Aim Trainer

ReflexMouse SkillPrecisionTraining
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Aim Trainer screenshot

About Aim Trainer

Aim Trainer is a click-accuracy workout built for anyone who wants to sharpen mouse or touchscreen precision. Targets spawn at random positions across the play area and shrink steadily from their maximum size down to nothing over a 1.2-second window. Clicking a target anywhere inside its border counts as a hit; letting it expire without clicking counts as a miss. After 60 seconds the session ends and shows your hit count, miss count, accuracy percentage, and average reaction time per target — the four metrics that pro FPS players use to track warm-up quality.

Target size variety is the defining challenge: large targets (80-pixel radius) spawn frequently and test broad movement; medium targets (45-pixel radius) require precise cursor placement; and small targets (22-pixel radius) appear occasionally and demand near-perfect aim. The session always ends with the same total number of targets regardless of the size distribution your run happens to generate, so score comparison between sessions is meaningful. A perfect session — no misses — requires both fast movement and clean deceleration into small targets, skills that train separately but must combine.

Reaction time is measured from the moment a target reaches its maximum visible size to when you click it. Average reaction time below 250 ms with 90%+ accuracy is the threshold for what FPS coaching communities call a "clean warmup." Users who run five aim-trainer sessions per day before playing competitive shooters report measurable improvement in in-game headshot percentage within two weeks, as the trainer isolates the cursor-to-target skill from the cognitive load of game decision-making.

How to Play

Tips & Strategies

Move to the target's future position

Targets spawn and shrink in place. Move your cursor to where the target is, not where your cursor was — sounds obvious but most beginners chase the last target's position after clicking.

Use wrist movement for small targets

Large targets can be hit with broad arm swings; small targets require wrist microadjustments. Consciously switch movement style based on target size — mixing methods creates inconsistency.

Track your reaction time, not just accuracy

Accuracy without speed is not useful. If your accuracy is above 95% but your average reaction time is above 400 ms, focus session on clicking faster — you are being careful but slow.

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