🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 01:43 *🎯 Understanding Aim Fundamentals* - Aim is the ability to move the mouse and position the Crosshair on the screen. - Three main aim types: tracking, click timing, and target switching, each crucial in different games. - Proper practice involves honing all three aim types to prevent skill bottlenecks and achieve overall improvement. 09:10 *🖱️ Wrist vs. Arm Aim Technique* - Both wrist and arm aiming are essential, with their advantages depending on sensitivity and movement range. - Combining both wrist and arm aiming techniques offers the most efficient approach to aim mastery. - Understanding DPI (Dots Per Inch) helps optimize mouse movement for better aim control. 15:05 *🧠 Enhancing Focus and Learning Process* - Focus intensifies the neurochemical process, aiding in marking neural pathways for improvement during rest. - Yerkes-Dodson Law emphasizes the optimal level of arousal for peak performance, avoiding under or over-arousal. - Motor learning and procedural memory play crucial roles in skill acquisition and improvement, including aiming. 20:34 *🖱️📈 Ultimate Aim Mastery Guide: Techniques and Mouse Grips* - Mouse grip types include palm, claw, and fingertip, each with its pros and cons. - Fingertip grip, especially for fast sensitivities, offers precision with increased range of motion in the fingertips. - Understanding and choosing the right mouse grip is foundational for improving aim accuracy and comfort. 22:21 *🖱️ Grip techniques and their impact on precision aiming* - Different grip techniques such as palm, claw, and fingertip grips affect precision aiming differently. - Claw grip, with the top part of the palm floating above the mouse, offers enhanced fingertip control. - Fingertip grip provides high precision but may lack control, especially during rapid target switching. 25:19 *🐭 Mouse weight and pad selection considerations* - Mouse weight impacts aiming precision and control, with lighter mice offering greater precision but requiring more control. - Soft pads offer comfort but may wear out faster, while hard pads provide less friction but may wear mouse skates faster. - Consider hand size, mouse weight, pad material, and dimensions when selecting a mouse and pad combination. 29:38 *🪑 Optimal sitting position and posture for effective aiming* - Optimal sitting position involves maintaining a flat back against the chair, feet flat on the floor, and arms positioned comfortably on the desk. - Consistency in sitting posture is crucial for effective training, ensuring repeatable positioning and muscle memory development. - Avoiding autopilot during practice sessions is essential for engaging the brain's learning processes and achieving improvement. 32:27 *🛏️ Importance of quality sleep and self-critique in aim training* - Quality sleep is vital for cognitive function and skill development, despite common tendencies to sacrifice sleep for gaming. - Being critical of one's gameplay through VOD reviews helps identify weaknesses and areas for improvement. - Tracking progress through goal setting and documentation fosters continuous improvement and motivates skill development. 36:03 *🔍 Techniques and categories of aim training* - Aim training encompasses three main categories: click timing, target switching, and tracking, each with subcategories. - Click timing involves static and dynamic clicking, focusing on raw aiming ability and micro-adjustment skills. - Effective click timing practice emphasizes technique, stopping power, scenario selection, and replicating in-game aiming dynamics. 44:26 *🎯 Focusing on reward-based practice* - Practicing to avoid missing targets by rewarding hitting them. - Implementing a restart mechanism to reinforce positive outcomes. - Utilizing dopamine release as a reward for completing scenarios. 46:04 *🎮 Differentiating between static and dynamic aiming* - Understanding the differences between static and dynamic aiming scenarios. - Emphasizing the importance of stopping power and precision in static aiming. - Discussing the challenges and skill requirements of dynamic aiming, including map reading and multitasking. 47:33 *🔍 Adjusting visual settings for better target tracking* - Tips for adjusting visual settings to improve target visibility and tracking. - Recommending grid or brick backgrounds for easier target tracking. - Highlighting the importance of visual clarity in dynamic scenarios. 49:01 *🔄 Balancing flicking and tracking in dynamic scenarios* - Emphasizing the balance between flicking onto targets and tracking their movements. - Discussing the significance of micro adjustments in dynamic scenarios. - Addressing common mistakes such as flicking ahead of moving targets and excessive tracking. 01:04:14 *🔫 Target Switching Techniques* - Efficient target switching eliminates accuracy loss, maintains tempo, and improves speed. - Holding Mouse 1 consistently maximizes damage uptime and enhances control during flicks. - Incorporating arm movements alongside wrist movements develops a hybrid technique for better adaptability. 