CPS & Clicking Tests

60 Second Click Test

Measure click speed online over 60 seconds with live CPS and saved results.

Interactive block

60s mode

Timer60
Score0
PrimaryScore
StatusReady
60 Second Click Test Press start or interact directly with the active zone.

Recent local history

Top saved runs

No saved scores yet.

About this test

Measure click speed online over 60 seconds with live CPS and saved results.

The 60-second click page shifts the question from burst speed to sustained pacing. It is long enough that small rhythm mistakes, tension and uneven recovery start to matter much more than on 15-second or 30-second pages.

Use it when you want a repeatable endurance benchmark that is still short enough to run in sets without turning the session into pure fatigue management.

Who this test is for

  • Users comparing sustained click rhythm once the first half-minute is gone.
  • Players who want an endurance benchmark they can still repeat several times in one session.
  • Anyone testing whether grip, mouse feel and posture stay stable under longer strain.

Common mistakes

  • Going out at 10-second pace and having no clean rhythm left by the middle of the round.
  • Ignoring how micro-pauses and recovery affect the total over a full minute.
  • Reading one high first-half pace as if it represented the whole run.

How to read the score

  • At 60 seconds, pacing is the skill. The opening spike matters less than how much of it survives the full minute.
  • A stable mid-round rhythm often tells you more than a dramatic start.
  • Compare your 30-second and 60-second numbers to see whether endurance breaks down gradually or all at once.

FAQ

Does this page keep my click results?

Yes. Recent runs can stay in local browser history so you can compare pace, burst and consistency over repeated attempts.

Why do the totals change so much across timers?

Short click modes reward opening burst more heavily, while longer timers show whether your rhythm and control actually hold up.

Should I read the leaderboard as a target?

Use it as rough context only. Your own repeatable range is usually more useful than chasing one extreme outlier.

What this mode actually tests

  • Opening click pace, repeatable rhythm and how quickly control breaks down under this specific format.
  • Longer-term endurance, rhythm maintenance and hand comfort under sustained clicking.

When to use this mode

  • Use this timer when you want to compare clicking under conditions that match its duration rather than treating all CPS pages as interchangeable.
  • Repeat several runs with the same mouse, grip and timer before drawing conclusions.

How to compare it with nearby modes

  • 60s makes pacing the central skill. Compared with 30s, early mistakes cost more. Compared with 100s, it is still short enough to repeat in small training sets.

Recommended next steps

  • Compare this page with the neighboring timer before deciding whether you improved burst speed, control or endurance.
  • Use the CPS basics and burst-vs-consistency guides to understand what a score jump on this timer really means.

Methodology notes

  • Browser-based scores depend on device input, focus state, browser timing and system load.
  • Comparisons are strongest when you repeat the same setup, posture and timer family.
  • Public saved results are filtered for suspicious or duplicate values, but your own local history is still the best place to judge repeatability.

Read the full methodology and score-filtering notes

Related tests

CPS & Clicking Tests

CPS Test

Measure click speed online over 5 seconds with live CPS and saved results.

Why nearby pages matter

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.

Open the guides for longer explanations

Popular guides