100 Second Click Speed Test
How fast can you click in 100 seconds? Click the button below as fast as you can and find out your CPS score.
This is part of our full click speed test suite. See all duration options at our CPS Test hub.
What Makes the 100 Second Test Unique
The 100 second CPS test is the ultimate endurance challenge among standard click speed formats. At this length, the test has almost nothing to do with burst technique and everything to do with physical stamina, mental focus, and mechanical consistency. Most players are genuinely surprised by how much their CPS drops between their shorter test scores and their 100 second result.
Where the 5 second test measures your peak speed and the 60 second test measures your sustained endurance, the hundred second test reveals your absolute clicking floor — the speed you can reliably maintain when fatigue, focus loss, and physical strain all become real factors.
What Your 100 Second Score Means
Scoring well on the 100 second test requires a different mindset than shorter formats. Under 4 CPS over one hundred seconds indicates clicking mechanics that are entirely effort-dependent with no rhythm or technique. Between 4 and 6 CPS is average for most adults without any dedicated practice. Between 6 and 9 CPS shows solid clicking endurance and consistent mechanics. Reaching 9 to 11 CPS across the full one hundred seconds is genuinely impressive and puts you in advanced territory. Above 11 CPS for the full duration is elite level and requires real physical conditioning alongside good technique.
How to Pace Yourself on the 100 Second Test
Pacing strategy matters more on the 100 second test than any other format. Players who start at maximum effort almost always crash hard around the 30 to 40 second mark as their finger muscles reach fatigue. Once that fade starts it is very difficult to recover within the same attempt.
The most effective approach is to start at 70 to 75 percent of your comfortable maximum speed and hold it steady. If you feel fresh at the 50 second mark, gradually increase your pace for the final stretch. This negative split approach, holding back early and pushing later, consistently produces higher average scores than full effort from the start.
Take the 20 second test and the 60 second test regularly as training tools. Building your endurance across those formats gradually extends the duration you can maintain a consistent click rate, making the hundred second test more manageable over time.
Why Your Score Drops Across Longer Tests
If you compare your scores across different test lengths, you will notice a consistent pattern. Your 1 second score is your highest, your 5 second score is lower, and your hundred second score is your lowest. This is completely expected and reflects the natural relationship between intensity and duration in any physical activity.
The drop from your 5 second score to your 100 second score tells you something useful about your fitness for clicking endurance. A drop of 2 to 3 CPS is typical and healthy. A drop of 5 or more CPS suggests that endurance rather than raw speed is your main limiting factor.
Training for the 100 Second Test
Building endurance for the 100 second test takes a progressive approach. Start each practice session with a few 5 second warmups, then move to 20 second attempts, then 60 second attempts, and finally attempt the one hundred second test. This progressive warmup reduces the shock to your finger muscles and produces more consistent scores.
Keep your grip loose throughout the test. A tight grip on your mouse causes forearm tension that builds up rapidly over 100 seconds and forces your CPS to drop sharply. A relaxed but controlled grip delays fatigue significantly.
Make sure your mouse hardware is not working against you. Use our mouse polling rate checker to confirm 1000Hz polling so every click registers accurately, and check our guide on the best gaming mice for fast clicking if you feel your current mouse is adding unnecessary resistance.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good score on the 100 second CPS test?
For general purposes, 5 to 7 CPS over 100 seconds is a solid result. Reaching 8 to 10 CPS across the full duration shows real endurance. Above 10 CPS for 100 seconds is advanced and reflects consistent training.
Why is the 100 second test so much harder than shorter tests?
Muscle fatigue accumulates over time. Clicking engages the same small muscles repeatedly with no rest. By one hundred seconds those muscles are working continuously for well over a minute, which pushes most people past their comfortable endurance threshold.
Can I use jitter clicking for 100 seconds?
Jitter clicking for 100 seconds is extremely difficult. The forearm tension required causes significant fatigue and most players cannot sustain it beyond 20 to 30 seconds. Regular rhythmic finger clicking is far more practical and sustainable for this format.
Should I take breaks during the test?
No. The test runs continuously and pausing breaks your rhythm and drops your average. Instead focus on starting at a pace you can genuinely sustain for the full duration without needing to stop.
How do I compare my 100 second score to my other scores?
A healthy endurance profile looks like a gradual decline across formats. If your scores look like 12 CPS at 1 second, 10 CPS at 5 seconds, 8 CPS at 10 seconds, 7 CPS at 60 seconds, and 6 CPS at 100 seconds, that is a well-conditioned clicking profile. If the drop is steeper, focus on endurance training with longer format tests.