About Aim Trainer
Aim Trainer is a free browser aim test that puts your reflexes and click accuracy on the clock. Targets pop up, you click them as fast as you can, and the game tracks every hit, miss, and millisecond. Pick between a timed run for max hits or a target-count race for the fastest finish — no download, no signup, no account.
How to Play
- Pick your mode: timed (30 seconds, score as many hits as possible) or target-count (hit 30 targets as fast as you can).
- Targets appear at random positions across the play area.
- Click or tap each target the moment it pops up — accuracy matters as much as speed.
- The HUD shows your live hits, accuracy percentage, and average reaction time.
- Finish to see your best run, broken down by hits, accuracy, and average reaction in milliseconds.
Tips & Strategy
- Don't chase. Let your cursor rest near the center and react when targets appear.
- Lower your mouse sensitivity if your shots overshoot — slower DPI gives you cleaner micro-adjustments.
- Warm up with a few short runs before going for a personal best.
- Track your average reaction time, not just your hit count. Sub-300ms is solid, sub-200ms is fast.
- The target-count mode is where the real ranking lives — speed under pressure separates good from great.
The Aim Trainer Family
Aim trainers come in two camps. The serious ones — Aimlabs, KovaaK's, and Aiming.Pro on Steam — are built for competitive FPS players grinding Valorant, CS2, Apex, Fortnite, and Overwatch routines. The browser-based ones — 3D Aim Trainer, AimBooster, and the original aimtrainer.io — strip the genre back to clicks, dots, and stopwatches. Aim Trainer on FunClicker is the quick browser version. Two modes, instant play, no install, runs in any tab. Train for thirty seconds between matches or settle a "fastest 30 targets" argument with a friend.
FAQ
What is an aim trainer?
An aim trainer is a game built specifically to drill mouse accuracy and reaction time. Targets appear, you click them, the game measures hit percentage and average response. It's the easiest way to isolate aim from every other variable in an FPS.
Do aim trainers actually improve your aim?
Yes, with consistent practice. Studies and player data both show measurable improvement in tracking, flick precision, and reaction time within a few weeks of daily 15 to 30 minute sessions. The transfer to in-game aim is real but works best when paired with actual match time.
Is Aim Lab or KovaaK's better?
Both are excellent. KovaaK's has a deeper library of community scenarios and is the standard for competitive pros training Valorant, CS2, and Apex. Aim Lab is free, has cleaner onboarding, and runs more accessibly. For drilling specific weaknesses, KovaaK's. For starting out, Aim Lab.
What is a good reaction time for aim training?
Average adult reaction time is around 250 milliseconds. Trained gamers consistently hit 180 to 200 ms. Sub-150 ms is elite territory. Aim trainers measure click reaction specifically, which is faster than general reaction because your hand is already on the mouse.
How long should I aim train each day?
15 to 30 minutes is the sweet spot. Longer sessions hit diminishing returns and risk wrist fatigue. Daily short sessions outperform weekly long ones by a wide margin.
Does aim training transfer to real games?
Yes, partially. Click accuracy, micro-adjustments, and target acquisition transfer directly. Movement, game sense, crosshair placement, and timing don't — those are learned in actual matches. Use aim training as the warmup, not the main course.
What is flicking vs tracking?
Flicking is moving your cursor in a single fast motion to land on a stationary target. Tracking is keeping your cursor on a moving target as it travels. Most FPS games need both, and most aim trainers separate them into different drills.
How do I match my game sensitivity?
Use the same cm/360 — the distance your mouse travels to make a full rotation in-game. Free converters online translate sensitivity values between Valorant, CS2, Apex, Fortnite, and most other shooters. Match the cm/360 in your aim trainer and your muscle memory carries straight across.
Is Aim Trainer free?
Yes. The Aim Trainer on FunClicker is completely free. No signup, no download, no install. Browser-only on any device that takes a mouse or touch input.
What aim trainer do pros use?
Most competitive FPS pros use KovaaK's for structured routines and Aim Lab for warmups. Specific routines like Voltaic Benchmarks, Tile Frenzy, and 1w4ts have become standards across pro communities.