Is 457 ms reaction time good?
A 457 ms average on a simple visual reaction test is well below average, big room to improve. That's 184 ms behind the average adult — noticeable in a duel, and very fixable with a few weeks of short daily practice.
Human reaction time to a visual stimulus follows a bell curve with an average around 273 ms and a standard deviation of about 60 ms. Plug 457 ms into that distribution and you land ahead of roughly 0.1% of the population — the verdict: slow — but trainable.
How 457 ms compares
| Who | Typical reaction time |
|---|---|
| Pro esports player | 170 ms |
| F1 driver (start lights) | 200 ms |
| Average gamer | 230 ms |
| Average adult | 273 ms |
| Average at age 60+ | 330 ms |
| You — 457 ms | 457 ms |
The gap to the average adult (273 ms) is 184 ms. That sounds like a lot, but untrained reaction time responds quickly to practice — the first 30 ms are the easiest you'll ever win.
What 457 ms really means
A 457 ms average is well below the adult mean of ~273 ms. Before worrying, rule out the boring explanations: device touch latency, reacting to the wrong cue, testing while tired, or simply not being warmed up. These routinely add 50–100 ms.
If the number holds up across ten focused rounds on a decent device, it's still not fixed in stone — reaction speed is one of the most trainable basic abilities, at any age.
What affects your reaction time
- Hardware latency. A 60 Hz screen adds up to 16 ms of display delay versus ~4 ms at 240 Hz; cheap mice and old touchscreens add more.
- Warm-up. Your first three attempts of a session are reliably your worst. Never judge yourself cold.
- Caffeine. One coffee speeds you up 3–7% for a few hours. Three coffees make you fast and wrong.
- Attention. Reacting while half-watching a video costs more than any hardware upgrade saves.
How to get faster from 457 ms
Start with the fundamentals: full attention on the stimulus, finger resting on the screen or mouse, react on the change of colour and nothing else.
Short daily sessions compound quickly from this starting point — improvements of 20% or more in the first month are common for untrained beginners.
The full training breakdown — session length, warm-up, measurement — is in our guide: how to improve your reaction time. To see where a specific number lands, check what it takes to reach the top 99%.