Round 1
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Click every target!
Press Start Test then click each target before it disappears
Get Ready…
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0 hits · 0 miss
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Per-Target Result Breakdown

🏆 Personal Best

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No record yet

📊 Session Stats

Last Accuracy
Best Accuracy
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Tests Run0

🕐 Recent History

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Accuracy Tier Guide — What Does Your Hit Rate Mean?

0–49%
🐢 Beginner
50–64%
🕐 Learning
65–79%
📘 Average
80–89%
🚀 Good
90–96%
⚡ Elite
97–100%
🌟 World Class
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How the Click Accuracy Test Works

Each test spawns a set number of circular targets one at a time at random spots inside the zone. Click a target and it counts as a hit. Let one expire without clicking and it counts as a miss. Your accuracy score is simply hits divided by total targets, shown as a percentage. Your average reaction time is how long it took from when each target appeared to when you clicked it.

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Hit Rate vs Reaction Time — Two Different Things

Your hit rate tells you how often you clicked correctly. Your reaction time tells you how fast you moved to each target. You can have great accuracy but slow reaction time — careful and deliberate. You can also be fast but imprecise — rushing and missing. The ideal result is a high hit rate combined with a low reaction time. Both numbers together give you a complete picture of your mouse aim.

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Why Cursor Precision Matters for Gamers

Every shot that misses in a first-person shooter is an accuracy problem. Every skill shot that goes wide in a MOBA is an accuracy problem. Clicking the right target at the right moment is one of the most fundamental skills in any game that uses a mouse. Regular sessions on a target clicking test build the muscle memory you need to aim without thinking — which is exactly what in-game performance requires.

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What Hit Rate Scores Actually Mean

Most everyday computer users score between 60% and 75% on Normal mode without any practice. Regular gamers tend to land between 80% and 90%. Players who actively train their aim regularly reach the 90–96% range. Scores above 97% are rare and usually involve both serious aim practice and hardware that is set up well — the right DPI, a smooth mousepad, and a mouse that fits the hand properly.

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Simple Ways to Raise Your Accuracy Score

Start on Easy and stay there until you hit above 90% consistently before moving to Normal. The biggest single thing to fix is overshoot — arriving at the target too fast and clicking past it. Slow down deliberately. Move to the target at 70% of your natural speed and let precision come first. Speed follows naturally once the movement pattern becomes automatic. Five to ten minute sessions work better than long ones.

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Mouse Settings That Help Your Aim Accuracy

DPI has the biggest impact. If your DPI is too high, small hand movements overshoot the target every time. If it is too low, you run out of mousepad before reaching the target. Most aim trainers recommend starting between 800 and 1600 DPI and adjusting from there. A large, low-friction mousepad gives you room to use your whole arm rather than just your wrist, which reduces strain and improves consistency over time.

Mouse Accuracy Test — Common Questions Answered

It measures two things: your hit rate (how many targets you clicked out of the total that appeared) and your average reaction time (how quickly you clicked from the moment each target appeared). Hit rate is shown as a percentage. Reaction time is shown in milliseconds. Both are saved as personal bests in your browser — no account needed and no data leaves your device.
On Normal mode (2-second targets), hitting 75–85% is solid for a regular computer user. Active gamers usually land between 85% and 93%. Players who train their aim seriously reach 93–96%. Anything above 97% is genuinely world-class and requires both consistent practice and hardware that is set up well. On Hard mode, clearing 80% already puts you ahead of most players.
Yes, quite a lot. High DPI (above 2000) means small hand movements move the cursor a long way, which makes it easy to overshoot a small target. Very low DPI means you need large arm movements to cross the screen, which slows you down. A starting point of 800–1600 DPI works well for most people. If you keep missing targets to the right of where you aimed, try lowering your DPI first.
The four difficulty modes change how long each target stays on screen before it counts as a miss. Easy gives you 3 seconds per target. Normal gives 2 seconds. Hard gives 1.2 seconds. Expert gives just 0.7 seconds. You can also change target size in Settings — smaller targets require more cursor precision to register as a hit. Start on Easy to get used to the flow, then move up when you reach 90% consistently.
On Hard mode the window is short enough that the time it takes to move your cursor to the target eats most of your available time. The fix is to keep your cursor near the centre of the zone between targets so the travel distance stays short. Start your movement the moment a target appears rather than after you have fully processed its position. These habits take a few sessions to build but they make a big difference.
Yes. The test runs in any mobile browser and tap events are counted as clicks. Touch accuracy is generally lower than mouse accuracy because a fingertip covers a larger area than a cursor. If you want to measure touchscreen precision specifically, use a stylus — it gives a much smaller contact point and more comparable results to mouse testing.