The Ultimate Guide to Nanosecond Autoclickers: Speed, Precision, and Performance

Result on Windows: ~50,000 ns (50 µs) per empty loop iteration – you'd need 50× faster just to reach 1 microsecond.

3. Interrupt Re-Mapping

The most aggressive implementations hook into the hardware interrupt request (IRQ) table, tricking the OS into thinking it received multiple click signals from a single physical action. This is functionally a driver-level DDoS attack on your own USB controller.

What Exactly is a Nanosecond Autoclicker?

At its core, an autoclicker is a program or script that simulates mouse clicks at a defined interval. A standard gaming autoclicker might manage 20 clicks per second (20 Hz). A high-end macro tool might reach 1,000 clicks per second (1 kHz). A nanosecond autoclicker, however, claims to operate at intervals measured in nanoseconds—one billionth of a second.

Can a computer actually click every nanosecond? Usually, no. There are three main bottlenecks:

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