An aim trainer helps you build mouse accuracy and speed by clicking shrinking circular targets as fast as possible. It's a popular warm-up tool among FPS gamers and anyone who wants to sharpen hand-eye coordination. Select a difficulty, hit 30 targets, and see your accuracy rating and average reaction time.
Select difficulty:
Aim Trainer
Click 30 targets before they shrink away. Move fast — accuracy and reaction time both count.
Medium — 42px targets, 2.0s window
Personal Bests
How to Use the Aim Trainer
This free aim trainer is designed to help you build mouse precision and target acquisition speed. Each round presents 30 circular targets that appear at random positions and slowly shrink — click them before they disappear. Your accuracy percentage and average reaction time are tracked throughout the round and compared to benchmarks.
Step 1: Choose Your Difficulty
Select Easy, Medium, or Hard using the buttons above the game area. Easy mode uses large 60px targets with a 3-second window — great for warming up or first-time players. Medium uses 42px targets with a 2-second window and represents a balanced challenge. Hard shrinks targets to 28px with only 1.5 seconds per target — the standard for serious aim training.
Step 2: Press Start and Click Targets
Click "Start Game" to begin. Targets appear one at a time at random positions in the dark game area. Move your cursor quickly to each target and click it before the shrink animation completes. A hit flash animation confirms successful clicks. Missing a target (letting it shrink away fully) counts as a miss and the next target spawns immediately.
Step 3: Complete All 30 Targets
Each round consists of exactly 30 targets. The HUD bar above the game area shows your current hit count, miss count, and rolling average reaction time in milliseconds. Try to maintain both speed and accuracy — a fast time with poor accuracy still earns a lower rating than a slightly slower but precise performance.
Step 4: Review Your Results
After the 30th target, your results appear immediately: accuracy percentage, average reaction time, hits, misses, and a performance rating. Your best score per difficulty mode is stored in your browser and displayed in the Personal Bests section. Beat your previous best to see the "New Best!" indicator.
Understanding Your Rating
Ratings are based on accuracy percentage and average reaction time combined:
- Sharpshooter — 95%+ accuracy and <300ms average reaction time: elite level aim
- Marksman — 85%+ accuracy: above average, competitive gamer level
- Average — 70%+ accuracy: solid performance, most regular users fall here
- Needs Practice — below 70% accuracy: keep training to build consistency
Tips to Improve Your Aim
Consistent daily practice is the most reliable way to improve your mouse accuracy. Start on Easy to build muscle memory, then progress to Medium and Hard as your accuracy stabilizes above 90%. Use a low mouse DPI (400–800) for more precise control — high sensitivity makes small targets harder to hit reliably. Keep your wrist slightly raised and use your arm for larger movements. A quality mouse pad and consistent monitor distance also reduce variability between sessions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this aim trainer free?
Yes, this aim trainer is completely free with no signup required. Everything runs locally in your browser — no data is collected or sent to any server.
Is my data private?
Absolutely. All game data runs entirely in your browser. Your scores and stats are only stored in your local browser storage and are never sent anywhere.
How does the aim trainer work?
A circular target appears at a random position in the game area. Each target slowly shrinks over its lifetime — click it before it disappears to score a hit. Miss the window and it counts as a miss. You play 30 targets per round.
What is a good accuracy score?
95%+ accuracy earns the Sharpshooter rating, 85%+ is Marksman, 70%+ is Average, and below 70% is Needs Practice. Most casual users score in the Average range on their first try. Consistent practice improves both accuracy and reaction time.
What do the difficulty modes change?
Easy uses large targets (60px) with a 3-second window. Medium uses medium targets (42px) with a 2-second window. Hard uses small targets (28px) with a 1.5-second window. The harder the mode, the faster and more precise you must be.
How is reaction time calculated?
Reaction time is measured from the moment a target appears to the moment you click it. Only successful hits are counted. The average across all 30 hits gives your final reaction time. Lower is better.
Does this help improve real gaming aim?
Click-target trainers build the habit of fast, decisive cursor movement and improve hand-eye coordination. While it's a simplified version of in-game aim, regular practice noticeably improves mouse accuracy and target acquisition speed over time.
Can I track my best score?
Yes. Your best score for each difficulty mode is saved in your browser's localStorage. The results screen shows your current stats and your all-time best for the current difficulty.