A free collection of click, tap, and reaction tests built for gamers.
Can You Click It? is a free, browser-based suite of input speed tests. It started as a click speed test (CPS) for Minecraft PvP players who wanted a clean way to benchmark themselves, and grew into a wider collection of tests spanning desktop and mobile — clicking, spacebar, reaction time, jitter clicking, butterfly clicking, double clicking, scroll speed, aim training, typing, and a full set of touch-based tests for phones and tablets.
Every test runs in your browser. No accounts, no downloads, no installs. Open a test, hit start, see how fast you really are.
Can You Click It? is built and maintained by Silly Games Lab, the small studio behind a growing set of browser games and tools at sillygameslab.com.
The site is plain HTML, CSS, and JavaScript with no build step — written with the help of AI coding tools, then reviewed and shipped by hand. The leaderboards are powered by a single Cloudflare Worker backed by Workers KV, and the site itself is hosted on Cloudflare Pages. We chose this stack because it's fast, free at the traffic levels we see, and simple enough that one person can maintain the whole thing.
We try to keep the experience clean: tests sit at the top of every page, written content sits below for context, and ads — where they appear — stay out of the test area itself so they never interfere with timing.
Every test ranks your score against a fixed twenty-level system, so you always know where you sit relative to a casual player, an average gamer, or a competitive Minecraft PvP player. The all-time and daily leaderboards are public and you can submit a score with just three letters as your initials — no email, no account.
Alongside the tests we publish guides covering technique, technique safety, score interpretation, and world records — How to Click Faster, Good CPS Score, Jitter Click Health, CPS World Records, plus mobile counterparts. The aim is to give honest context to anyone trying to improve their score, including the trade-offs of techniques like jitter clicking that can cause hand injuries if overused.
If you've spotted a bug, want to suggest a test, or want to ask a question, head to the contact page or email [email protected].
If you enjoy this one, you might also like the rest of the lab's work at sillygameslab.com — word games, quizzes, and other small browser projects.