I'll be honest — I didn't think clicking a mouse button was something you could actually get better at. Then I found QuickCPSTest.com and decided to run a little experiment.
For seven days, I started each morning with three rounds of the 10-second click test. I tracked my score, noticed the patterns, and tried different techniques. What I found surprised me.
Day 1: Humbling Start
My first score was 5.2 CPS. My colleague had bet me he could hit 8 CPS on a good day. I was skeptical, but after seeing my result, maybe he had a point.
The test at QuickCPSTest is dead simple. Pick a time duration, click the big button when ready, and click as fast as you can until time runs out. Your CPS is calculated instantly.
No accounts, no ads, no signup. Just your score staring back at you.
Day 3: Discovering Jitter Clicking
I read about jitter clicking and tried it on Day 3. The technique involves tensing your arm and letting the small vibrations translate into rapid clicks. It feels weird at first — kind of like holding your hand over a vibrating surface.
My score jumped to 7.8 CPS. Felt like cheating, honestly. But QuickCPSTest has a dedicated Jitter Test mode for exactly this purpose, so apparently it's a legitimate thing.
Day 5: Hitting a Wall
Around Day 5, my scores plateaued between 7.5 and 8.1 CPS. I switched to using QuickCPSTest's Click Counter mode for a few sessions — no timer, just counting — to focus on the rhythm of clicking rather than the speed. This actually helped.
Day 7: Final Results
By Day 7, my best score was 9.3 CPS. Almost doubled from where I started. I also tried the Kohi Test, which uses a Minecraft-server-style format. Got 8.6 on that one.
What QuickCPSTest Does Well
Multiple test modes — Standard click test, Jitter Test, Kohi Test, Click Counter, and keyboard tests.
No clutter — Every CPS tool I tried before this was full of ads or wanted me to sign up. QuickCPSTest has neither.
Honest scoring — It doesn't pad your numbers. Your score is your score.
Try It
Head to quickcpstest.com and run a few rounds. It takes 10 seconds and you'll immediately want to beat your score.

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