The Kohi click test
Kohi was a Minecraft PvP server whose built-in 10-second click counter became the unofficial standard for measuring CPS. The server is gone; the test's name stuck.
Ask an old Minecraft PvP player their CPS and they'll quote their Kohi score. The Kohi server's practice lobby had a simple counter — clicks over 10 seconds — and because everyone tested there, "Kohi click test" became shorthand for the 10-second CPS window itself.
What a good Kohi score looks like
Over 10 seconds, fatigue already bites: the population average lands near 5.7 CPS (57 clicks). Good is ~7.4 CPS, excellent ~9.3. Serious PvP players targeted 8–12 CPS with jitter clicking; the full bands are on the 10-second test page.
The 10-second window is the test's real legacy — long enough to punish pure burst, short enough to stay a sprint. It filters one-second heroes brutally.
Why a Minecraft server defined a benchmark
In Minecraft 1.8 PvP, click rate affected hit frequency and knockback, so CPS was a genuine competitive stat. Kohi's counter was simply where everyone measured — and when the server shut down, dozens of "Kohi click test" sites appeared to fill the ritual. The name outlived the place, like a dead bar everyone still gives directions by.
Testing the modern way
A counter can't pressure you. A duel can. Smash on blocks.pw compresses the click test into 3 head-to-head seconds against a real opponent — same skill, live scoreboard, no download. Check your rate's verdict at is 8 CPS good?