What is the 100-second CPS test?
The 100-second CPS test is the marathon of click tests — a minute and forty seconds of continuous output. At this length raw speed is almost irrelevant; the score is decided by pacing, hand economy and plain stubbornness. Even a modest 5 CPS held for the whole window means 500 total clicks.
What is a good score?
Holding 5–6 CPS for all 100 seconds is a genuinely strong result, and finishing above a 7 CPS average is rare — the click-test equivalent of distance-running pace.
Extreme endurance: how to pace 100 seconds
Treat it like a distance run. Open at a pace you are certain you can hold — around 70–80% of your burst speed — and resist the urge to sprint the first ten seconds, because clicks banked early are repaid with interest when your hand stalls at second sixty. Micro-recoveries help: consciously loosen your grip for a beat every twenty seconds without stopping the rhythm. And know when to stop entirely — sharp pain, tingling or numbness is your cue to quit; no browser score is worth a tendon strain. Stretch your fingers and wrist when you finish.
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, 10s, 15s, 30s, 60s tests, or the main CPS test.
FAQ
How many clicks is a good 100-second score?
500 clicks (5 CPS) is solid, 600 (6 CPS) is very good, and 700+ (7 CPS) is exceptional over such a long window.
Is the 100-second test safe?
Fine for healthy hands in moderation, but stop immediately if you feel sharp pain, tingling or numbness, and shake out your hand between attempts.
Is my score saved?
Yes — your best 100s 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.