Fast Click is a precision speed game that measures your ability to click appearing targets quickly and accurately. Each round lasts 30 seconds. Circular targets appear at randomised positions on the screen and shrink gradually over 1.5 seconds before disappearing. Clicking a target scores points; letting a target expire without clicking penalises your accuracy rating. The scoring system rewards both speed and accuracy simultaneously: a fast click on a large target scores fewer points than a fast click on a small (nearly expired) target, incentivising controlled aggression over mindless spam-clicking.
There are three game modes: Classic (single target at a time, clean and focused), Burst (three targets appear simultaneously — you must prioritise), and Frenzy (targets appear every 0.5 seconds with a 1-second lifetime, maximum chaos). Classic mode is ideal for warming up; Burst mode trains peripheral vision and target selection priority; Frenzy mode is the benchmark for elite performance, demanding over 9 CPS (clicks per second) just to keep pace. The high-score leaderboard tracks best scores per mode separately.
Fast Click has a secondary function as a genuine reaction-time trainer. The built-in stats panel shows your average reaction time per click, miss rate, and click consistency (variance between your fastest and slowest clicks). Improving your consistency score — rather than just your raw speed — is the mark of a trained player. Mobile support uses touch: tap targets with your thumb, and the target sizing automatically scales up on small screens to compensate for touch imprecision.
Targets randomise their position with a mild centre-bias. Park your cursor slightly left-of-centre (most people are right-handed and drift right) and you'll average fewer cursor travel distances per click.
Below 90% accuracy, missed targets subtract from your score faster than extra clicks add to it. Fix misses first — then push click speed once your hit rate is reliable.
Burst mode forces eye movement between three targets at once. That peripheral vision training carries directly into Classic mode, where your eye reaches new targets faster after Burst training.