Tests & Trainer

Aim Trainer

Click 30 targets as fast as you can to measure your aim in ms per target, targets per minute and accuracy — then share your score.

  • Free forever
  • No sign-up
  • Runs in your browser
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Aim TrainerClick 30 targets as fast as you can. Each hit spawns the next one somewhere new. Misses cost you accuracy.
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What an aim trainer measures

An aim trainer measures how quickly and accurately you can move your mouse to a target and click it. This one shows you a single circular target at a random spot in the play area. The instant you hit it, the next target appears somewhere new. You do that 30 times, and the tool turns your run into a few clean numbers:

  • Milliseconds per target — your average time to find and click each target. Lower is better, and it's the headline score.
  • Targets per minute — the same speed expressed as a rate, which is the number most people instinctively understand.
  • Accuracy — the percentage of your clicks that actually landed on a target. Every click on empty space is a miss and pulls this down.
  • Total time — how long the whole 30-target run took.

Together these tell you more than a single number from a reaction time test. Speed without accuracy means you're spraying clicks; accuracy without speed means you're being too careful. A good run balances both — fast target acquisition with clean, deliberate clicks.

How to play

  1. Click Start in the play area above.
  2. A target appears. Move to it and click it as fast as you can.
  3. The next target spawns instantly somewhere else. Keep hitting them.
  4. After 30 targets the run ends and your stats appear.
  5. Hit Play again to go straight into another run, or Share my result to generate a score card and challenge a friend.

There's no countdown and no waiting between targets — the clock runs from your first target to your last, so smooth, continuous clicking gives the best score. Clicks that miss don't stop the run; they just count against your accuracy.

How to improve your aim

Improving at an aim trainer is mostly about consistency, not raw frantic speed. A few things make a real, measurable difference:

  • Settle on one sensitivity. Constantly changing your mouse DPI or in-game sensitivity resets your muscle memory. Pick a sensitivity you can control across the whole screen and stick with it long enough to learn it.
  • Aim with your arm, not just your wrist. For larger movements across the play area, a relaxed arm motion is more repeatable than tiny wrist flicks. Save the wrist for small corrections.
  • Click without yanking. Many misses happen because people pull the mouse slightly while clicking. Plant on the target, then click. A light, fast click beats a hard one.
  • Warm up first. Your first run after sitting down is rarely your best. Do a couple of relaxed runs to loosen up before going for a record.
  • Use a clean surface and a decent mouse. A smooth, large mousepad and a responsive mouse remove friction — literally. A trackpad will almost always be slower and less accurate than a real mouse.

The most reliable way to get better is short, frequent sessions rather than one long grind. A few 30-target runs a day, with a sensitivity you don't change, will move your numbers more than an hour of random clicking.

What counts as a fast aim score?

Here's a rough guide for this single-target click test. These are ballpark figures — your mouse, sensitivity and screen size all shift them:

  • Above 900 ms per target — relaxed or warming up.
  • 700–900 ms — around average for most people.
  • 550–700 ms — fast; you've got solid target acquisition.
  • 400–550 ms — very fast, the kind of pace trained players hit.
  • Below 400 ms — elite; clean, confident clicking with almost no wasted movement.

Treat these as a map, not a verdict. The number that matters most is your own best — beating it means your aim genuinely got faster or cleaner, on your setup, today.

Tips for a higher score

  • Look ahead, not at the cursor. Watch for where the next target appears rather than tracking your own pointer. Your hand will follow your eyes faster than you think.
  • Prioritise accuracy at first. Misses quietly wreck both your time and your accuracy score. Get to 100% accuracy comfortably, then start pushing speed.
  • Find a rhythm. The best runs feel like a steady beat — move, click, move, click — rather than a panicked scramble. Smooth is fast.
  • Don't death-grip the mouse. A tense hand overshoots and tires quickly. Hold it firmly but loosely.
  • Reset between runs. If a run goes badly, shake out your hand and start fresh instead of forcing it. Frustration makes you slower.

Why this aim trainer is different

Most aim tests online are buried in ads, gate your results behind a sign-up, or make you screenshot your own screen to share a score. Pageonaut's aim trainer is the opposite: it's clean, has no login, runs entirely in your browser, and replays instantly so you can chase your best without friction.

The real difference is the shareable score card. When you finish, the tool generates a branded image of your result — ms per target, targets per minute and accuracy — that you can post or send as a challenge. No screenshotting a cluttered page; just a clean card that says exactly how fast you are and dares someone to beat it. That's the whole point of a skill test: bragging rights you can actually share.

If raw clicking speed is what you're really chasing, that's what a click speed test measures instead. Pick a steady sensitivity, click Start, and see how fast your aim really is.

Frequently asked questions

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