Aim Trainer
Hit 30 targets as fast as you can. Speed and accuracy both count.
What does an aim trainer measure?
This aim trainer tests how quickly and precisely you can move the cursor to a target and click it. You'll chase 30 targets that appear one at a time at random positions; we track your average time per target in milliseconds and your accuracy, the share of your clicks that actually landed on a target. Lower time per target is better, and the ⚡ Lightning tier starts under 500 ms.
How this test works
Press Start, then click each volt-green dot as it appears. A new target spawns the instant you hit the last one, so there's no waiting. Clicks that miss the target count against your accuracy, so resist the urge to spam. Controlled, deliberate clicks score higher than frantic ones.
How to improve your aim
Find a mouse sensitivity (DPI) that lets you cross the arena with one comfortable movement of the wrist or forearm, then stick with it so your muscle memory can build. Flick to the target and stop. Don't drift past it and correct back. Keep your grip relaxed. Practising short, focused sessions improves both your speed and your consistency, and your best is saved on your device.
Frequently asked questions
- How does the aim trainer score work?
- You click 30 targets that appear one at a time. The test measures your average time per target and your accuracy, so both speed and precision count toward your result.
- What is a good time per target?
- Under one second per target is a good baseline. Under 700 ms is fast, and under 500 ms is Lightning tier, the kind of flick speed competitive FPS players train for.
- How can I improve my aim?
- Find a mouse sensitivity you can repeat consistently, move from the wrist and forearm rather than the fingers for large flicks, and stop your cursor on the target instead of overshooting. Short daily sessions build muscle memory.
- Does mouse sensitivity matter?
- A lot. A consistent DPI and in-game sensitivity let you build reliable muscle memory. Most players do best somewhere between low and medium sensitivity.