Is 3 CPS good?
3 CPS is below the typical 6–7 CPS most people manage on a standard 5-second test. Usually it means you're clicking with deliberate full presses instead of letting the finger vibrate — technique, not ability.
On the standard 5-second click test, 3 CPS means 15 clicks before the timer runs out. Against a population average of ~6.2 CPS, that puts you behind roughly 98.9% of casual clickers.
Where 3 CPS sits
| Range | CPS | How |
|---|---|---|
| Casual | 3–5 | Normal deliberate clicking |
| Average–good | 6–9 | Regular clicking, optimised |
| Fast | 10–14 | Jitter clicking |
| Extreme | 15–25 | Butterfly / drag clicking |
How to reach (and pass) 3 CPS
At 3 CPS you don't need any special technique — this range is reachable with regular clicking and a relaxed hand. If you want more: rest your wrist, hover the fingertip, and click from the finger joint rather than the whole hand. The jump to 10+ usually requires jitter clicking.
Duration matters as much as technique: everyone's CPS falls on longer windows. If you can do 3 CPS for 5 seconds, expect roughly 2.2 CPS over a full minute — the decay curve is on the 60-second test page.
Does CPS even matter?
In Minecraft PvP, higher CPS wins knockback exchanges. In most other games, raw speed matters less than timing — clicking at the right moment beats clicking often. That's why the blocks.pw Smash duel is only 3 seconds long: it measures burst speed where it actually counts, then the other eight mini-games test everything speed can't fake.