Mouse Accuracy Tester
Free online aim trainer — hit targets as fast and accurately as you can. Choose your mode, set a duration, and see how you stack up.
Mode
One target at a time. Miss = penalty.
Target Size
Duration
Sound
Ready to test your aim?
Click targets as fast and accurately as possible.
How to Use
- 1 Pick a game mode, target size, and duration from the settings panel.
- 2 Click Start Game — red targets will start appearing in the play area.
- 3 Click each target as quickly and accurately as you can. In Classic and Precision modes, missed clicks cost you points.
- 4 When time's up, review your score, accuracy percentage, average reaction time, and overall rating.
- 5 Your personal best is saved automatically in your browser — no account needed.
Game Modes
Classic
One target at a time. Hit it for +10 pts; click the background for −5. Targets never expire — accuracy wins over speed.
Speed
Targets disappear after 2 seconds. Miss the window and you lose points. Pure reaction speed under pressure.
Precision
Targets are locked to small size. Tests fine motor control. One stray click is costly — aim carefully.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the accuracy score measure?
Accuracy is hits ÷ (hits + misses) × 100. A hit means clicking a target directly. A miss is clicking outside a target in Classic/Precision mode, or letting a target expire in Speed mode.
How is reaction time calculated?
Each target records its spawn time. When you click it, the elapsed milliseconds become your reaction time for that hit. The result shown is the average across all successful hits in the session.
What is a good accuracy score?
Most people score 70–90% on medium targets. Hitting 70%+ in Precision mode (small targets) is excellent. Professional FPS players typically sustain 85–95% accuracy with reaction times under 250 ms.
Is my best score saved between sessions?
Yes — your highest score is stored in browser local storage and persists across visits on the same device. Clearing your browser data will reset it.
Does this work on mobile?
Yes. Tap targets with your finger. Classic and Speed modes play well on touchscreens. Precision mode is considerably harder on mobile since finger taps are less precise than a mouse cursor.
Which mode is best for FPS aim training?
Speed mode most closely mirrors FPS target training — targets won't wait. Precision mode sharpens small hitbox accuracy. Use Classic first to establish a baseline, then progress to Speed or Precision for a stiffer challenge.