CPS Test Unblocked - Play at School or Work
Works at school, work, on Chromebook — no download, no install, no third-party ads.
Unblocked CPS test
Why Most CPS Tests Get Blocked at School
Schools, libraries, and corporate networks run filtering software — Securly, GoGuardian, Lightspeed, Cisco Umbrella, ZScaler, and similar — that decides which websites your computer can reach. These filters categorize a site by its content and the third-party services it loads. A typical click speed test page trips three of those categories at once.
Ad Networks
Most free CPS test sites pay their hosting bills with banner ads from Google AdSense, Media.net, or similar networks. School filters categorize those ad domains as 'advertising' and often block the whole page that loads them. The unblocked CPS test on this page serves no ads — there's no ad domain to flag.
Game Portal Iframes
Some click speed test pages embed Unity or HTML5 games from portals like CrazyGames or GameDistribution to keep visitors on-site. Filters categorize those embedded URLs as 'games' and block the host page along with them. This page embeds nothing — the click area is plain HTML and a few hundred bytes of JavaScript.
Tracker and Analytics Domains
Filters often have a 'tracking' or 'privacy risk' category that flags pages calling out to dozens of analytics endpoints. The unblocked CPS test makes no third-party requests — no Google Analytics, no Facebook pixel, no marketing tags. There's nothing for the filter to categorize except the page itself.
We can't promise this page will load on every locked-down network — your IT admin can blocklist any URL they choose. But if a filter is using category-based rules (which most do), this unblocked CPS test is much less likely to be flagged than a site with embedded ads, trackers, and game iframes.
How to Use the Unblocked CPS Test
Using the unblocked click speed test takes about ten seconds. There's nothing to install, sign up for, or unlock.
Step 1 — Pick Your Input Mode
Use the Left Click / Right Click / Spacebar toggle above the click circle. Left click is the default. Switch to spacebar if your school computer has a broken left button, or to right click if you want to test your right mouse button speed. The CPS scoring formula is the same for all three.
Step 2 — Pick a Duration
Choose 1, 5, 10, or 100 seconds with the duration tabs below the click circle. The 5-second test is the most common click speed benchmark — start there if you're not sure. The 1 second test measures pure burst speed; the 100 second test measures clicking endurance.
Step 3 — Click to Start
Click the circle (or right-click anywhere, or press spacebar — whichever input mode you picked). Your first click starts the timer. Keep clicking until the timer hits zero. Your CPS = total clicks ÷ duration.
Step 4 — Beat Your Personal Best
When the timer ends, your final CPS appears below the test, along with your previous personal best for this duration if you've taken the test before. Your best is saved in your browser's localStorage — it stays on this device only and doesn't sync anywhere.
What This Unblocked Page Trades Off
To stay light enough to load on slow campus Wi-Fi and pass through restrictive filters, this page leaves out a few features that are on the main CPS test. Knowing what's missing helps you decide when to use which page.
No Public Leaderboard
The main CPS test has a global leaderboard for every mode and duration. The unblocked page doesn't — submitting scores would require an extra network request, and the leaderboard widget would add JavaScript bytes. Your personal best is still tracked locally; you just can't compare it publicly from this page.
No Sound or Animation Effects
The main click speed test has a satisfying click sound on every hit and a ripple animation that spreads from the cursor. The unblocked page is silent and the click feedback is minimal. This saves about 15-20 KB of JavaScript and a small audio file — meaningful on a network with strict bandwidth caps.
No Other-Test Preview Cards
The main page shows preview thumbnails for every other CPS test mode. The unblocked page uses plain text links instead, listed in the navigation. Eleven preview images would mean eleven extra network requests — fine on home internet, painful through a saturated school router.
If you're on an open network, the homepage CPS test is the better experience. The unblocked CPS test on this page is built for the specific case where a filter is in the way — once you're home, switch back.
Unblocked CPS Test — FAQ
Will this CPS test work on my school's Wi-Fi?
If you can load this page, the click speed test on it will run. Most school filters block CPS tests because the popular ones embed ads, third-party trackers, and game-portal iframes — those trigger category filters like 'gaming' or 'ads'. This page loads no third-party scripts, no ads, and no embedded games, so it usually passes through where other CPS test sites get caught. We can't promise every network will let it through — your IT department can blocklist any URL they want.
Does the unblocked CPS test work on a Chromebook?
Yes. The unblocked CPS test runs in plain HTML and JavaScript, the same tech every Chromebook ships with. There's no Flash, no Java applet, no browser extension to install, and no admin permissions needed. If your managed Chromebook can open this URL, you can take the click speed test — works the same as on any laptop.
Is using a CPS test at school against the rules?
That's between you and your school. This page is a free click speed test — it doesn't bypass any security controls, doesn't tunnel any traffic, and doesn't pretend to be something it isn't. If your school's acceptable-use policy bans non-academic websites during class, that policy still applies whether the site is blocked or not. Use breaks, lunch, or after-school hours.
Why is this page so plain compared to the main CPS test?
On purpose. Restrictive networks are more likely to block pages that pull in lots of third-party resources — fonts from Google, analytics from a tracker domain, ads from a network. We stripped this page down to the essentials: the click area, a mode switch, and the timer. No sound effects, no leaderboard submission, no preview images for other tests. The full experience lives at the main CPS test on the homepage — try it from a non-restricted network.
Can I take the test with my keyboard or right mouse button?
Yes. The unblocked CPS test supports left-click, right click, and spacebar input — switch modes with the toggle above the click circle. Useful if your school computer has a broken left mouse button, a touchpad without right-click gesture, or you want to test your spacebar press speed for rhythm games like osu! or Beat Saber.
Are my scores being sent anywhere?
No. Your personal best is stored only in your own browser's localStorage and never leaves your device. The unblocked page deliberately has no leaderboard submission — that's part of why the page is light enough to load on flaky networks. Clearing your browser data also clears your CPS record. If you want to compare scores publicly, take the main CPS test on the homepage from a network that allows it.
What's a good CPS score on a school computer?
Lower than at home, almost always. School and library mice are usually budget OEM models with stiff switches and worn buttons, which costs you 1-2 CPS compared to a gaming mouse. A 5-second score of 6-7 CPS on a school PC is roughly equivalent to 8-9 CPS at home. The 5-second click speed test world record is community-reported at 17.4 CPS — set on dedicated gaming hardware, not a Chromebook.
Can I use an autoclicker on the unblocked CPS test?
You can, but it's pointless here. There's no leaderboard on the unblocked page, so there's nothing to cheat onto. Your autoclicker score sits in your own localStorage, beats your own previous record, and that's it. Most managed school computers also block autoclicker downloads at the OS level, so installing one is usually harder than just clicking faster.