CPS CHECK

CPS IMPROVEMENT TRACKER

Log your daily CPS scores to track your improvement over time. Data is saved locally in your browser.

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AVERAGE
ENTRIES
0
RECENT TREND
HISTORY LOG
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CPS Improvement Tracker: Visualize Your Progress

Log your daily CPS scores, track your improvement over time, and visualize your journey to elite clicking speed.

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Progress
Data visualization
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Daily
Consistency is key
🔥
Plateaus
Overcome stagnation
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Adaptation
Neurological growth

🎯The Science of Improvement

Improving your CPS is exactly like going to the gym. You are training the fast-twitch muscle fibers in your forearm and building new neurological pathways. Progress is never a straight line; you will experience peaks and plateaus.

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Did You Know?

Muscle memory consolidation happens while you sleep. If you practice clicking for an hour, your CPS might actually drop due to fatigue. But after a full night of sleep, your baseline speed the next morning will be permanently higher.

📊Phases of CPS Growth

PhaseTimelineDescription
The Noob GainsDays 1-7Massive improvements just from learning the technique and holding the mouse correctly.
The PlateauDays 8-20Progress slows to a halt. Muscles are adapting. Frustration is common.
The BreakthroughDays 21+Neurological pathways are fully insulated with myelin, leading to sudden, effortless speed increases.

🛠️How to Use the Tracker Effectively

01
☀️

Test at the Same Time Every Day

High Impact

Your nervous system is faster in the morning than late at night. For accurate data, always log your score at the exact same time of day.

02
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Warm Up Before Logging

Medium Impact

Never log your first click test of the day. Do 3 warmup tests, and log your 4th attempt to capture your true physiological maximum.

03
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Rest on Bad Days

High Impact

If your score is dropping for 2 days in a row, your forearm is fatigued. Take 48 hours completely off from clicking to allow the muscles to repair.

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Pro Tip

Do not change your mouse or your grip style while tracking your progress. Changing variables resets your muscle memory and makes your historical tracking data irrelevant.

Key Takeaways

  • Track your average score, not your personal best
  • Log scores consistently but schedule rest days to prevent injury
  • Always perform warm-up tests before logging an official score
  • Keep hardware and grip variables constant to maintain reliable data
  • Push through plateaus with patience and consistent practice

Frequently Asked Questions

Your CPS scores are saved in your browser's local storage, which means the data is completely private and never sent to any server. The trade-off is that your history only persists on the device and browser where you logged it. If you clear your browser data, switch to a different browser, use a private/incognito window, or move to a new device, your history will not carry over. There is no cloud backup by design — that is what makes the data private.

Like any physical skill, clicking speed improves with structured, consistent practice — but only if you can actually see the improvement happening. Tracking your scores daily lets you spot micro-improvements, identify plateaus, and figure out which clicking technique (jitter, butterfly, regular) actually yields the best results for your specific hand. Without data, you are guessing whether a new mouse or technique is helping. With data, you know.

Most players see measurable improvement (0.5-1.5 CPS) within 2-3 weeks of consistent practice. Reaching the next tier (Rabbit to Fox, Fox to Cheetah) typically takes 1-3 months. Learning a new advanced technique like jitter or butterfly clicking takes 4-8 weeks to internalize. The fastest gains come from short, daily practice sessions (5-15 minutes) with rest days built in — daily grinding without rest actually slows progress and increases injury risk.

Three to four times per week is the sweet spot. Logging every day can be misleading because your first session after a rest day is usually lower, which drags your average down. Logging less than twice a week does not give enough data to spot trends. Aim for a consistent schedule — same days of the week, same time of day if possible — so the data is comparable. Most importantly, log scores after a proper warm-up, never cold.

Yes, that is one of the best uses for it. A/B testing is straightforward: log at least 10-15 scores with your current setup to establish a baseline, then change one variable (new mouse, new technique, different grip), log another 10-15 scores, and compare the averages. Make sure you change only one variable at a time, or you will not know which change actually caused the improvement. The dashboard makes this kind of comparison very easy.

A sudden drop usually has a specific cause, and the tracker helps you spot it quickly. Common reasons include: you are tired or burned out from over-practicing, your mouse switch is wearing out (run the Double Click Test to check), your polling rate dropped after a software update (verify with the Mouse Rate Checker), or you recently changed technique and have not fully adapted yet. If none of those apply, take 3-5 days off and re-test — sometimes a short rest is all you need to reset.