What is the 60-second CPS test?
The 60-second CPS test is a full minute of clicking — as much a mental test as a physical one. Fatigue is guaranteed; what separates scores is how you manage it. Attention drifts, the wrist creeps into the motion, and a broken rhythm costs more clicks than slow fingers ever do.
What is a good score?
Averaging 5–7 CPS for the entire minute is a strong result; a 400+ click total (6.7 CPS) puts you well ahead of most people who attempt the full 60.
Surviving the full minute
Over a minute the fatigue curve flattens into a grind: after the initial 15-second decline, output stabilizes at whatever rate your hand can recycle energy — and that plateau is trainable. Three things protect it: anchor your wrist so only the finger moves; keep breathing normally (breath-holding is the most common unnoticed error in long tests); and if you use jitter bursts, alternate roughly five seconds of jitter with five seconds of relaxed clicking rather than trying to jitter for a minute straight, which cramps almost everyone. Shake your hand out afterwards — a minute of maximal clicking is a real tendon workout.
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, 100s tests, or the main CPS test.
FAQ
How do I keep my CPS up for a whole minute?
Anchor the wrist, keep breathing, and hold a rhythm around 85% of your burst speed — steady output beats repeated sprint-and-cramp cycles.
How many clicks in 60 seconds is good?
360 clicks (6 CPS) is solid, 420+ (7 CPS) is very good, and anything near 600 (10 CPS) sustained for a full minute is elite.
Is my score saved?
Yes — your best 60s 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.