Pick a level & time, then hit Start. Click targets fast and accurately!
Green = target (click it) | Orange = decoy (avoid it, appears from Level 6+)
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This click accuracy test measures how precisely and how quickly you can hit a moving or appearing target, tracking your hits, misses, accuracy percentage, average reaction time, and streak across ten difficulty levels.
From Level 1’s slow, large, predictable targets to Level 10’s fast, small, unpredictable ones — with orange decoy targets appearing from Level 6 onward that you have to avoid clicking — this test scales with your skill instead of staying flat.
Accuracy alone doesn’t tell the whole story, which is why this tool tracks four things together: hits, misses, average reaction time in milliseconds, and your current streak. A high accuracy score achieved by clicking slowly and carefully isn’t the same skill as high accuracy at speed, so pay attention to both numbers rather than optimizing for just one.
Levels 1 through 3 are easy — larger targets, slower pace, no decoys, a good place to warm up. Levels 4 through 7 are medium, shrinking the target size and picking up the pace. Levels 8 through 10 are hard, with small fast targets and decoy targets mixed in that punish careless clicking. Working through the full range is a better long-term measure of your aim than staying on one comfortable level.
Reaction time and accuracy pull against each other. Click the instant a target appears and you’ll often overshoot; wait to be certain and your average reaction time creeps up. Most players train for a balance where accuracy stays above roughly 80–90% without reaction time ballooning past what the game or task demands.
In fast-paced shooters and other reflex-based games, aim precision is frequently the difference between winning and losing a fight, and it’s a skill that responds well to deliberate practice — closer to muscle memory training than raw talent. Wikipedia’s overview of mental chronometry covers some of the underlying science of reaction time if you want to go deeper.