AutoClick Pro vs OP Auto Clicker: An Honest Comparison
Updated July 2026
Let's start with the part a product's own website usually won't say: OP Auto Clicker is a good tool. It's free, small, and it does the one thing it promises — clicking on an interval — reliably on Windows. If that one thing is all you need, you can stop reading and just use it.
The real question is where basic clicking stops being enough. This page lays out the actual differences so you can decide which side of that line you're on.
At a glance
| OP Auto Clicker | AutoClick Pro | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Free | Paid (one-time, on Steam — covers every platform) |
| Platforms | Windows | Windows 10/11, SteamOS / Steam Deck, Linux (X11 & Wayland) |
| Auto clicking | Yes — interval, hotkey, fixed spot or cursor, repeat count | Yes — 1 ms–60 s interval, randomized interval, random position offset, left/right/middle, single/double, repeat count, named profiles |
| Macro recorder | No | Yes — records mouse + keyboard with original timing; replay at 0.1×–10×, looped |
| Scripting | No | Yes — readable 16-command language (click, type, wait, loops, …) |
| Trigger mapping | Hotkey to start/stop clicking | Global hotkeys plus mapping profiles to extra mouse buttons, keyboard keys, and controller buttons (Xbox-style and classic DirectInput pads) |
| Controller extras | — | Move the cursor with an analog stick (sensitivity, deadzone, invert) |
| Background mode | Runs in a window | Tray icon, minimize-to-tray, start minimized; hotkeys work while hidden |
| Updates & install | Manual download | Installed and auto-updated by Steam |
| Privacy | Local tool | Local only — no ads, accounts, telemetry, or screen capture |
OP Auto Clicker details reflect the widely-used Windows version as of this writing — check its site for current features.
Choose OP Auto Clicker if…
- You're on Windows, and
- you need plain repeated clicking — one spot or the cursor, fixed interval, hotkey — and nothing more, and
- you'd rather not pay for a utility. Fair enough.
Choose AutoClick Pro if…
- You're on a Steam Deck or Linux. This is the biggest fork in the road: Windows-only clickers don't run natively on SteamOS, and web tools can't click into games. AutoClick Pro is native there — see the Steam Deck setup guide.
- Your task is a sequence, not a single click. Recording a macro once (or writing a five-line script) replaces "click A, type B, wait, click C" busywork that a pure clicker can't express. More on the difference: auto clicker vs macro vs script.
- You want triggers on your own terms. Side mouse buttons, keyboard keys, or a gamepad button each toggling their own saved profile — press once to start, again to stop — instead of one global hotkey for one behavior.
- You want it out of sight. Tray mode keeps it running in the background with hotkeys live, and Steam handles installs and updates on every machine you own.
The honest bottom line
Don't pay for features you won't use: for basic Windows-only clicking, the free tool is genuinely fine. AutoClick Pro earns its one-time price when any of these is true — you're on Deck/Linux, you need macros or scripts, or you want proper button mapping and background operation in one maintained app.
Try the full toolkit
Auto clicker, macro recorder, scripting, and mouse/keyboard/controller mapping — one purchase on Steam for Windows, SteamOS & Linux.
Get AutoClick Pro on SteamMore guides
AutoClick Pro vs MT Auto Clicker
The free multi-platform tool, compared just as honestly.
How to set up an auto clicker
Intervals, hotkeys, fixed positions, and your first macro.
Auto clicker for Steam Deck
Native SteamOS setup and Deck-specific quirks.
Auto clicker vs macro vs script
Which tool fits which job — plus what CPS means.