01:06:17 *🔄 Importance of Holding Mouse 1* - Holding Mouse 1 continuously streamlines the transition from flicking to shooting, enhancing tracking readiness. - Maintaining a constant shooting state reduces downtime between targets, improving overall efficiency. - Building a connection between flicking and shooting reduces cognitive load and enhances response time. 01:10:32 *📖 Scenario Awareness in Target Switching* - Reading the scenario aids in identifying target locations, enabling quicker target acquisition. - Anticipating bot positions based on previous eliminations minimizes reaction time and optimizes movement. - Developing scenario awareness enhances gameplay adaptability and strategic decision-making. 01:13:03 *🎯 Practice Methodology for Aim Improvement* - Effective aim practice focuses on mastering fundamental techniques rather than pursuing high scores. - Emulating in-game aiming situations promotes skill transfer and practical proficiency. - Consistent practice with diverse scenarios cultivates adaptability and hones specific aiming skills. 01:16:45 *⚡ Differentiation Between Speed and Evasive Switching* - Speed switching emphasizes quick target acquisition, prioritizing speed over accuracy. - Evasive switching requires precise target tracking due to moving targets, balancing accuracy and speed. - Incorporating both types of switching in practice enhances overall aiming capabilities and adaptability. 01:21:13 *🎮 Playlist Organization and Training Variety* - Structuring playlists with diverse scenarios aids in comprehensive skill development. - Incorporating various aim types, including static, dynamic, speed, evasive, smooth, and reactive, ensures holistic improvement. - Randomizing scenarios within playlists promotes adaptability and simulates real-game aiming challenges. 01:24:05 *🎯 Smooth Tracking Technique* - Smooth tracking technique emphasizes smoothness over reactive movements. 01:29:20 *🎯 Reactive Tracking Mastery* - Reactive tracking is considered the most challenging aspect of aiming. - Requires proficiency in target switching, speed, evasion, smooth tracking, and clicking skills. 01:33:26 *🎯 Eliminating Wasteful Movement* - Wasteful movements in reactive tracking lead to downtime and inefficiency. - Deliberately underflicking helps to reduce overflicking and increase accuracy. 01:36:22 *🎯 Effective Improvement Strategies* - Deliberately targeting weaknesses accelerates improvement in aim training. - Recording gameplay and self-assessment aid in identifying weaknesses. - Optimal practice length varies but should be at least an hour per day, focusing on challenging yet manageable scenarios. 01:41:45 *🎯 Mindset, Mentality, and Motivation* - Maintaining motivation and the right mindset is crucial for long-term improvement. - Improvement in aiming skills may not always be immediately noticeable but consistent effort yields results over time. Made with HARPA AI
@imdotsam9 ай бұрын
Aim Notes: Click Timing - Multi FOV Warm up 1) learn aiming like you would learn a musical instrument - master the technique slowly at first 2) flick fast but take your time on the correction (STOPPING POWER) 3) restart if you miss in the first 10 secs 4) restart on 4th miss (even if you're on the last sec) - Be nice and precise, no floating, flicking and think about decelerating - Auto microadjusting Dynamic Clicking - 1wall5target pasu *Change background and color if its bad* 1) Don't keep track, as soon as you hover target, click and move on 2) Care about speed and accuracy. Don't speed click (APING) 3) Flick and microtrack (think of ScreaM warmup) Speed Switching - Target Switching 360 Static 1) Good Stopping Power (CSGO/Warzone) (Spray Transfering) 2) Use wrist and arm *** MAKE SURE TO PLAY HOW YOU'D PLAY IN GAME *** Evasive Target Switching - kints voltaic easy 1) Accuracy and Speed but mostly the first 2) Flick and little track Smooth Tracking - 1) Don't guess about where the target will go 2) BE smooth, not reactive 3) Don't jolt to catch it, just flick back on it 4) Pay attention to mouse grip (BE NEUTRAL) Reactive Tracking - Close Fast Strafes e 1) Don't need to react to all movements, focus on the main movements 2) No flicking, track the bot 3) No jittering After all this, focus on attacking weaknesses Deliberately targetting weaknesses Do VOD review, whats going wrong? Practice Length minimum 1 hour per day - don't do the same one's everyday - It's like the gym, keep practicing everyday and eventually you'll get better. -It's hard to see that your aim is getting better so just keep going
@侚9 ай бұрын
24 likes on ts is crazy
@flu1d_9 ай бұрын
THE GOAT
@dragBL316 ай бұрын
U should be a coach
@justarandomweeb42346 ай бұрын
Btw the name of the smooth tracking scenario is “thin aiming long invincible”
@escapegulag43174 ай бұрын
I know a gm who says f*** everything, speed is most important.
