Best APM
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0-50 Beginner
51-100 Intermediate
101+ Pro
This keyboard APM test tracks actions per minute by listening to keyboard and mouse input events in real time. APM, or Actions Per Minute, is commonly used to evaluate input rhythm, execution density, and overall control in games that rely on rapid switching between keys and mouse clicks. That makes it useful for RTS, MOBA, and even fast-paced FPS training. The tool includes multiple presets such as FPS, RTS, and a custom mode so you can test either general hand speed or a workflow that matches your own setup. During the test, it reports live APM, peak APM, total actions, correct actions, and accuracy, then visualizes your most-used inputs with a heatmap. This helps you understand whether your issue is raw speed, unstable rhythm, or inefficient key transitions. By reviewing saved history over time, you can compare training sessions and measure whether a new key layout or practice routine is actually improving your performance.
Want to know how fast your CS2 operations are? This APM test tool is designed for CS2 players to measure operations per minute, including common movement keys, switching weapons, reloading, walking, crouching, jumping, and firing. The higher your APM, the smoother your key switching during gameplay, resulting in more fluid operations without experiencing hand stiffness or miskey presses. For experienced players, good APM metrics can improve overall game operation smoothness.
CS2 common keybinds (WASD + Shift + Space + Mouse)
Improve key operation smoothness
Increase APM
Improve blind key precision
Personal best tracking
Average players: 80-150, Good players: 150-250, Pro players: 250+. APM isn't the only metric - accuracy matters too.
Movement, aiming, shooting, jumping, weapon switching, walking, and more all count toward APM. Follow the on-screen keys during testing.
Practice aim tracking consistency, keep your fingers relaxed, and use appropriate mouse sensitivity. It's recommended to do 5-10 minutes of APM training daily.
Actually, CS2 APM isn't always better when higher. High APM represents key press fluency - our goal is to train smooth operations while maintaining speed, not random mashing. Pro players have high APM because they press keys fluidly and quickly, not just to increase key press speed. Accuracy and fluency are what matter most.