cpstest

Aim Trainer

A free aim trainer to sharpen your mouse accuracy. Click the targets as fast as you can — we track your hits, accuracy, and targets per second. Pick a target size and time, then go. Pair it with our CPS test and eDPI calculator.

Target size
Time
Hits0
Time30s
Accuracy0%

Aim Trainer

Click the targets as fast and accurately as you can. 30s, medium targets.

Best (30s):

Top scores

Aim Trainer · Medium · 30s

  1. 1🇺🇸Flickz71 hits
  2. 2🇰🇷aimGod68 hits
  3. 3🇸🇪m0ist64 hits
  4. 4🇩🇪Wisp61 hits
  5. 5🇬🇧clickr58 hits
  6. 6🇨🇦NovaQ55 hits
  7. 7🇧🇷pixel52 hits
  8. 8🇵🇱Tachy49 hits
  9. 9🇫🇷zenith46 hits
  10. 10🇺🇸rookie741 hits

How to use the aim trainer

Choose a target size and round length, then hit Start. A single target appears at a random spot — click it and the next one spawns instantly. Every click that misses the target counts against your accuracy, so it rewards clean aim, not just fast clicking. When the timer runs out you get your hit count, accuracy percentage, and targets-per-second.

Start on large targets to warm up, then drop to small as your aim sharpens. Your best hit count is saved per duration, so you always have a number to beat. For real gains, keep a consistent sensitivity — use the eDPI calculator so your muscle memory carries across every game you play.

How to actually get better aim

Hit count is the scoreboard, but accuracy is the skill. A 60-hit run at 95% beats an 80-hit run at 70% — the second one would get you killed in a real match. Train the two halves of aim separately, then let them merge.

BandHits (30s, medium)Accuracy
Warming up< 30 hitsany — First few runs of the day, or large targets — your baseline.
Casual30–50 hits80 %+ — Plays FPS games regularly but doesn't drill aim.
Sharp50–70 hits85 %+ — Warmed up, consistent sensitivity, clean flicks.
Experienced70–90 hits90 %+ — Trains aim deliberately; speed without losing accuracy.
Cracked90+ hits90 %+ — Rare — elite flick speed with almost no wasted clicks.

Bands are tied to this trainer's default format (medium targets, 30 seconds). Every aim trainer scores differently — use them to read your own progress, not to compare across tools.

Flicking vs tracking

Flicking is snapping the crosshair onto a target that just appeared — that's exactly what this trainer drills. Tracking is keeping it glued to a moving target. They use different muscle patterns, so train them as separate skills. This page sharpens flicks; bring tracking practice to a moving-target drill or in-game.

Lock your sensitivity first

The single biggest aim killer is changing your sensitivity every week. Pick one eDPI and stick with it long enough for muscle memory to form. Match it across every game with the eDPI calculator so a flick that lands in one game lands in all of them — consistency beats a 'perfect' number you keep changing.

Short reps, accuracy first

Three focused 30-second runs beat one tired five-minute grind. Warm up on large targets, then shrink to small and chase accuracy before speed — speed that costs you accuracy is a habit you'll have to unlearn. Pair it with a quick reaction time test to confirm you're clicking on cue, not pre-firing.

Want raw clicking speed instead of precision? The CPS test measures how fast you can click, full stop — a different axis from aim, but the same warmed-up hand.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the aim trainer measure?

It tracks three things: hits (targets you clicked), accuracy (hits ÷ total clicks), and targets per second. Accuracy matters as much as speed — spraying clicks lowers your percentage. A good run balances both.

What's a good aim trainer score?

On medium targets over 30 seconds, casual players land 30–50 hits at 80%+ accuracy. Experienced FPS players hit 60–90+ with 90%+ accuracy. Start on large targets and shrink them as you improve — see the score bands below for where your run lands.

How do I improve my aim for FPS games?

Practice flicking (snapping to a target) and tracking separately. Use a consistent eDPI so muscle memory transfers between games. Short daily sessions beat long infrequent ones, and accuracy should lead speed — clean aim first, fast aim second.

Does this work on mobile?

Yes — tap the targets instead of clicking. That said, aim training is most useful with a real mouse, since that's what you'll use in-game. Treat the mobile version as casual practice.

Is a web aim trainer as good as a dedicated app?

For warming up and tracking your flick accuracy, yes — it's instant, free, and needs no install. Dedicated 3D trainers add tracking and target-switching scenarios this 2D flick trainer doesn't. Use this to warm up fast and benchmark your day-to-day; reach for a 3D trainer when you want scenario-specific drills.