click speed test
Click Speed Test
Pick a timer mode, click as fast as possible, and see whether you can beat the average 6.5 CPS pace without losing control.
This page combines a playable benchmark, result feedback, and supporting content around click speed test so users can test the skill immediately, understand what the score means, and continue into the most relevant related challenge.
Solo benchmark + friend challenge
One clear skill test per page
Finish, score, then send the duel link
Click Speed Test
Finish the run to view your score, replay instantly, or send a challenge link to a friend.
Win Rule
Higher score wins
Challenge
Solo run
Run Archive
Attempt history
Your local history will appear here after the first completed run.
CPS distribution
Average benchmark: 6.5 CPS
Finish a run to place your marker on the distribution curve.
Briefing
Why Click Speed Test matters
This CPS test focuses on one job: count how many clean clicks you can produce inside a fixed time window and turn that into an honest clicks-per-second score.
Click Speed Test is designed as a focused browser challenge around the core keyword "click speed test", so players can understand the rule set quickly, start the game immediately, and still read supporting guidance without leaving the page. That balance matters because benchmark pages work best when the test and the explanation reinforce the same user intent instead of competing for attention.
Advantage
Benefits
Five timer modes let you compare explosive clicking against longer endurance sessions, so the page serves both casual testing and repeated practice.
For search users, the main value of Click Speed Test is clarity: one game, one score model, one clean URL, and one obvious next action. For returning players, the value is repeatability. You can replay the same mechanic, compare local history, and use the challenge link to turn a personal benchmark into a competitive loop with friends.
Play Loop
How to use it
Choose a timer, hit the big target area, and keep clicking until the countdown reaches zero. The final result is total clicks divided by seconds.
The best way to use Click Speed Test is to complete one clean run first, review the score tier, then repeat the test after a short break to compare consistency. That pattern gives users both an immediate result and a practical sense of whether the score was stable, lucky, or affected by hesitation, fatigue, or device control.
Loadout
Features
The game runs on requestAnimationFrame timing, supports touch input, blocks the context menu, and stores your best results in local history.
Each launch page keeps the same structure: a clear hero section, a visible game area, a result flow, a distribution reference, descriptive FAQ content, and related internal links that point to the most relevant live tests. That structure makes the page easier to scan for users and easier to understand for search engines.
Player Questions
What is a good CPS score?
Around 6.5 CPS is a solid average. Reaching 8 CPS is strong, and anything above 10 CPS is already elite for most players.
Why does my CPS drop over time?
Longer timer modes reveal fatigue and rhythm loss, so your 30 or 60 second average will usually sit lower than a short burst mode.
Should I use jitter or butterfly clicking?
You can experiment with different techniques, but a stable click rhythm is usually more useful than chasing one short peak number.
Related tests
Jump into another live benchmark without breaking the same skill cluster.
Exit Gate
What to do next
After CPS, try Reaction Time Test for pure reflex measurement or Aim Trainer if you want a speed test that rewards precision instead of spam clicking.
After finishing Click Speed Test, the strongest next step is to move into a related benchmark that stresses a neighboring skill. That keeps the internal linking relevant, improves session depth, and gives players a natural path from one test to another without flooding the page with unrelated destinations.