Mouse Clicker Test
Use the mouse clicker test to confirm click frequency and missed clicks before buying a low-latency mouse or repairing a switch.
Check path
Run the CPS check once at normal speed before trying fast clicking.
Watch whether every deliberate click increments once without missed or duplicate counts.
Compare another port, browser, or mouse before treating click frequency as hardware failure.
Buy later
Keep the mouse when clicks register cleanly at normal speed.
Fix software when macros, overlays, or browser focus change the result.
Compare low-latency mouse options only when missed clicks or delay repeat across clean tests.
Repair picks
When click latency, polling consistency, or DPI steps stay bad after software and connection checks, compare wired or low-latency wireless mice.
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FAQs
How do I run a mouse clicker test? +
Open the mouse tester, start the CPS check, and click in a controlled way. First confirm normal deliberate clicks register, then use faster clicking only if you want a speed reading.
Does low CPS mean my mouse is broken? +
No. CPS depends on the user, browser focus, and test style. Hardware is more likely when slow deliberate clicks are missed or counted twice.
Can a failing switch affect click frequency? +
Yes. A worn switch can miss clicks or create duplicate clicks. Compare the double-click test before buying a new mouse.
When should I buy a low-latency mouse for click frequency? +
Only when deliberate clicks register late, miss, or feel inconsistent after closing overlays, changing ports, and comparing another browser. If the result is clean at normal speed, low CPS is usually practice, not hardware.
Run the source test.
Use the matching live tester first, then return to the model page only if the fault repeats.