Click Speed Test measures mouse-click CPS in a short, focused browser round. The goal is not only to reach a high number, but to understand how your rhythm changes from the first click to the final seconds. Keep the cursor centered, relax the wrist, and watch whether speed drops because of tension, uneven pressure, or a rushed opening burst.
Use the mouse button or trackpad as the primary input and keep the pointer fixed over the center pad. The test rewards repeated clicks from the same hand position, so avoid dragging, double-loading the wrist, or chasing the cursor. A useful attempt has a steady first second, a controlled middle, and a clean finish.
The score is useful when you compare more than one run. Note total clicks, CPS, and the moment where the hand started to tighten. A strong result usually has fewer dead pauses, not only a faster first second. If two attempts end with similar totals, prefer the one with smoother rhythm because it is easier to repeat.
Practice in short sets instead of grinding one exhausted attempt after another. Run three attempts with the same grip, rest briefly, then change only one factor: wrist height, finger angle, or opening pace. Do not chase a single lucky score; build a repeatable clicking rhythm that stays usable when the timer reaches its final seconds.
On phones, treat this page as a secondary way to compare clicking habits rather than a pure thumb benchmark. Keep the active pad visible, tap with one fingertip, and avoid sliding across the screen. If the score feels low, check whether the browser zoomed, the hand covered the counter, or the touch point drifted away from center.
Practice in short sets instead of grinding one exhausted attempt after another.
On phones, treat this page as a secondary way to compare clicking habits rather than a pure thumb benchmark.
Click Speed Test: The score is useful when you compare more than one run
Click the center pad as many times as possible before the timer ends.