Reaction Click Test

Benchmark mouse reaction speed with a wait-for-green click test, attempt history, and latency-focused scoring.

Reaction Click Test helps mouse users testing clicks, buttons, scrolling, reaction speed, DPI movement, and switch behavior. It focuses on click timing, button state, scroll behavior, movement or drag stability and runs directly in the browser.

What this page checks

  • click timing
  • button state
  • scroll behavior
  • movement or drag stability
  • Reaction Click Test result interpretation

How to use Reaction Click Test

  1. Open Reaction Click Test on the same browser and device you want to diagnose.
  2. Most mouse tests use pointer and button events; DPI estimation may use pointer lock for raw movement capture.
  3. Run the visible reaction click test controls and watch the live result area update before judging the hardware.
  4. Repeat the test once or twice, then compare related InputLab tools if the mouse behavior looks inconsistent.

How to read the result

Reaction Click Test is most useful when you read the result as a practical browser diagnostic. Browser event timing, operating-system pointer settings, polling rate, and repeated runs all affect the final reading. A repeated pattern across multiple runs is more meaningful than one isolated spike, missed event, or visual artifact.

Privacy and permissions

Most mouse tests use pointer and button events; DPI estimation may use pointer lock for raw movement capture. Tests are designed to run locally in the browser, with permissions controlled by the browser.

Reaction Click Test FAQ

What does Reaction Click Test check?

Benchmark mouse reaction speed with a wait-for-green click test, attempt history, and latency-focused scoring. It is designed for mouse users testing clicks, buttons, scrolling, reaction speed, DPI movement, and switch behavior.

Is Reaction Click Test accurate?

Browser event timing, operating-system pointer settings, polling rate, and repeated runs all affect the final reading.

Do I need to install anything for Reaction Click Test?

No. Most mouse tests use pointer and button events; DPI estimation may use pointer lock for raw movement capture.

Are results uploaded to a server?

The page uses local browser events or browser hardware APIs. InputLab does not need to upload the diagnostic result.

What should I try if the result looks wrong?

Check browser focus, device selection, operating-system settings, and then run related mouse tools to separate a device problem from a browser or permission issue.