What is the 2-second CPS test?
The 2-second CPS test sits between a pure burst and a short sprint. It still rewards an explosive start, but one lucky click no longer decides the outcome — each click moves the score by only half a CPS, so results are twice as stable as the 1-second version while the test still finishes almost instantly.
What is a good score?
Expect a small step down from your 1-second peak: 7–11 CPS is a solid 2-second score, and technique clickers hold 13–18.
Why choose the 2-second window?
Two seconds is the shortest window that starts to punish sloppiness. In the first second everyone is fresh; in the second, an unstable grip or a tense wrist already costs clicks. That makes the 2s test a favorite quick calibration drill — run it between longer attempts to check whether your form is holding up without burning your hand out. It is also the fairer burst comparison between friends: the doubled window averages out the single lucky-click swings that make 1-second bragging rights unreliable, while still being quick enough to retry a dozen times in a minute.
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, 5s, 10s, 15s, 30s, 60s, 100s tests, or the main CPS test.
FAQ
Is the 2-second test more accurate than the 1-second test?
For burst speed, yes — the doubled window halves the impact of any single click on the final CPS, so scores fluctuate far less between attempts.
What should I use the 2-second test for?
Quick form checks and burst comparisons: it keeps the explosive character of a 1s run but smooths out the luck factor.
Is my score saved?
Yes — your best 2s 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.