1-second click test: what counts as good?
Clicks per second falls as the window grows — burst speed fades into endurance. For 1 second, 9.9+ CPS is a good score and 12.5+ CPS is excellent.
A 1-second window is a pure burst test: no endurance, no pacing, just how violently your finger can start. Scores here run the highest of any duration — there's no time to slow down.
Score bands for 1 second
| Band | Rate | Total clicks |
|---|---|---|
| Average | 7.6 CPS | ≈ 8 |
| Good | 9.9 CPS | ≈ 10 |
| Excellent | 12.5 CPS | ≈ 13 |
Why the duration changes everything
Modelling sustained clicking as a decay curve calibrated to the 5-second average of 6.2 CPS: a clicker who bursts 7.6 CPS for one second holds only ~4.9 CPS across 30 seconds and ~4.2 CPS across 100. Comparing scores across different durations is meaningless — always quote the window with the number.
Strategy for the 1-second window
Go all-out from the first millisecond — the window ends before fatigue exists. Pre-tense the forearm, start clicking before you consciously decide to, and treat it like a single explosive movement rather than a series of clicks.
Compare your rate against the verdict pages — say is 10 CPS good? — or see how the pros inflate their numbers with butterfly and drag clicking.