Aim Trainer

Targets Left

30

Time

0.00s

Hits / Second

0.00

Best Run

Benchmark

30-target completion times

This reference curve shows a typical spread for clean 30-target aim trainer runs. Your latest completed time is plotted on the chart when the session ends.

Reference distribution Clear 30 targets to plot your result.

How It Works

Thirty targets, one timer

  1. Step 1

    Click inside the large blue arena to start the run.

  2. Step 2

    Hit each red target as soon as it appears in a new position.

  3. Step 3

    Finish all 30 targets to stop the clock and compare your latest run with the benchmark.

Finish Line

A completed run shows your final time, updates your best run if you beat it, and plots the latest result on the benchmark chart so you can compare pace at a glance.

Why It Matters

Why a basic aim trainer still helps

Even a simple click-target drill can help you warm up hand speed, mouse control, and visual pickup. This version is intentionally lightweight, but it still gives you a quick way to practice target acquisition and measure clean runs over time.

Focus

Target acquisition

Goal

Fast clean runs

How to get more from aim training

Aim training works best when the challenge is simple enough to repeat and measure. Try to stay accurate first, then push speed once your clicks feel controlled.

Accuracy First

Missed clicks waste more time than slightly slower but deliberate hits.

Stay Smooth

Avoid overflicking. Cleaner cursor movement usually leads to more consistent runs.

Repeat Short Sets

Several short runs are often better than one long grind when you are trying to sharpen form.

FAQs

Aim Trainer FAQ

+ How is the score measured?

The timer runs from the moment your run starts until you finish all 30 targets. Lower completion times are better.

+ Does my best run save?

Yes. Your best aim trainer run is stored in your browser, so it stays on the same device after refresh.

+ Why do the targets keep changing position?

Moving the target after every hit forces you to reacquire it each time, which makes the drill more useful for flicking and visual pickup than clicking the same spot repeatedly.

+ Is this enough for a full warmup?

It is a good starting point, but most players get better results when they combine click drills with tracking practice and time in their actual game too.

+ Can I use this on mobile?

Yes, you can tap targets on a phone or tablet, but the test is still more representative of aim practice when you use a mouse on desktop.

+ Why keep the trainer simple?

A minimal setup makes it fast to load, easy to repeat, and straightforward to improve later without overcomplicating the first version.

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