CPS Test World Records: All-Time Highest Click Speeds

The Number Every Click-Test Site Repeats
If you have ever searched for the CPS test world record, you have seen one number: 105.1 CPS — 1,051 mouse clicks in 10 seconds, attributed to Dylan Allred of Las Vegas, Nevada. The figure shows up on cpstest.org, cpstest.io, butterflyclicktest, and dozens of other tools that copy each other's footers. It has become the de-facto benchmark people compare their own 10-second test results against.
But here is the part the click-test ecosystem never mentions: the submission itself was not accepted. RecordSetter — the platform Allred submitted to — marks the entry DENIED, with the rejection reason printed right on the record page. The rule he failed is the most fundamental one in the click-speed category: no auto-clickers. So before going further, it is worth being honest about what the 105.1 number actually is — and what a legitimate CPS world record looks like instead.
- Total clicks
- 1,051
- Duration
- 10 seconds
- Holder
- Dylan Allred
- Location
- Las Vegas, NV, USA
- Submitted to
- RecordSetter
- Verified by
- —Not accepted
Disputed. The RecordSetter submission page is publicly tagged 'DENIED: Does not follow rule of use of auto-clickers not permitted.' Every CPS-test site that repeats the 105.1 number omits this caveat.
What the RecordSetter Entry Actually Says
RecordSetter is a community-driven record platform that, unlike Guinness, accepts video-only proof for thousands of niche categories. The Dylan Allred submission was filed against the 'Most Mouse Clicks in 10 Seconds' category, with a video showing 1,051 clicks in 10 seconds (105.1 CPS sustained). The page is still live at the URL referenced in the sources section below, and the visible status tag on the page itself reads: 'DENIED: Does not follow rule of use of auto-clickers not permitted.'
Why the rejection is plausible
A clean, human-sustained 105 CPS over 10 seconds would imply two consecutive clicks every 9.5 milliseconds for the entire window. Peer-reviewed motor-control studies put the human voluntary finger-tap ceiling at roughly 14 Hz in burst conditions and 8 Hz sustained — drag-clicking and butterfly-clicking can exceed those bounds by exploiting mouse switch debounce, but only in 1–2 second bursts, not for ten straight seconds. A 105 CPS sustained over 10 seconds sits an order of magnitude above the physiological ceiling, which is consistent with auto-clicker assistance and consistent with RecordSetter's call.
Why every clone site still cites it
The 105.1 number is sticky for three reasons. First, it is dramatic — '105' headlines well. Second, copy-from-competitor is the default content-production strategy for low-budget click-test sites; the caveat gets lost in the chain. Third, no widely cited human-verified replacement exists, so the disputed number fills the vacuum. We surface the rejection in the breakdown card below because keeping it hidden would put cpstest.site in the same lazy bucket as the rest of the clone tier.
The Real Verified Record: 12.67 CPS Over 60 Seconds
The only widely cited CPS-style mouse record that has survived third-party verification is Yiğit Arslan's 760 clicks in 60 seconds — a sustained 12.67 CPS — set during the Logitech G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE launch in Türkiye and adjudicated by a Guinness World Records official. Guinness publishes the case study (linked in sources below); it is not a CPS-test-site claim, it is a corporate-record program with on-site adjudication.
12.67 CPS sustained for a full minute is a much more honest number than 105.1 CPS for 10 seconds. It sits inside the physiological window, it was performed in front of an adjudicator with a verified counter, and it represents a real ceiling humans can train toward on stock hardware. If you want to chase a record on cpstest.site, this is the benchmark to chase — pick the 100-second test to feel what 60+ seconds of sustained clicking actually does to your forearm.
What the Realistic Benchmark Numbers Look Like
Stripping out the disputed claim, here is what an honest tier list looks like for click-speed performance — drawn from Hypixel community surveys, Minecraft PvP analytics, and the leaderboards on cpstest.site itself.
| Technique | Typical CPS | Bottleneck | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Untrained adult | 5–7 CPS | Voluntary finger-tap ceiling (~8 Hz sustained) | Baseline reference |
| Skilled gamer (normal click) | 8–11 CPS | Tendon endurance + mouse switch travel | Most modern PvP |
| Trained jitter / butterfly | 14–17 CPS | Switch debounce + technique consistency | 1.7/1.8 Minecraft PvP, Kohi servers |
| Drag-click (1–2s burst) | 20–30 CPS | Mouse switch wear (warranty-voiding) | Bridging, very short bursts |
| Guinness-adjudicated (60s) | 12.67 CPS sustained | Forearm fatigue at 60s | Verified ceiling reference |
| RecordSetter 105.1 (disputed) | 105.1 CPS (10s) | Marked DENIED for auto-clicker use | Not a usable benchmark |
1 second — the burst window
The 1-second CPS test is where pure burst technique shows up. A trained jitter or butterfly clicker can clear 14–18 CPS in a 1-second window without auto-assist; anything in the low 20s is achievable but starts to look like drag-click or double-click switch behavior. Hypixel forum threads frequently cite 20 CPS as the threshold where anti-cheat systems begin flagging accounts for review.
