Frame Rate Test

Mouse Spin Test

Spin your mouse in circles as fast as you can and measure your speed in RPM.

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Click the circle to start, then spin your mouse in circles around the centre.
Click to start 10s spin testSpin your mouse in circles as fast as you can
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This free online mouse spin test measures how fast you can spin your mouse in circles. Pick a duration, spin around the centre of the circle, and the tool tracks your rotations, live, average and max RPM, and spin direction — then gives you a skill rank and saves your personal best so you can train toward pro-level control.

Curious how fast that really is?The Mouse Speed & Acceleration Test shows your raw cursor speed in px/s, IPS, and G-force.

Mouse Spin Test Guide

What Is Mouse Spin Testing?

Mouse spin testing measures your ability to make rapid circular motions with your mouse — a skill that matters in gaming scenarios needing quick 360° turns or continuous spinning. The test tracks your spinning speed in RPM (revolutions per minute) and evaluates how consistently you can hold that pace over the duration you choose.

How to Use the Mouse Spin Test

  1. 1. Pick a duration (5–300 seconds) and choose whether to count clockwise, counter-clockwise, or both directions.
  2. 2. Click inside the circle to start the timer.
  3. 3. Spin your mouse in circles around the centre as fast as you can keep it smooth.
  4. 4. Watch your live RPM, rotations, and max RPM update in real time.
  5. 5. When the timer ends, read your average RPM and skill rank — your personal best is saved automatically.

Skill Rankings

RankRPMLevel
RookieUnder 60Just getting started
Beginner60–149Casual circular control
Skilled150–249Solid, steady spinning
Expert250–299Fast and consistent
Master300+Pro level — sustained high RPM

Pro gamers typically hold 280–300+ RPM consistently rather than hitting it in short bursts.

Tips for Better Performance

  • Use your arm: drive the circle from your forearm, not just your wrist, for speed and stamina.
  • Find your radius: experiment with circle sizes — too small crowds the centre, too large outruns your sensor.
  • Stay consistent: a steady pace for the whole test beats a fast start that fades.
  • Practice regularly: short daily sessions build the muscle memory for smooth, fast spins.
  • Check your hardware: a low polling rate or a sensor that maxes out on fast movement can cap your RPM.

What the Test Measures

  • RPM: your spinning speed in revolutions per minute — shown live, as an average, and as a max.
  • Rotations: the total number of full 360° turns you complete during the test.
  • Direction: clockwise, counter-clockwise, or both, with the dominant direction detected for you.
  • Skill rank & personal best: a rank from Rookie to Master, with your best score saved per duration and direction.

Frequently Asked Questions

A mouse spin test measures how fast you can spin your mouse in circles, reported in RPM (revolutions per minute). You spin your cursor around the centre of the circular pad and the tool counts full 360° rotations over a timed test, showing your live, average, and maximum RPM along with a skill rank.
Spin smoothly around the centre of the pad, use your whole arm rather than just your wrist, keep a steady circle radius, and hold a consistent speed for the entire duration. Pro players sustain 280–300+ RPM for the whole test instead of relying on short bursts.
As a rough guide: Beginner is 60–149 RPM, Skilled is 150–249, Expert is 250–299, and Master (pro level) is 300+ RPM. Consistency across the full test matters more than a single fast spike — pros hold high RPM steadily.
Use the Count selector to measure only clockwise rotation, only counter-clockwise rotation, or both directions combined. "Both" counts all rotation regardless of which way you turn, so it usually produces the highest RPM; the single-direction modes are useful for training your weaker hand direction.
No — spinning will not damage a modern optical or laser sensor. However, very fast spins can briefly exceed your sensor’s maximum tracking speed (its IPS rating) and skip, which caps your measured RPM. If that happens, a larger circle or a better gaming sensor will track more cleanly.
Yes. Your personal best is stored locally in your browser for each duration and direction, so you can track your improvement over time. The data never leaves your device — clearing your browser storage will reset it.
Yes — it tracks any pointer moving in a circle, so a trackpad or a touchscreen finger circle will register rotations and RPM. For results that reflect real gaming hardware, though, a mouse on a mousepad gives the most representative score.