Butterfly clicking peaks around 20 CPS on a good day. Kaizen Fast Clicker delivers any click rate, perfectly evenly, for as long as you need — with hotkeys and repeat limits. Free to try on Windows.
Need full mouse & keyboard automation instead? Try Kaizen Auto Mouse Click.
Butterfly clicking means resting two fingers — usually index and middle — on one mouse button and alternating them rapidly, like a drummer's single-stroke roll. Because each finger only works half the time, practised players sustain 15–20 CPS, comfortably above jitter clicking speeds and roughly triple normal clicking.
| CPS | Rating |
|---|---|
| < 12 | Learning the roll |
| 12–15 | Good |
| 15–18 | Very good |
| 18–20 | Excellent |
| 20+ | Elite |
Watch your best 1-second burst stat too — if it's far above your average, your roll is fast but breaks down; drill for evenness. Benchmark your overall speed on the click speed test or the classic Kohi test.
Butterfly clicking exploits switch bounce on some mice, which can double-register — the reason several Minecraft servers cap CPS or flag it. Check the rules where you play. For legitimate repetitive-clicking jobs — testing, grinding, automation — use Kaizen Fast Clicker or full-sequence Kaizen Auto Mouse Click instead of wearing out your fingers.
Butterfly clicking is pressing one mouse button with two fingers alternately (usually index and middle), doubling your click rate. Practised players reach 15–20 clicks per second.
Jitter clicking uses one finger driven by forearm tension and tremor; butterfly clicking alternates two relaxed fingers. Butterfly is usually faster and less tiring, but some mice and servers register it inconsistently.
It depends on the server. Because butterfly clicking can double-register on some mice, several competitive servers treat very high CPS as cheating. Check your server's rules before relying on it.
12–15 CPS is good, 15–18 is very good, and 20+ is elite. Your best 1-second burst will usually run 2–4 clicks above your sustained average.