Stick Precision Test — Micro-Movement Accuracy
Tiny stick movements are what carry your fine aim, your gentle steering, and your slow walks. This stick precision test puts small targets near centre and asks your stick to land on each one — measuring how accurately it handles the smallest inputs.
A precise stick lets you nudge the dot exactly where you want it. A worn or jittery one overshoots, drifts past, or won't sit still on the target. The tool below scores your accuracy across a short sequence of micro-targets and reports an overall precision rating out of 100. Everything runs in your browser through the standard Gamepad API — no download, no signup, nothing leaves your device.
Press a button to begin
Connect via USB or pair over Bluetooth, then press any button so the browser detects your pad.
Hold the stick on each target until it locks. Smaller errors mean a more precise stick.
Why micro-movement matters
Big stick movements are easy. What separates a precise stick from a sloppy one is what happens in the smallest 20% of its range — the tiny nudges that decide a headshot, a line, a clean stop.
Where small inputs decide the outcome
A precision test isn't an abstract score — it predicts how the stick behaves in the moments that matter most.
Tracking a head at distance
At long range, the difference between a hit and a miss is a stick movement of a few percent. Imprecise sticks overshoot every time.
Holding a racing line
Long sweeping corners need a steady, small steering input. A jittery stick wanders the line; a precise one holds it.
Slow stealth walks
Half-pressed sticks control speed in many games. A stick that can't sit at a small, steady value forces you between walk and sprint.
Fine camera framing
Lining up a shot or aligning a build piece in a sandbox game leans on the smallest stick adjustments. Precision shows there first.
What affects your score
Some of your precision comes from the controller. Some comes from how you hold and move the stick. Both show up in the result.
- A healthy, drift-free stick with a low idle offset.
- A small in-game or system dead zone that lets micro inputs through.
- Light, deliberate finger pressure — heavy hands overshoot small targets.
- Using the tip of the thumb rather than the pad for fine control.
- A wired connection — slightly steadier than wireless on small movements.
- Stick drift — the dot won't sit still even with no input.
- An oversized dead zone that swallows your small movements.
- Worn potentiometer wear causing jitter near centre.
- A loose pivot that lets the stick wobble under finger pressure.
- A heavy aftermarket thumbstick cap that resists fine control.
Reading your precision score
The tool turns your distance-from-centre on each target into a 0–100 score. Closer hits across all six rounds mean a higher score.
Excellent
Very precise. You're landing close to dead-centre on each target — the stick handles micro inputs cleanly.
Fair
Workable, but with some overshoot. Often improves with a smaller dead zone or a quick clean.
Poor
Real precision trouble. The stick struggles to land or hold small inputs — a hardware issue is likely.
Run the test more than once. A single off-round can pull the average down — your best score across two or three runs is a fairer picture of the stick.
When prep doesn't lift the score
If your precision score sits stuck in the mid range even after the prep checklist, work through this. Start by isolating whether it's you or the controller, then escalate from the simplest software fix to the most involved hardware one.
Isolate the cause first
Don't replace anything until you know which side the problem sits on. Run the same test twice — once with the variable changed, once without — and compare the score.
Is it me?
- Hand off the pad to someone else and re-run it. If their score is meaningfully higher than yours, the stick is fine — your grip or approach is the variable.
- Run a fresh round when you're not tired. Hand fatigue degrades precision noticeably. Your morning score is the real one.
- Test with each hand pair. Right stick worse than left often just means weaker right-thumb control, not a worse stick.
Is it the pad?
- Test the same pad on a different machine. Same low score elsewhere points firmly at the controller, not the system.
- Test a different pad on your machine. If a known-good controller scores well, your system is clean and the original pad is the issue.
- Check stick drift and consistency first. Failing those tests almost guarantees a low precision score — fix those before chasing precision specifically.
Escalate one level at a time
Once Step A points at the controller, work down this path. Each level costs more than the last — stop the moment your score recovers.
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01 Free · 2 min
Recalibrate in system settings
Most consoles and operating systems include a built-in calibration utility that re-learns the stick's centre and outer limits. Run it once, then re-test.
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02 Free · 5 min
Reduce the inner and outer dead zone
Set the inner dead zone just above the stick's measured idle offset. Loosen the outer one so micro inputs near the edge stop being clipped. Re-test after each change.
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03 Free · 10 min
Clean the stick mechanism
Compressed air around the collar, several slow full rotations to free debris, then air again. Grit on the resistive track is a frequent precision killer.
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04 Low cost
Update the controller firmware
Modern pads receive firmware updates that can change stick behaviour, deadzone handling, or polling. Make sure you're on the latest before assuming hardware fault.
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05 Low cost
Replace the thumbstick cap
A worn rubber cap reduces grip and forces a heavier hand on the stick. Aftermarket replacements are cheap and often restore a useful chunk of precision.
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06 Mid cost · service
Replace the stick module
If cleaning and calibration don't recover the score, the potentiometer is genuinely worn. A module swap is the real fix — either a self-repair or a service centre job.
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07 Long-term fix
Move to a Hall-effect controller
If precision keeps degrading on every pad you buy, the issue is the wear-by-design of potentiometer sticks. Hall-effect sticks use no contact wear surface and tend to hold precision over years.
Signals it's time to stop troubleshooting
Some results aren't worth chasing further. If any of these apply, save your time.
The stick fails the drift test at the same time — fix drift first.
The pad is years old, used daily, and other tests are also dropping.
Replacement-part cost approaches the price of a new controller.
You've already swapped the module once and the score is dropping again.
Running the precision test
A full six-round test takes about a minute. Slow, deliberate movement gives the truest score.
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1
Pick a stick
Choose left or right. Test each separately so you can compare.
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2
Press Start
The first target appears close to centre — small, deliberate input only.
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3
Land and hold
Settle on each target and hold for half a second to lock it.
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4
Read the final score
After six rounds the tool grades your overall precision.
Before you run it
A short prep gets you the most accurate result — and makes any failed round meaningful.
Sit comfortably
A tense grip pushes the stick around — relax before you start.
Use your usual grip
Test how you actually play. A different grip gives a different number.
Lower any outer dead zone
A tight dead zone clips small inputs — disable it for the test if you can.
Wired if possible
USB tends to be slightly steadier than Bluetooth on small movements.
Practising for a higher score
Precision is a hardware-and-technique mix. These habits genuinely help — especially if your stick itself is healthy and the score is still mid-range.
Lighten your grip
A relaxed thumb settles on small targets. A tight grip transmits hand tremor straight into the stick.
Lead with the tip
Use the tip of your thumb rather than the pad. The contact point is smaller, so the movement is finer.
Move slowly
Approach each target deliberately. Rushing causes overshoot — the single most common reason for a low score.
Settle before locking
Stop the stick first, then steady it on the target. Trying to land in one motion adds jitter to the final position.