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Mouse Test

Check pointer accuracy, button presses, wheel input, and auxiliary-button behavior with visual feedback. Turn on the event-disable switch to suppress browser actions that would otherwise interrupt testing.

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How the mouse test works

Move and click inside the test pad to see live input feedback.

1

Move the pointer

The test area tracks your live cursor position and draws a motion trail so you can confirm movement responsiveness.

2

Press every button

Left, right, middle, Aux 1, and Aux 2 light up on the mouse diagram and increment counters when detected.

3

Block interfering actions

Enable the safety switch to prevent browser actions like scrolling, context menus, and navigation while the pad is active.

What you can verify

This tool is designed for both standard office mice and feature-rich gaming mice.

Pointer tracking

Watch the live cursor marker, motion trail, and event feed to confirm that movement is stable and responsive.

Primary buttons

Check left click, right click, middle click, and double click with counters and button highlights.

Side buttons

Test auxiliary mouse buttons such as Aux 1 and Aux 2 and see whether the browser reports them correctly.

Wheel input

Scroll vertically or horizontally to verify wheel direction, event logging, and graphic feedback on the mouse illustration.

Interfering browser actions

Toggle suppression for scroll, context menu, middle-click, and navigation actions during the active test session.

Event visibility

Review the live event log to see exactly what the page is receiving from your mouse.

Why use a browser-based mouse test

A quick online test is useful before meetings, gaming sessions, troubleshooting, or hardware setup.

🖱️

New mouse setup

Confirm every button works correctly right after unboxing or pairing a new mouse.

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Gaming readiness

Make sure primary clicks, auxiliary buttons, and wheel actions register correctly before a match.

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Work and productivity

Verify that auxiliary buttons or wheel gestures are not triggering unwanted browser actions during meetings or office tasks.

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Troubleshooting

Differentiate between hardware issues, browser behavior, and operating system shortcuts.

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Quick diagnostics

See a live summary of clicks, scrolling, movement, and button states in one place.

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No software install

Run a quick test in the browser without installing desktop utilities or driver tools.

FAQ

Mouse test FAQ

Answers to common questions about browser-based mouse testing and side-button handling.

1

What does this mouse test check?

It verifies pointer movement, left and right click, middle click, double click, wheel scrolling, horizontal wheel input when available, and auxiliary buttons such as Aux 1 and Aux 2.

2

Why is there an event-disable switch?

Some mice map middle buttons, side buttons, or wheel gestures to browser actions such as scrolling, context menus, or navigation. The switch prevents those interfering actions while the test pad is active so you can test safely.

3

Can I test gaming mice with extra side buttons?

Yes. If your browser exposes those buttons through standard mouse events, the tester will show them. Some vendor-specific thumb buttons may appear as Aux 1 or Aux 2, while others may be remapped by driver software and never reach the page as mouse events.

4

Why do Aux 1 or Aux 2 still trigger browser navigation sometimes?

Some browsers and operating systems reserve those buttons for history navigation before the page can fully intercept them. Use the isolated test window when you want to test browser-mapped auxiliary buttons without your current tab moving backward or forward.

5

Does the test send mouse data to a server?

No. The tool runs entirely in your browser and only uses local event handling for visual feedback and counters.

6

Why does right click sometimes open a menu?

That is normal browser behavior when the blocking switch is off. Turn on the event-disable switch before testing if you want the page to suppress interfering browser actions.

7

Can I use this on a touch device?

The page works best with a real mouse or trackpad. Touchscreens do not expose the same mouse-button and wheel events, so the feedback will be limited.

Technical notes

A few practical notes will help you get more reliable results.

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Best tested on

Desktop browsers
Laptops with external mice
USB and Bluetooth mice
Trackpads with mouse-button emulation
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Browser support

Chrome and Chromium browsers
Firefox
Safari
Edge
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What can interfere

Browser navigation bindings
Context menu on right click
OS-level mouse shortcuts
Mouse driver remapping tools

Tips for accurate testing

Enable the blocking switch before testing auxiliary buttons
Keep the pointer inside the test pad
Press one button at a time for clearer logs
Test in the browser you use most often