@GREED_EU2 жыл бұрын
A few things to clear up. In the video I sometimes mention having a picture of an example on the screen, I couldn't find anything high enough quality to actually throw in, so instead I left it blank to not mislead or give poor examples that don't help my explanation
@its_lucky2526 Жыл бұрын
you did not have to flex your iq on us like that 😭
@naimakka1949 Жыл бұрын
I wanted to relax but I was like WHAT DID HE JUST SAY and I unlocked my phone to like the video😭😭😭
@ythniafps Жыл бұрын
Iq is completely irrelevant as a test in general let alone when it comes to aiming
@Bot-iq9vo Жыл бұрын
@@ythniafpsCompletely irrelevant is completely false. As a measure of crystallized intelligence, I would agree. But as a metric of fluid intelligence, is when it is useful. As fluid intelligence facilitates the transition of execution to crystallized intelligence. As you can see, the importance of fluid intelligence is not linear but exponential, as it increases the gain of crystallized intelligence, say aim mechanics or game sense, which facilitates further acquisition of said skill or similar skills. It is through a combination of fluid and crystallized that makes people excel in their skillset; hence why top players perform well on other games.
@eveyrhting Жыл бұрын
@@Bot-iq9volots of big words my man
@seag1 Жыл бұрын
@@Bot-iq9vo iq is a measure of how good you took a test that day.
@MJxGames2 жыл бұрын
I have 3600+hr at kovaak and am absolutely confirm this , I was un utter shit at fps in general then I start playing kovaaks in Covid-19 lock down I was setting infront of my pc for 6 months and I become the one that they call out " REPORT SOLDIER 76 FOR AIM BOT " best feeling ever
@yoyocherio11 ай бұрын
3600 is insane
@VaughnHBS11 ай бұрын
Did you just find random scenarios to do every day, or did you follow a specific playlist or two?
@MJxGames11 ай бұрын
@@yoyocherio I started with aimer7 routins first couple of months then start doing the Vt benchmark , afterward I tried the yin yang routin by krascsi then I start to create my random practice/warm-up routin to target my weakness and strength
@truckmuncher89989 ай бұрын
Kovaak is gonna be the first thing I download when I get a pc
@dustf1nger1189 ай бұрын
Agreed but 3600 is insane amount. Aim training is the same as gym training. I have 800 hours in Kovaaks and has me improved drastically (aim mechanics)
@monke5403 Жыл бұрын
finally, a video thats not a 10 min get "pro" aim "routine", this video is actually helpful in the sense that it actually breaks down the mechanics and goals for different scenarios and how to properly use them. this video is actually gold and i cant believe you didnt charge for it it is actually that useful.
@nade5557 Жыл бұрын
44:06 I can vouch for this point. I used to grind a racing game which penalises you in time trials for collisions with walls, even if they are grazes and cause no damage. Previously, I was used to slightly sloppy racing because collisions were never penalised in previous games I played, so to drill it into my head that you can't touch the walls I would restart the time trial every time I got penalised. It was very annoying but it greatly improved my accuracy and feeling of how to place the car in a corner. A similar thing in cs2 is to run around deathmatch with a deagle and not reload by yourself (i.e don't press R). It just makes you think about each shot more and penalises you for whiffing. I saw a marked improvement in my headshot and first bullet accuracy
@Omn1c1d3 Жыл бұрын
hey thanks for the idea. I play FPS and I love rally racing games. It's basically entirely attempting to not kill yourself making turns as fast as you can in terrible road conditions and they all HEAVELY punishes you for mistakes. it's usually a campaign mode so you are going to have to pay for all that damage and it matters long after that individual race is finished- it's slowing your company's progression and effecting your ability to pay staff. Tires popped? Either finish the race like that (good luck) or pull over and get out the car and fix it (massive time penalty-you 100% lost that race). Losing races cost money. I'm going to grind the little training area on turns!
