Score
0
Time
1:00
Best
—
The crosshair drifts on its own. Tap to fire when it lines up with a moving target. 60 seconds.
A red crosshair drifts around the screen in a smooth figure-8 pattern. You don't control where it goes — your only input is the trigger.
Targets enter from the edges and move across the playfield in different directions and speeds. Tap anywhere on the screen to fire a shot at the crosshair's current position. If the crosshair is inside a target, the target goes down.
Hitting the small inner bullseye is a headshot — three points instead of one. There's a short cooldown after each shot before you can fire again.
You have 60 seconds. Score is the sum of all the hits.
Don't chase the crosshair — it never stops, and trying to time a shot at the exact moment the crosshair touches a target is a recipe for misses. Instead, look one beat ahead: see where the crosshair will be in half a second based on its current arc, and fire when a target is about to cross that future point. You're shooting where the crosshair is going, not where it is.
Ideal targets are slow and approaching the crosshair's path. A fast target moving against the crosshair's drift is far harder to time than a slow one drifting into its arc. When several targets are on the field at once, ignore the awkward ones and wait for the alignment that comes to you — patience beats spam-shooting, especially because the cooldown punishes wild fire.
Go for the headshot only when the line-up is already there, not by reaching for it. The bullseye is small enough that aiming at it directly costs you regular hits. The trick is to shoot for the body confidently and let the headshot multiplier happen naturally when the crosshair lands cleanly through the centre — over a full minute, those incidental headshots are what separate a casual run from a leaderboard score.