Reaction Time Test

Aim Trainer

Pop 30 targets as fast as you can. We measure your average time per target.

TAP TO START
Pop 30 targets as fast as you can.
โ€”Best ms
0Day streak
0Games

What is an aim trainer?

An aim trainer measures how quickly and accurately you can move your cursor to a target and click it. It is really two skills at once: visual search (spotting where the next target appeared) and motor control (flicking there and clicking cleanly). FPS players use aim trainers to warm up and to build the flick-and-track muscle memory that games like Valorant, CS2 and Apex demand. This test spawns 30 targets one after another and reports your average time per target in milliseconds.

What is a good aim score?

Most people average around 550-650 ms per target. Under 500 ms is quick, and trained FPS players often push into the low 400s or faster. Because the score is averaged over 30 targets, one lucky click cannot inflate it โ€” consistency matters more than a single fast flick.

Tips to aim faster

How this test works

Tap to start, then click each target as fast as it appears. Only clean hits advance you, so focus on landing each target rather than spraying. After 30 targets we show your average time per target, your label, and where you rank. Your best score and daily streak are saved in your browser only, with no sign-up and nothing sent to a server.

Test your other reflexes too: the reaction time test, the click speed test, ormemory flash.

FAQ

What is a good aim score?

Averaging under 500 ms per target is quick, and trained FPS players often reach the low 400s or faster. The typical range is 550-650 ms, so anything below that is above average.

Does lower mouse sensitivity improve aim?

For most people, yes. A lower sensitivity gives you finer control and better accuracy, which usually beats the raw speed of a high sensitivity you cannot keep steady. Find a sens where you can flick to a target without constantly overshooting.

Do misses count against my score?

Only clean hits advance you through the 30 targets, so the score rewards accuracy โ€” there is no benefit to spraying clicks in the general direction of a target.

Will this make me better at FPS games?

A browser aim trainer builds the basic flick-and-click and visual-search skills that transfer to any shooter, and it is a great warm-up. For deep training, dedicated apps add tracking and target-switching drills, but the fundamentals start here.

Is my score saved or shared online?

No. Your best time and streak live only in your browser via localStorage. There is no account, and sharing only happens if you tap the share button yourself.