@nade5557 Жыл бұрын
@Omn1c1d3 all the best to your rally training 💪👍
@juderees6101 Жыл бұрын
yo man if ur still reading comments i havnt left a comment on YT for months but came across this video at midnight and clicked before realising the length. almost 2 hours later and i can confirm this is what i needed to get back into aim trainers as id used them a couple times but never consistently. great video good job
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
@AbrahamLeanin9 ай бұрын
Did you?
@arthurabraham3271 Жыл бұрын
In case you're wondering. The game hes playing in the start is Shatterline.
@senderbud318 ай бұрын
W mans. I love you
@kurusus340911 ай бұрын
"I have over 150 iq"
@RottenSprinklz9 ай бұрын
Threw me off so hard😭 might as well continued on and have said "I stand 6foot 9inches, my willy is 8ichies"
@francislee1745 ай бұрын
I was 164 in second grade. Disappointingly, Mensa qualification starts at a mere 130.
@francislee1745 ай бұрын
@@RottenSprinklznot that you asked, but my Willy also does happen to be 8” 🙂
@AristotlesRevolutionАй бұрын
@@francislee174 sorry but mines 165
@francislee174Ай бұрын
@@AristotlesRevolution as an adult😂
@Summers22 Жыл бұрын
one of the best youtube videos i've ever seen. can tell you're bright. if you're a young bloke, you have a bright future ahead of you if you apply your brain power to useful and fruitful pursuits
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
@moreskuxx54004 ай бұрын
Backhanded compliment lol
@Chinfu2013 ай бұрын
@@GREED_EUyo what game is in the background in this vid
@Anunachi9 ай бұрын
1. static clicking: flicks + micro adjust (instead of smooth floaty aim) 2. dynamic clicking: flicks (straight on target, not in front of where it will go) + micro adjust + track 3. spreed swithcing: flicks + micro + hold left click 4. evasive switching: flick + micro + track 5. smooth tracking: track the movement, dont predict when it swaps directions 6. reactive tracking: takes everything from above, but mostly react smooth and only to big moves, not to small moves
@f4txm1c2 жыл бұрын
Bro. Big thx for this guide, now i understand a lot of my mistakes, i started to gripping my mouse less harder and got smoother in strafe tracking! Really helpful guide and big respect for u
@zombiedeathrays886211 ай бұрын
Very useful video and very comprehensive! 1:19:00 for speed switching the targets can move (i think both switching scenarios you ran were speed). For evasive switching the targets move more unpredictably. Some other small points but this video will give people a very solid foundation.
@grimR__ Жыл бұрын
Hey I really appreciate your video. you really put into perspective how you can get to that higher level with the right technique. For too long I felt I wasn't progressing far after 630 hours. But now I really get it and am seeing the results. You're saving aim out here thank you!
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
@rainiosvids6 ай бұрын
I’d also recommend reading “the inner game of tennis” this book will help you 10x your results. It’ll teach you a ton about natural learning and mindset.
@Robbiehoo10 ай бұрын
Thank you Mr.Greed. You pointed out everything I was doing wrong with aim training. Floaty aim, shaky stops, lazy aim ( waiting for the bot in evasive switching scenarios ). After ironing out the obvious problems in my aim, I was not sure of what I was doing wrong anymore. Got the video recommended at the perfect time. Shall update on the progress in a year maybe. Thank you again❤
@davidleone65093 ай бұрын
My dude you are the goat, just starting my aim journey and this completely in-depth guide is exactly what I was looking for, props to u
@agapic44511 ай бұрын
I will leave 3 tips. #1 understand attention - when you train a skill for example flicking be aware of your attention, hit flicking training sessions with a specific aspect you want to pay attention to it and alter that the next time #2 breaks - your breaks MUST not be doing something overloads the brain the most common is scrolling social media do something relaxing or fun. #3 future expectations is your worst enemy - setting goals is fine and I recommended it but it will come with various expectations it is unavoidable. my advice is first you must be aware of them and try to lock them away to prevent it from circulating in your mind, despite the expectations is what you desire but constantly comparing yourself to the ideal version you want to become will destroy your reward system despite you clearly better than yourself 5 days ago, compare the present to the past not present to the future
@Hwcks14 күн бұрын
i'm new in this aiming world, but your videos is definitely the most explained and complete video i've seen so far, goated content
@DylanKHunter5 ай бұрын
43:03. This. This is huge. I have never thought about this, and it I exactly how I practise, thinking that I am getting somewhere, only to get dumpstered in game. Awesome content
@4real_rl4949 ай бұрын
After watching this video and implementing it into my aimlabs routine I noticed results instantly. Especially switching to holding my mouse with my fingers which i didnt know was a thing and made my microadjustments in valorant so much more consistent. Great video!!!
