@@JekplexTV what just play the game you play and dont focus on aim trainer for 40 + min 5 to 15 min a day is more then enough with 20 to 40 min game
@arianagrandeqwe10 күн бұрын
@@brknfrmif ur aimtraining for 15 min a day what is the point
@brknfrm10 күн бұрын
@@arianagrandeqwe Hey, I've been playing Rainbow Six Siege and Apex Legends for over 5 years now, and I'm 22. That means I started playing these games when I was around 17 years old. In both games, I've achieved the highest rank possible (r6 - 2x champ apex - 5x pred 1x double digit) and I have over 5000 hours in each of them. Now, when it comes to aim training, I’ve only spent 500 hours in the aim trainer across these 5 years. If you break it down, that's roughly 16 minutes a day. On average, I spent about 3 hours per day playing the games. At the end of the day, playing the game is what makes you better. Aim training has its place, but nothing beats real in-game experience where you’re constantly adapting and reacting to different situations. If you were to ask any solid player who’s been around for a while, they'd tell you the same thing. The balance of playing the game while occasionally working on aim is key. I never spent more than 20 minutes in the aim trainer on any given day. I had my playlists, focused on key areas, and got straight to it. It’s the ingame play that makes you improve in the long run, not just aim training. And to really answer your question: 15 minutes a day can go a long way. A) You don’t really waste time. B) If you have 2 or 3 maps that adapt well to the game you play, it’s the best warmup before you jump into the game. C) Ultimately, you can go and play the real game to learn and improve the most.