Ready — Medium
Target Size
🎯
Sensitivity Test
Press Start Test to begin
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Click the Target!
Hit 20 targets as accurately as you can
0
0 % acc
Remaining: 20 targets — Click the circle!
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Test Complete!
0
accuracy • 0/0 hits
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Accuracy
Hits / Total
Avg React
Target Size
Accuracy Per Target — Breakdown

Session Stats

Last Accuracy
Best Accuracy
Worst Accuracy
Avg React Time
Session Avg
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Accuracy Rating Guide

>97%
🌟 Pro Aim
Top 0.5%
93–97%
⚡ Elite
Top 5%
85–93%
🚀 Precise
Top 20%
70–85%
📖 Average
Top 50%
50–70%
🕐 Casual
Top 80%
<50%
🐂 Beginner
Learning
🏿

What Does Accuracy Mean?

Accuracy measures how close your click lands to the exact center of the target. A direct center hit scores 100%. The score falls off as distance from the center increases relative to the target radius.

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Finding Your Ideal DPI

Most competitive players use 400–800 DPI combined with a low in-game sensitivity. High DPI introduces micro-tremor amplification. Lower DPI forces deliberate arm movement, which produces more consistent accuracy on this test.

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Arm vs Wrist Aiming

Arm aiming produces smoother, longer movements and is generally more accurate on large targets. Wrist aiming allows faster micro-adjustments but can lose precision on small targets. Hybrid techniques often yield the best results.

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Mouse Polling Rate

Polling rate (Hz) controls how often your mouse reports position to the PC. 125 Hz updates every 8ms, while 1000 Hz updates every 1ms. Higher polling reduces positional jitter and improves accuracy on fast movements.

Frequently Asked Questions

Above 90% is excellent. Most experienced FPS players score 80–95% on Medium targets. Casual users typically land 60–80%. Scores above 97% are considered pro-level and are achieved by very few players.
Too high a sensitivity causes overshooting — your cursor travels past the target before you stop moving. Too low makes it hard to reach targets quickly. The optimal sensitivity lets you cover the full screen in one fluid arm movement without overcorrecting.
Medium is the standard benchmark and gives the most balanced score between speed and precision. Small targets stress-test micro-accuracy and are useful for diagnosing overshoot. Large targets emphasise reaction time and movement speed.
Slightly. Higher resolution displays make targets appear smaller in physical size, requiring more precise movements. The test uses percentage-based target sizing relative to the zone, so results are comparable across resolutions.
Lower your DPI to 400–800 and switch to arm aiming. Practice daily at Small difficulty until you can consistently score above 85%. A large mousepad gives the physical space required for precise arm movements. Also ensure no mouse acceleration is active in Windows or your OS settings.