🎯 Aim Trainer

Click all 30 targets as fast as you can. Measures your average time per target.

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30 Targets

Click every target as fast as possible.

How the Aim Trainer Works

Thirty circular targets appear one at a time at random positions within the play area. Click each target as quickly and accurately as possible. The timer starts the moment each target appears and stops the instant you click it. Your average time per target across all thirty clicks is your final score.

Unlike dedicated aim training software, this test runs entirely in your browser with no download required. It measures the combination of visual reaction speed and mouse movement accuracy, the two core components of aim in first-person games.

What Your Score Means

An average time under 0.4 seconds per target is competitive. Under 0.3 seconds is elite, achieved by dedicated FPS players who train regularly. Most casual players score between 0.45 and 0.65 seconds when first testing. The score improves noticeably with even a few weeks of consistent practice.

Your score is affected by mouse sensitivity, monitor resolution, the surface under your mouse, and whether you are warmed up. Testing cold immediately after sitting down typically produces results 15 to 20 percent slower than a warmed-up score.

Tips to Improve Your Aim

Sensitivity is the most important variable to get right before practising. Most professional FPS players use 400 to 800 DPI with low in-game sensitivity. If you are making large over-corrections, your sensitivity is likely too high. Reduce it by 10 to 15 percent at a time and allow a week of adjustment before judging the change.

Aim training works best in short, focused sessions. Twenty to thirty minutes, three to four times per week, produces better results than daily marathon sessions. Always warm up with the reaction time test before your aim training session. Track your average weekly score and expect improvement of around 0.05 seconds per month during the first three months.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this aim trainer work on mobile?

Aim training is designed for mouse users on desktop. On mobile or touchscreen, results will be significantly slower due to input method differences, not actual aim ability. Try the reaction time or memory tests for a better mobile experience.

How does aim training improve gaming?

Consistent aim training improves mouse movement speed, click accuracy and target acquisition time. These skills transfer directly to FPS games. The improvement is specific to mouse aim and does not automatically transfer to trackpad or controller aim.

What is a good aim trainer score?

Under 0.4 seconds per target is above average. Under 0.3 seconds is competitive level, placing you alongside dedicated FPS players. The global average is around 0.45 seconds per target.

How often should I train?

Three to four sessions per week of 20 to 30 minutes each. Daily training without rest produces diminishing returns because motor coordination improves during recovery, not just during practice.

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