28 Second Click Speed Test
How fast can you click in 28 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.
Two Seconds From the 30 Second Mark
The 28 second CPS test is as close to the 30 second standard as you can get without taking that test directly. At two seconds of difference, the physical and mental demands are nearly identical. Your 28 second score predicts your 30 second average with very high accuracy, typically within 0.3 CPS for most players.
This format is especially useful when your clicking muscles are slightly fatigued and you want to track your performance without committing to the full 30 second run. The two-second reduction in demand is small enough that the data is still meaningful but large enough to matter when repetitions are accumulating.
What Your 28 Second Score Means
Between 4 and 6 CPS is casual clicking with no dedicated technique. Between 6 and 9 CPS is the standard range for regular gamers. Reaching 9 to 11 CPS over twenty-eight seconds shows genuine clicking output at this duration. Above 11 CPS for the full window is advanced performance and reflects clicking fitness built through consistent training.
Compare your 28 second result to your 20 second score. A drop of around 1 CPS across 8 additional seconds is healthy. A larger gap means your clicking output loses more than expected over sustained durations and targeted pacing practice at mid-range lengths would help close it.
28 Second CPS Test FAQs
Is the 28 second test a good substitute for the 30 second test?
For training purposes yes, particularly in sessions where you are already fatigued from earlier attempts. The two-second reduction produces nearly identical training stimulus at a slightly lower per-attempt cost. For record tracking, the 30 second format is more commonly used as a benchmark.
Should I treat the 28 second test as a warm-up for 30 seconds?
Yes. One or two 28 second attempts before your 30 second runs prime your clicking muscles at the right duration and give you a pace calibration for the full-length test. Players who warm up at the same scale as their main format consistently produce better results than those who go cold into long tests.