kohi click test

10
0.0 cps 0 clicks

the classic minecraft click test

The Kohi click test is the original benchmark of Minecraft PvP click speed: click as fast as you can for 10 seconds, divide by ten, and that's your CPS. The format comes from the Kohi hardcore factions server, where players measured their click speed to gauge how they'd fare in fights. The server is long gone — the test it made famous is right here.

This recreation keeps the rules identical (10 seconds, left click) and adds what the original lacked: a live CPS counter, a per-second graph, peak-second and consistency stats, and a locally saved personal best. For PvP, 8+ CPS is a strong score at this length. Want to push higher? Learn the technique on the jitter click test, or check your raw speed across other durations on the cps test.

more tests

guides

faq

What is the Kohi click test?

The Kohi click test is a 10 second clicks-per-second test that originated on Kohi, a popular Minecraft hard-core factions PvP server. Players used it to measure their CPS for PvP, and the 10 second format became the community standard for comparing click speed.

Why is it called Kohi?

Kohi was the name of the Minecraft server (MCPVP-era hardcore factions) that hosted the original test page. The server has since shut down, but the test format it popularized — 10 seconds, left click only — lives on under its name.

What is a good Kohi click test score?

On the 10 second Kohi format, 6 to 8 CPS is average, 8 to 10 is solid for PvP, and 10+ usually requires jitter or butterfly clicking. Top scores on the format reach the mid-teens.

Does higher CPS actually help in Minecraft PvP?

Up to a point. More clicks per second means more attack attempts and better combo potential, especially in 1.8-style PvP. Beyond roughly 10 CPS the returns diminish — aim, movement and timing matter more than raw click speed.

Is this the same as the original Kohi test?

It follows the same rules: 10 seconds, count your left clicks, divide by ten for CPS. The original server is gone, so this is a faithful recreation with extras the original never had — a live counter, per-second graph, peak CPS and saved personal bests.