Free aim trainer test to measure mouse accuracy and reaction control in real time. This test is part of MeasureHuman’s cognitive benchmarking suite, designed to help users understand and compare human performance across core mental skills. Get instant results with percentile rankings comparing you to other players. Learn what's considered a good aim score. Try the click speed test to compare your performance. No signup required and works on desktop and mobile.
Click targets as fast as possible
Click anywhere to begin
Target Count
How many targets per round
Sound Effects
Play audio for hits/misses
Take all core tests in one guided run and get a single score.
Take all tests →Complete a run to see your percentile.
Play once to see your history here.
Aim Trainer measures how quickly and accurately users can click on targets that appear at random positions. The score is the average time taken to click each target, usually expressed in milliseconds.
This test evaluates hand-eye coordination, mouse control, target acquisition speed, and precision under time pressure. It requires tracking movement, predicting target location, and executing accurate clicks.
Aim precision is a core skill in first-person shooters (FPS), competitive gaming, and any task requiring precise cursor control. It combines reaction time with spatial accuracy.
Lower times indicate better performance—faster target acquisition means quicker responses. The test becomes harder with smaller targets or faster appearance rates, though this version uses a standard difficulty level.
In gaming, aim precision directly affects performance in FPS games, MOBAs, and other competitive titles. Players with better aim land more shots, track opponents more effectively, and respond faster to threats.
Outside gaming, cursor precision supports design work, video editing, and any interface that requires accurate pointing and clicking. Stronger hand-eye coordination benefits many screen-based tasks.
The skill also reflects broader motor control and spatial awareness, which can transfer to physical activities requiring coordination and timing.
| Performance tier | Typical reaction time | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner | Over 600 ms | New to aim training or mouse control. |
| Average | 400–600 ms | Typical for casual users and gamers. |
| Good | 300–400 ms | Above average, showing solid coordination. |
| Excellent | 200–300 ms | Strong performance, common among FPS players. |
| Elite | Under 200 ms | Exceptional aim, top-tier competitive level. |
Times are measured per target. Lower is better. Performance depends on mouse sensitivity, device quality, and practice level.
This test measures aim in a controlled environment with stationary targets. Real gaming scenarios add movement, prediction, and recoil patterns, making them more complex.
Device quality matters—high-DPI gaming mice with low latency perform better than budget or wireless mice with input delay. Monitor refresh rate also affects target visibility and tracking smoothness.
Taking multiple tests and tracking averages reveals consistent performance better than single attempts.
Aim improvement requires consistent practice, proper equipment setup, and deliberate focus on technique rather than random grinding.
Aim improves gradually with deliberate practice. Tracking weekly averages shows real progress more clearly than daily fluctuations.
This test is for gamers, FPS players, and anyone curious about their hand-eye coordination. It works on desktop devices with a mouse, though results vary by equipment quality.
It is also used for competitive benchmarking, skill tracking, and warm-up routines before gaming sessions.
Yes. No payment or registration required.
Yes. Multiple attempts help establish consistent performance.
Results are stored locally in the browser. Clearing site data removes them.
This is a consumer benchmark for gaming and coordination, not a clinical tool.
Most casual gamers fall between 350–500 ms. Competitive FPS players often reach 200–300 ms.
For more on how gamers perform across different tests, see Are Gamers Faster
Learn about aim training, precision techniques, and how gaming experience affects accuracy
Time-per-target bands from below-average to elite
Learn how gaming experience affects aim accuracy and precision
Related fundamentals: stimulus processing, timing, and speed vs accuracy