5 seconds — the workhorse format
The 5-second CPS test is what most casual users measure on. Average untrained adults score 5–7 CPS. Skilled gamers settle around 8–11. The top tier of jitter and butterfly clickers consistently lands 14–17 CPS over 5 seconds. The current cpstest.site leaderboard cap for the 5-second board sits in the high teens, in line with what other Minecraft PvP click tests report.
10 seconds — the legacy world-record format
The 10-second CPS test is the format Allred's disputed submission was filed against. Realistic human ceilings here are 12–15 CPS sustained for trained clickers; the elite floor is roughly the Guinness-adjudicated 12.67 CPS extrapolated downward. Anything above 20 CPS sustained for 10 full seconds is, in practice, indistinguishable from a hardware-assisted or software-assisted submission.
100 seconds — the endurance number nobody cites
Almost no record write-up talks about the 100-second CPS test, but it is the format that best separates technique from raw fast-twitch ceiling. Sustained pace drops to 6–9 CPS even for elite clickers as forearm fatigue accumulates. If you want a number that is genuinely hard to fake, this is the one.
Where the Kohi Format Fits Into the Record Picture
Most modern CPS records are filed against the 10-second mouse-click category — which makes sense, because that is the format Kohi, the Minecraft server that gave its name to the Kohi click test, used to popularize. Kohi operated from roughly 2013 through April 29, 2016, primarily hosting Hardcore Factions (HCF) and Practice gamemodes. Its server-side click test became the de-facto skill benchmark in pre-1.9 Minecraft PvP.
The Minecraft 1.9 Combat Update — released in February 2016 — added an attack-cooldown timer that fundamentally changed the value of raw click speed in vanilla combat. After 1.9, attack timing matters more than CPS. But many PvP servers, including Hypixel and CubeCraft, run 1.7- or 1.8-style hit mechanics where CPS still measurably converts into damage output. The Kohi-style 10-second format survives as a benchmark precisely because the use case did not go away — it just moved to specific server networks.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the actual verified CPS world record?
The only widely cited record adjudicated by a third party is Yiğit Arslan's 760 clicks in 60 seconds (12.67 CPS sustained), set at the Logitech G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE launch and certified by Guinness World Records. The frequently cited '105.1 CPS' by Dylan Allred is marked DENIED on the RecordSetter submission page for failing the auto-clicker rule.
Is the Dylan Allred 105.1 CPS record real?
The submission exists, but it was rejected. The RecordSetter page itself displays the status 'DENIED: Does not follow rule of use of auto-clickers not permitted.' Click-test sites repeat the 105.1 number without that caveat, but the rejection has been on the public record page since the submission was reviewed.
What's a realistic top score for the 10-second CPS test?
For human, unassisted clicking on the 10-second CPS test, elite trained clickers using jitter or butterfly technique typically land between 12 and 15 CPS sustained. Anything significantly above that for the full ten seconds is, in practice, indistinguishable from a hardware-assisted or auto-clicker submission.
What about 1-second and 5-second records?
Burst windows are easier to peak in. Trained clickers regularly clear 18–22 CPS on the 1-second test using jitter or drag-click technique. The 5-second format settles into the 14–17 CPS range for top performers — long enough to expose technique consistency, short enough to avoid forearm fatigue.
Can I get banned from Hypixel or other servers for clicking too fast?
Yes. Server-side anti-cheat systems frequently flag accounts that sustain 20+ CPS for more than a second or two, particularly when the click rhythm is too regular. Drag-click and double-click hardware patterns are also detectable. The exact threshold varies per server — community threads on the Hypixel forums put the practical 'safe' ceiling at roughly 15 CPS sustained.
Why does the [Kohi format](/kohi) keep appearing in record discussions?
Because the 10-second mouse-click format that the Kohi network used to host became the industry-standard CPS test format, and the name stuck even after Kohi shut down on April 29, 2016. Lunar Client, mcrpg, cpstest.org, and most other tool sites still use 'Kohi click test' as a synonym for the 10-second format. The cpstest.site Kohi page preserves the original Kohi-era 10-second default.
Sources & References
- RecordSetter — Most Mouse Clicks In 10 Seconds — Dylan Allred. The 1,051-clicks-in-10-seconds submission cited across the click-test industry. The submission page itself is tagged 'DENIED: Does not follow rule of "use of auto-clickers not permitted"' — a detail almost every clone site omits.
- Guinness World Records — Most mouse clicks in one minute — Logitech G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE launch. Guinness-adjudicated record: 760 clicks in 60 seconds (12.67 CPS sustained) by Yiğit Arslan, set at the Logitech G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE launch in Türkiye. This is the only widely cited CPS-style mouse record that survives third-party verification.
- Lunar Client — Kohi Click Test — What is Kohi?. Primary-source background on the Kohi network — the Minecraft HCF server that gave the Kohi click format its name. Confirms the April 29, 2016 closure date.
- Minecraft Wiki — Java Edition 1.9 — Combat Update. Reference for the Minecraft 1.9 attack-cooldown change that diminished raw CPS as a PvP advantage on post-1.9 servers.
- Hypixel Forums — How fast can I click before ban?. Community thread on Hypixel's anti-cheat thresholds. Useful for the 'is 20+ CPS bannable?' discussion that comes up around any record write-up.