About this game

What Reaction Timer Challenge is about

Reaction Timer Challenge is a single-screen browser reflex test. Press the target to start, wait until the panel turns green, then click as fast as you can. The page reports your latest reaction time in milliseconds and tracks your personal best across the session.

Clicking before the panel turns green is treated as a false start. That intentional friction is what turns the tool from a pure reaction test into a small focus drill: you can only post a real time when you wait correctly.

How to play

Step-by-step rules

Press New round

The target panel switches to Wait for green. A short, random delay begins.

Watch for the green state

When the panel becomes Click now, the timing window starts. The faster you click, the lower the reaction time.

Read your result

The most recent reaction time appears on the panel. The best time during the session updates above.

Avoid false starts

Clicking before the green state shows Too early and ends the round without recording a time.

Tips

How to actually get better at Reaction Timer

Relax the clicking hand

Tense muscles react slower than relaxed ones. Sit comfortably and rest your hand on the mouse or trackpad before pressing New round.

Watch peripherally, not directly

Focusing too hard on the panel can cause anticipation false starts. A slightly soft gaze tends to produce a faster honest click.

Aim for honest improvement, not luck

One lucky 150 ms is not a real best. The improvement that matters is when your average across ten rounds drops by 20-30 ms.

Why this game is here

The link to Catch the King and Metin2 events

Many RPG events open with a short clickable window. A faster, more controlled reaction usually means more event rewards collected over a season.

FAQ

Common questions about Reaction Timer Challenge

What is a good reaction time?

Most adult players land between 200 and 300 milliseconds. Anything below 200 ms is fast. Below 150 ms is rare and usually involves anticipation.

Is clicking before green ever scored?

No. Clicking during the waiting state is a false start and produces no time. You have to wait correctly for the round to count.

Does the device matter?

Yes. Mouse clicks are typically 10-30 ms faster than touch screens. Compare your times on the same device for fair tracking.

Does the page save my best time?

Only within the current browser session. Refreshing the page resets the best time.

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