21 Second Click Speed Test

How fast can you click in 21 seconds? Click the button below as fast as you can and find out your CPS score.

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21 second test • Click as fast as you can
Time
21s
Clicks
0
CPS
0

This is part of our full click speed test suite. See all duration options at our CPS Test hub.

Pushing Past the 20 Second Mark

The 21 second CPS test extends one second beyond the 20 second format, entering the territory where clicking fitness becomes the dominant factor. At twenty-one seconds, burst-based techniques cannot compensate for insufficient clicking stamina. What you see in your 21 second score is a truer measure of your sustained clicking baseline than any shorter format provides.

Players working toward the 30 second test often find that practicing at 21 seconds builds the right level of clicking fitness without requiring the full commitment of a 30 second run in every session.

What Your 21 Second Score Means

Between 4 and 6 CPS is a relaxed pace with no focused technique. Between 6 and 9 CPS is solid for gamers who practice regularly. Reaching 9 to 11 CPS over twenty-one seconds shows strong clicking fitness. Above 11 CPS at this length is genuinely advanced and reflects consistent technique paired with real clicking conditioning.

Use your 21 second result to evaluate your output drop. Compare it to your 5 second score. A difference of 2 to 3 CPS is healthy and normal across that length gap. A difference larger than that means clicking fitness training should take priority over technique refinement.

21 Second CPS Test FAQs

Why does my score drop noticeably past 20 seconds?

Twenty seconds is roughly the threshold where most players without dedicated long-duration training start to see meaningful fatigue effects. Regular practice at 20 to 25 second durations gradually raises this threshold. Short daily sessions are more effective than occasional long grinds for building clicking stamina.

What pace should I target on the 21 second test?

Start at about 80 to 85 percent of your comfortable maximum CPS and hold it steady. Players who start too fast almost always fade in the final third of the test. A paced approach produces a higher average CPS and a more consistent training outcome than going all out from the start.