![]() ![]() Even just doing a bit of DM helped enormously, but it plateaued quickly. There is a whole massive level of movement and reliable aim that I just don't have, no matter how cleverly I behave. Not even that fast like a headshot flick or anything, just I get a body shot or two and they are able to spin and gun me down with spray. I can't even count the number of times I've had someone dead-to-rights, completely blindsided or whatever, fucked up my shooting and got killed. ![]() I have a strong suspicion that most people saying this are people that have years of youth and hundreds of hours playing FPS games (ya know, the sort that generally make it to Immortal) and don't quite understand the enormity of the gap in mechanics that a relative noob to the genre is facing. ![]() Make sure you keep practicing good habits in DM and warm up in the range and DM before queuing for competitive. To build more aim skills like flicking, micoradjusting, etc. Aim for the head, take your time and don't rush, etc.)ģ) focus on crosshair placement and headshots in DMs to warm up before playing rankedĤ) start to incorporate strafing side to side between shots when practicing in the range and deathmatch (building good habits)ĥ) start doing medium bots, hard bots, aimlabs routines etc. I went from Bronze to Diamond over ~1 year and this is the order I'd recommend for improving your aim:ġ) find a reasonable sensitivity and buy a decent mouse and XL mousepad (by decent mouse a Logitech G305 is enough, doesn't have to be expensive, and by reasonable sensitivity I mean somewhere in the eDPI range that pros use 200-300 depending on the mouse as sensor positioning makes this feel different between mice)Ģ) Practice the miyagi method (look this up on YouTube - essentially you're just teaching yourself the basics of good aim. I would say for S2 any aim training is going to help you. ![]()
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