Right Click CPS Test
Measure how fast you can right-click. Pick a duration, then right-click the pad as fast as you can — your first right-click starts the clock, and the context menu stays out of the way. It counts the right mouse button only, so you'll need a mouse. Want the regular version? Try the CPS Test.
Right-click to start
Then right-click as fast as you can for 5 seconds.
Clicks over time
5s testHow it works
Choose how long to test for — a quick 1- or 5-second burst, the classic 10-second run, or up to 100 seconds for stamina. The clock starts on your first right-click so no reaction time is wasted, and from there we count every right mouse button press and divide by the duration to get your clicks per second. Left-clicks are ignored and the browser context menu is suppressed on the pad, so you can spam the right button freely.
Why right-click speed matters
The right mouse button does a surprising amount of work in games — blocking, aiming, placing or using items, and secondary attacks are commonly bound to it. Because most people drill left-click far more, the right button is often the weaker, less consistent one, which makes it worth practicing. A higher, steadier right-click rate translates to tighter control whenever a game leans on that button.
Tips for a fair test
- Use a mouse — right-click isn't available on touchscreens.
- Keep your hand relaxed and tap from the knuckle rather than the whole finger.
- Compare scores at the same duration; burst speed and endurance are different skills.
- Check your hardware with the Mouse Polling Rate Tester if your clicks feel like they aren't registering.
Frequently asked questions
What is a right-click CPS test?
It's a click speed test that counts only your right mouse button. You right-click the pad as fast as you can for the time you pick, and it reports your clicks per second (CPS) — total right-clicks divided by the duration. It works exactly like a normal CPS test, just on the other button, and the right-click context menu is disabled on the pad so it won't interrupt you.
How is it different from a normal CPS test?
Only the button changes. A standard test usually counts left-clicks, while this one ignores left-clicks and tallies right-clicks instead. Most people are noticeably slower with the right button because the middle and ring fingers that often rest on it are less dexterous than the index finger, so don't be surprised if your right-click CPS is lower than your left. If you want to compare, run the regular left-click CPS test too.
Why would I test my right-click speed?
Mostly for gaming. In a lot of games the right mouse button handles a frequently spammed action — blocking, aiming down sights, using or placing items, or a secondary attack — so right-click speed and consistency can matter as much as left. It's also just a fun way to benchmark your less-practiced button and even out both hands' clicking ability.
Why doesn't it work on my phone or trackpad?
Touchscreens have no concept of a right-click, so a tap won't register on this test — you need a real mouse. On a laptop trackpad you can usually right-click with a two-finger tap or by pressing the bottom-right corner, but it'll be far too slow for a meaningful score, so a mouse is strongly recommended. If nothing registers, that's why: the pad is deliberately listening for the right button only.
How can I right-click faster?
The same techniques that speed up left-clicking apply: keeping your hand relaxed, tapping from the knuckle rather than the whole finger, and using jitter or butterfly motions if you want to push higher numbers. A mouse with a light right switch and a high polling rate helps too. Practice matters most, since the fingers you use for right-click usually get far less exercise than your index finger.
