AIMTEST
Where does your aim actually stand right now? This quick aim test has you click targets as they appear, then turns your accuracy and speed into a single result you can repeat and compare over time.
Aim Test
Click 30 targets as fast and accurately as you can. Your score is based on speed and accuracy.
Click the targets the moment they appear.
Measure Your Aim Before You Train It
An aim test is a quick way to find out where your aim stands today instead of guessing. Targets pop up one at a time at random spots on the screen, you click each one as soon as you see it, and the test watches both how accurately you hit and how quickly — then rolls those two numbers into a single result you can read at a glance.
Think of it as a snapshot, not a workout. The whole run takes about half a minute, lives entirely in your browser, and costs nothing — so you can test your aim right now on any computer with a mouse, note your number, and come back to see whether it moves after you put in some practice.
How the aim test works
When you press start, a target appears somewhere on the play area. Your job is simple: move your crosshair onto it and click. The instant you hit, it disappears and the next one shows up in a fresh location, so you never know exactly where to look next and can't camp one spot.
Two things are being recorded the whole time. Accuracy tracks how many of your clicks actually landed on a target versus the screen around it, and speed tracks how long, on average, you take to get on each target after it appears. When the run ends, those combine into one result plus a short rating, and because every run is identical you can repeat it as often as you like for a fair comparison.
How to read your result
Accuracy tells you how clean your clicking is. A high percentage means you're landing on targets and not spraying the empty space; a low one usually means you're rushing and firing before the crosshair has settled. Speed tells you how fast you find and reach each target — lower times mean quicker target acquisition.
The catch is that a single run is just a snapshot. A lucky streak or one bad cluster of misses can swing it either way, so don't read too much into one number. Run the test three or four times back to back and look at the middle of your results — that average is much closer to your real level, and it's the figure worth writing down and beating later.
Aim test vs. aim trainer
These two tools do different jobs, and mixing them up is a common mistake. An aim test measures — it gives you a fixed, repeatable benchmark of where your aim is right now and asks nothing of you beyond a short, honest run.
An aim trainer is for the work itself: long, varied, repeated practice on a specific skill so it gradually improves. The sensible loop is to use the test first to find your number and spot your weakest area, then spend your time in a trainer drilling that area, and finally come back to the same test to confirm the number actually moved.
How to raise your score
- Slow target acquisition? Drill the flick shot trainer, where single targets appear and you snap to them — that's the same skill the test rewards most.
- Trouble with moving targets? Spend time in the tracking trainer, keeping your crosshair glued to a target that drifts around the screen.
- Missing small or tight clusters? The micro-adjustment trainer shrinks the margins and trains the fine corrections that turn a near-miss into a hit.
- Whole run feels sluggish? Warm up first and keep a stable mouse sensitivity, then re-take the aim test so you're measuring skill rather than a cold hand.