What is the 10-second CPS test?
The 10-second CPS test is where endurance starts to matter. It is the classic Minecraft Kohi length: long enough that the burst from your first two seconds fades and your true sustainable rate shows through, short enough to remain a sprint rather than a slog. Most people feel their rate visibly sag around the 7–8 second mark — that sag is exactly what this duration is designed to expose.
What is a good score?
6–7 CPS average is normal, 8–10 is good, 10+ is fast — and holding your 5-second pace all the way to ten is the real achievement.
World-record territory
Community leaderboards regularly show jitter clickers sustaining 12–14 CPS across a full 10 seconds, which is elite. Drag-click videos claim far higher figures — 30+ CPS — but those rely on switch vibration rather than finger speed, and most such records are self-reported and unverified, so treat them as entertainment rather than benchmarks. A more meaningful personal target: multiply your best 1-second burst by 0.7 — if your 10-second average reaches that number, your endurance is excellent for your speed class. This is also the duration used by the Kohi click test, so your score transfers directly.
How to click faster
- Use a light mouse and relax your hand.
- Click from the finger, keep the wrist still.
- Warm up, then try a jitter or butterfly technique to push past 10 CPS.
Other durations
Try the 1s, 2s, 5s, 15s, 30s, 60s, 100s tests, or the main CPS test.
FAQ
What is the CPS world record for 10 seconds?
Verified numbers are scarce. Sustained 12–14 CPS by jitter clickers is elite; 30+ CPS drag-click claims circulate online but are unverified and depend on hardware tricks.
Why does my speed drop near the end of 10 seconds?
Your forearm flexors begin to fatigue after roughly 7 seconds of maximal effort, so the final stretch runs on endurance rather than burst.
Is my score saved?
Yes — your best 10s CPS is stored locally in your browser, nothing is uploaded.
Does a faster CPS help in games?
In Minecraft PvP and clicker games it can help, but accuracy and consistency matter more than raw speed.