19 Second Click Speed Test
How fast can you click in 19 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.
One Second Before the 20 Second Challenge
The 19 second CPS test is a direct preview of your 20 second performance. With just one second of difference, your result here is almost always within 0.2 to 0.4 CPS of your twenty second average. Players who want to gauge where they stand before attempting the 20 second format use the 19 second test as a lower-stakes warm-up.
Nineteen seconds is also the last format before the duration shifts significantly toward a clicking fitness challenge rather than a speed challenge. At 20 seconds and beyond, pacing strategy starts to matter as much as raw technique.
What Your 19 Second Score Means
A score of 4 to 6 CPS is a casual, untrained clicking pace. Between 6 and 9 CPS is the range most gamers who practice regularly reach. Hitting 9 to 11 CPS over nineteen seconds shows strong clicking ability. Above 11 CPS for the full nineteen seconds reflects genuine clicking fitness and technique quality.
If your 19 second score is significantly lower than your 10 second result, clicking fitness is the area to work on. Practice consistently at mid-range durations like 12, 15, and 17 seconds to gradually raise the threshold at which fatigue affects your output.
19 Second CPS Test FAQs
Is the 19 second test useful if I only ever use the 20 second format?
Yes. Taking the 19 second test before a 20 second attempt warms up your clicking muscles at the appropriate duration and gives you a realistic score expectation. Players who warm up at the same length as their main test format consistently produce better results than those who go cold into long tests.
What is a realistic target for the 19 second test for a competitive gamer?
For Minecraft PvP, 9 to 11 CPS over nineteen seconds is a meaningful competitive target. Check your Kohi click test score alongside this format to compare your short and medium-duration performance.