Speed and accuracy together
Pure click speed only tells half the story. In most games you also have to put the cursor on the right spot before you click, and that is exactly what an aim trainer measures. Each target appears somewhere new, so you cannot settle into one position. You have to flick the mouse to the target, land on it and click, then immediately reset for the next one.
The trainer reports two numbers that pull against each other: how many targets you hit, and your accuracy, which is the share of your clicks that actually landed on a target. Rushing lifts your hit count but tanks your accuracy as stray clicks pile up. Slowing down protects accuracy but costs you hits. The best runs find the pace where both stay high at once.
How to train your aim
Sit at a comfortable distance and give yourself room to move the mouse freely, without your hand hitting the edge of the pad mid-flick. A steady, repeatable mouse sensitivity helps your muscle memory learn how far a given hand movement travels on screen, which is the foundation of consistent aim.
Work on smooth flicks rather than frantic jerks. Move decisively to the target, let the cursor settle for a fraction of a second if you need to, then click. Over many runs your eyes and hand start to sync, your flicks land closer to the centre, and both your hit count and accuracy climb together. Your best run is saved locally so you always have a target to beat.
Frequently asked questions
How is accuracy calculated?
Accuracy is the percentage of your clicks that landed on a target. If you click twenty times and hit sixteen targets, your accuracy is eighty percent. Missed clicks in empty space lower the figure.
Should I aim for speed or accuracy?
Both. Chasing hits alone wrecks your accuracy, and playing it safe costs you hits. The strongest scores come from a pace where you stay fast without spraying clicks into empty space.
Does this help my aim in games?
It builds the core skills that transfer to most games: flicking the cursor to a spot, landing on it and clicking cleanly. It is a warm up and a benchmark rather than a replacement for playing.