You just right-clicked by hand. Kaizen Fast Clicker has a dedicated right-click mode — exact intervals, start/stop hotkeys and repeat limits, far faster than any finger. Free to try on Windows.
Need full mouse & keyboard automation instead? Try Kaizen Auto Mouse Click.
A right click test measures how many times you can press the right mouse button in a fixed time and reports your right-click CPS (clicks per second). The page blocks the context menu inside the test box, so every right-click counts. It runs entirely in your browser — nothing is uploaded.
Minecraft players drill right-click CPS for bridging and fast block placement — speed-bridging techniques like breezily and moonwalk depend on high, consistent right-click rates. Right-click speed also helps with shield play in PvP and rapid unit commands in RTS games. Compare your result to your normal left-click CPS — most people right-click about 1–2 CPS slower.
| CPS | Rating |
|---|---|
| 1–4 | Casual |
| 5–6 | Average |
| 7–9 | Fast — bridging-ready |
| 10+ | Elite |
For farming, testing or any repetitive right-click job, Kaizen Fast Clicker clicks the right button at speeds and consistency no hand can match — and Kaizen Auto Mouse Click can combine right-clicks with cursor movement and keyboard steps for full sequences.
A right click test measures how many times you can press the right mouse button in a set time and shows the result as right-clicks per second (CPS). It mirrors the classic left-click CPS test.
Minecraft players practise right-click CPS for bridging, block placement and PvP shielding, where placement speed depends on right-click rate. It also matters in some MOBA and RTS games.
Right-click speeds are usually a little lower than left-click: 5–6 CPS is average, 7–9 is fast, and 10+ is excellent for sustained right-clicking.
Yes — Kaizen Fast Clicker has a right-click mode that clicks at any interval you set, with hotkeys and repeat limits, on Windows. Use automation responsibly; many competitive servers ban it.