What is the 15-second CPS test?
The 15-second CPS test is the consistency check. By second ten your burst is gone, and the final third of the window is pure maintenance — keeping a steady rhythm while your forearm tightens. It is the shortest duration that genuinely punishes players who can only sprint.
What is a good score?
Averaging 6–8 CPS over 15 seconds is strong; staying within one CPS of your 5-second score across the full window says more about your skill than any single peak number.
Use 15 seconds to measure your fade
Divide your 15-second average by your 5-second best to get a fade ratio. Above 0.9 means your technique holds up under mild fatigue; below 0.75 means you are burning out early — usually a sign of a death-grip on the mouse or of clicking from the wrist instead of the finger joint. Fixing form typically buys more points on this test than clicking "harder", because the clicks lost to fatigue in the final five seconds outnumber whatever a faster start adds. Re-test your ratio weekly; it improves faster than raw burst speed does.
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, 30s, 60s, 100s tests, or the main CPS test.
FAQ
Is 15 seconds harder than 10?
Noticeably — the extra five seconds all happen after your burst has faded, so the average drops and grip fatigue starts to show in the result.
What is a good fade ratio?
15s average divided by 5s best: above 0.9 is excellent endurance, 0.75–0.9 is typical, below 0.75 means form or pacing problems.
Is my score saved?
Yes — your best 15s 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.