@jasperrrr10 ай бұрын
One thing I'd like to say regarding muscle memory. I think the argument whether aim is consisted of muscle memory or not is mainly semantics. Aim is definitely comprised up of a LOT of different things, but when someone says muscle memory, I don't think they mean literal muscle memory, I think they usually mean the natural capability your brain can calculate eye-hand coordination to reach a goal (moving mouse to a target) based on prior experience. Of course aim doesn't include actual muscle memory, but I think it does include your brain's capability to calculate how to move a mouse in a way you need to in whatever scenario. If you play on the same sensitivity everyday for multiple months or years, I think your brain gets used to it and calculating what you need to do in order to hit something comes more naturally, thus the phrase "muscle memory"
@mrtoast2443 ай бұрын
My friend is Grandmaster in Overwatch and always beats me in 1v1's because he's been gaming for years (while I'm still a noob basically), he's in the navy right now but when he gets back from basic training in two or three months I'm going to *DESTROY HIM*
@DesolateVal Жыл бұрын
I've been sitting criss cross every time I've sat down to game for years from controller to m&k and i get average 115k sixshots and max 130s so I believe its more about comfortability but for the consistency of how you sit, that's probably what has the most impact
@niivora Жыл бұрын
Can't thank you enough for this! I've set up my everyday aim playlist now and hope to see some improvement within these next months. Felt really lost in kovaaks and had no idea how to efficiently practice my aim, just kept jumping around in different scenarios. Was looking into iitztimmys playlist but I felt something was off with it and searched on youtube to see what other people said about it. Found your video about it and then I clicked this one. Really happy I did!
@paweex11 ай бұрын
hey man, how did you improve this month? did it help? :)
@VaughnHBS11 ай бұрын
Would you mind sharing the scenarios in your playlist? I'm just starting out again myself, and KovaaK's scenarios have always been a pain for me to decide on despite owning it for years. Also, how's your progress been? Very curious to know.
@niivora10 ай бұрын
@@paweex I improved a lot! My aim is way smoother and im super reactive in game. I did slack off a bit but im convinced that with consistency this will make you better at aiming. I recently got a skypad tho so that set me back quite a bit until I get used to it. But you could see a lot of improvement just from doing it everyday.
@fiercegamer98744 ай бұрын
@@niivora can you share your playlist please?
@venxit4592 Жыл бұрын
Thanks to this video *which I know, I'm late to... and found it off you're quitting ow2 video* I went up from Ruby 4 to Emerald 4 in Aimlab within 2 hours! Which was a shocker for me because I have been having a huge skill decrease I was unable to fix alone. I tried searching up videos on how to get better and would try their ideas for usually a week - a month *with consistent timings and all* with no help. So for this to already be showing me signs of betterment made me know that I still have a chance to keep up in gaming! You are amazing and thanks for this comprehensive and actually useful guide!
@equilibriumv2 ай бұрын
The delivered information given by you in this video is pure gold and you can't comprehend how appreciated i am by the fact that this information is pure free. Pure gold content. Thank you so much!
@awesomexpresso6 ай бұрын
I knew most of the stuff because I researched a lot about aim mechanics and aim trainers and voltaic the past couple of weeks and I can confirm this guy knows everything and this is the best and only video any1 needs to have good aim. It's really all the information i got to know compiled in 1 video. Subbed to you and love you dude.
@jam28822 Жыл бұрын
actually thanks so much for this, i've really wanted to get good at valorant for a couple months now and felt my aim was really holding me back, along with all my other mechanics of course, this video is a big help, cheers!
@ukblood1337 Жыл бұрын
Its good to hear a lot of things that you already practice, especially grips, seating position, self improvement. When I first started looking to improve (at League) I would remove all criticism of my team and focus only on what I can do to carry a game, meant I went from complete new player > diamond 2 in my first ranked season and then challenger (top 250) for multiple seasons. I had etched into the WALL how far I position my seat from the table, the distance from the wall and my seat height / arm rest height. When I first told my mates about this they just thought it was me having ocd or something but like you said it comes down to consistency, you wouldn't train with a gun holding it a different way or at a different height in your shoulder each time would you?
