What reaction time puts you in the top 4%?
Averaging 168 ms on a simple visual reaction test puts you ahead of 96% of people — the entry ticket to the top 4%.
Modelling human reaction time as a normal distribution (mean 273 ms, standard deviation 60 ms), the top 4% cutoff works out to 168 ms. One fast click doesn't count — percentiles only mean something for your average across many attempts.
The percentile ladder
| To be in the top… | You need |
|---|---|
| Top 1% | 133 ms or faster |
| Top 4% | 168 ms or faster |
| Top 5% | 174 ms or faster |
| Top 10% | 196 ms or faster |
| Top 25% | 233 ms or faster |
| Top 50% | 273 ms or faster |
| Top 75% | 313 ms or faster |
| Top 90% | 350 ms or faster |
This is rarefied air — sub-168 ms averages belong to trained competitors, and most people will never touch this number even once, let alone average it.
How to actually reach the top 4%
At this level you're competing with trained reflexes, so everything has to be right at once: short daily sessions over months, ruthless consistency (ten-round averages, not records), proper sleep, and low-latency hardware — a 60 Hz screen alone can eat your entire margin.
The complete training method is in how to improve your reaction time. When you're ready to measure, the reaction time test runs as a best-of-5 duel — averages, not lucky singles.