Mouse Accuracy Test
Measure click precision across three target sizes — from body shots to headshot accuracy.
Mouse Accuracy Test
Click targets precisely — 30 second challenge
Choose Difficulty
Target size: 50px diameter
What Is a Mouse Accuracy Test?
A mouse accuracy test evaluates how precisely you can position your cursor on a target and click it. Unlike the Aim Trainer (which measures how quickly you can click appearing targets), this test focuses on pure precision — measuring the percentage of clicks that land within the target versus total clicks. Three difficulty levels let you test precision at different target sizes, reflecting different gaming scenarios from large character hitboxes to precise headshot targets.
Difficulty Levels
Three target sizes reflecting real gaming scenarios
Equivalent to body shots on nearby targets in FPS games.
Focus on building speed while maintaining good accuracy.
Equivalent to chest/shoulder shots at medium range.
Balance between speed and precision. The standard difficulty.
Equivalent to headshots or distant targets in FPS games.
Slow down and prioritize precision over speed.
How to Improve Mouse Accuracy
Practical tips to raise your score
Set the Right DPI
Most precision FPS players use 400–800 DPI. Low DPI forces larger arm movements that are easier to control precisely. Test different DPI levels here to find your optimal setting.
Disable Mouse Acceleration
Turn off Enhance Pointer Precision in Windows. This ensures consistent cursor movement regardless of mouse speed, making muscle memory reliable.
Use a Large Mousepad
A larger mousepad allows full arm movements. Arm aiming is more consistent than wrist aiming for precision targeting.
Practice Small Targets Daily
Spend 10 minutes daily on the Small (28px) difficulty. Consistent, focused practice builds the muscle memory needed for headshot accuracy.
Who Should Use This Test?
Common use cases
FPS Gamers
Measure your headshot precision and identify whether DPI or sensitivity adjustments improve your accuracy score.
Mouse Buyers
Compare your accuracy before and after switching mice to objectively measure whether the new mouse improves your performance.
Sensitivity Tuners
Test accuracy at different DPI and sensitivity combinations to find the setting that gives you the highest consistent score.
Beginners
Start with Large targets to build confidence, then progressively move to smaller sizes as your control improves.
Mouse Accuracy Glossary
Key terms explained
- Accuracy %
- Percentage of clicks that land within the target area. Formula: (hits / total clicks) × 100.
- eDPI (Effective DPI)
- Hardware DPI × in-game sensitivity. Used to compare sensitivities across different games and players.
- Mouse Acceleration
- A setting that makes cursor speed vary with physical mouse speed. Disabling it (Enhance Pointer Precision in Windows) makes movement predictable.
- Arm Aiming
- Moving the mouse using shoulder and elbow. More stable and consistent for large movements and precision targeting.
- Wrist Aiming
- Moving the mouse using wrist rotation. Better for small adjustments and quick flicks, less consistent for large sweeping movements.
Mouse Accuracy Test FAQ
Common questions about mouse accuracy, DPI settings, and improving precision.
Related Hardware Tests
More free tools to check your setup.
Mouse DPI Test
Calculate your mouse's actual DPI by moving it a measured distance. Verify if your mouse matches its rated specification.
Mouse Polling Rate Test
Measure mouse polling rate (browser event Hz) with distribution, median, peak, and stability checks.
Reaction Time Test
Measure your reflex speed in milliseconds with a 5-round click test. Compare to gamer and average population benchmarks.
Aim Trainer
Click targets to train mouse accuracy and measure targets per second. Three difficulty levels: large, medium, and small targets.
Input Lag Test
Measure browser-level click-to-frame latency using requestAnimationFrame. See average, best, and worst lag across 10 clicks.
About This Test
Methodology: Accuracy is calculated as hits divided by total clicks × 100. A hit is any click whose pointer coordinates fall within the circular target boundary at the moment of the mousedown event. The test runs for 30 seconds per session.
About: Tested across Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari. Click detection uses pointer events for sub-millisecond precision. Target sizes are calibrated to match common FPS hitbox scenarios.
Disclaimer: This test measures browser-level click precision. Results depend on your current mouse settings (DPI, acceleration, polling rate) and monitor resolution. Disable mouse acceleration for the most consistent results.