
A practical reminder that sustainable practice beats forceful bursts when you want useful progress.
A more practical beginner guide to aim practice, target control, sensible routines and what browser aim drills can and cannot teach you.