A strong run in Aim Test starts with a plain plan: Hit as many targets as you can in 30 seconds. Every click counts, so stay sharp and stay accurate. First checkpoint: Hit as many targets as you can in 30 seconds. Follow-up checkpoint: Click or tap the glowing target as fast as possible. Small reads like that make later scores easier to explain.
Control cue: Missed clicks reduce your accuracy. Use the smallest movement that still changes the result, then leave room for a second correction.
Scoring cue: Each successful hit records your hit time in milliseconds. If the number rises but the mistake repeats, the habit has not changed yet.
Practice rule: Keep your combo alive to build momentum. A planned attempt should have one target, one fallback, and one review point.
Mobile cue: Use small cursor movements instead of chasing too far ahead. Use gestures short enough to repeat under pressure, then clear your view. Next-run checkpoint: Accuracy matters almost as much as total hits. If the session stalls, return to Hit as many targets as you can in 30 seconds and then check Click or tap the glowing target as fast as possible. This gives the next run a measurable checkpoint instead of another random restart. Aim Test review note: hit as many targets as you can in 30 seconds should lead into click or tap the glowing target as fast as possible. On the next attempt, judge missed clicks reduce your accuracy against the previous mistake before changing anything else. For Aim Test, use a compact checklist before the next attempt: first cue is hit as many targets as you can in 30 seconds, second cue is click or tap the glowing target as fast as possible, control cue is missed clicks reduce your accuracy, and score cue is each successful hit records your hit time in milliseconds. Aim Test note stays tied to each successful hit records your hit time in milliseconds, then adjust the earliest visible cue and leave the rest unchanged for one run.
Keep your combo alive to build momentum.
Use small cursor movements instead of chasing too far ahead.
Aim Test: Each successful hit records your hit time in milliseconds
Hit as many targets as you can in 30 seconds. Every click counts, so stay sharp and stay accurate.