@Arnichoutoutou2 жыл бұрын
Oh my, that is quite the long video, good job on keeping your promises! Very cool
@nubthepro50227 ай бұрын
I Don't EVER give out comments but a video like this so useful and informative requires one from me.
@CoinGames30 Жыл бұрын
Sharing this video this is what I’ve needed for so long an many others need this your a god sent thank you for the awesome vod
@GanZsie9 ай бұрын
i keep revisiting this video it's so thorough and really good when im tryna revise my weaker mechanics
@lin_leaf Жыл бұрын
This video is gold.. i only got through it because of your references of actual scientific evidence, as I could apply this to any skill in life. It is relevant to soooo many different fields form sports, music, and really any daily activity
@ElabLive1 Жыл бұрын
I'm a Rust player currently refining skills and I have to say this is the best piece on aim training I've ever seen! It's densely packed with incredibly resourceful information. I've been using Aim Labs, but Kovaak's seems a lot more modular. Definitely need to train up on target switching and reactive tracking. Thank you so much for all the effort that went into this!
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
@ElabLive1 Жыл бұрын
Much respect, Greed.@@GREED_EU
@ElabLive1 Жыл бұрын
btw, weird piece of information but believe it or not I have benefitted from slicing 'grip tape' on my mouse as well. No slipping! Much more control. Cheers! @@GREED_EU
@snep0012 жыл бұрын
Hopefully this video is gonna explode❤
@jibrilspencer843111 ай бұрын
oddly enough I've always been better at reactive tracking than all the other categories, my issues have always been primarily with static and dynamic clicking. I haven't aim trained in a long time since I've moved on to single player games, but since I'm gettin back into competitive, ill be trying to get better again. Last time which was over a year ago I was plat in everything with diamond scores in reactive and still gold in static. I look forward to seeing what I can do in 2024.
@constantinhamm2739 Жыл бұрын
Yo only critique I got is for the different grips you talked about pictures (23:00) but u didn’t actually add any
@its_lucky25262 ай бұрын
wow, this was at 10k views not too long ago, now it blew tf up along with my comment. congrats, deserved
@pancakesz Жыл бұрын
Best aim training video i have ever watched It needs more views
@OldSchoolL4D-zb2kt3 ай бұрын
Bro. He spent 2 hours to tell you flick and micro adjust
@OhBlivEUn7 ай бұрын
I've been looking for something like this for years! A lot can be applied to controller players as well. Thank you! The brain chemistry section was awesome
@Kipirtur Жыл бұрын
I noticed by myself like 40% of the mistakes said in this video, but cause i was insecure about it didn't put enough effort to change them, this video made me think different and gave my brain a 180° flick to focus and fix all the stuff I do wrong to be a better aimer, as I said I was interested but lost and lazy, thank u for the video and give some confidence on my thoughts about it 💚
@damienrosales798711 ай бұрын
Dude, THIS was a sick freaking video! Thank you so much for this. I have been playing cod games for years and have always taking my MMR seriously. Despite how long I have been playing fps games I was never aware of the aim community and have always wanted to get better aim. I feel like this whole time (YEARS) I have been led astray by videos talking about how to aim and developing muscle memory. BUT this video led to the fields of plenteous and MAN HAVE I ATE. You have fed me with this video and it was awesome. I have been taking notes on this videos for the past two weeks and now; just today I have finally completed completed them with, 7 pages worth of notes on college ruled paper. Thank you, I can't wait to put everything into practice and watch my aim improve.
@tecnosalva14 Жыл бұрын
Jesus the amount of useful information. Gigachad for doing this long video, ready to surpass platinum very fast (just looking at this video i have see my errors in both mindset and technique). Ty
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
Good luck
@retiredtravazapper28278 ай бұрын
i just transitioned to xbox to pc, i was a apex predator and had good aim, when i transitioned i couldnt hit one shot, and started doing aimlabs, shoting at the practice map EVERY DAY i trained way more than i actualy played , and in the process i also transitioned to cs2, now 2 months later i am playing with my duo on (an averege) 22000 on cs lobby the part when you said that you can achieve a significant good aim in 2 to 3 months is so real you just have to really practice like a real sport like giving your max and having consistency, but i wanna achieve more lmao, cheers from brazil bro great content
@X2debuff2 жыл бұрын
I think this is one of the most informative guides I've seen! btw 1:45:52 it's really scary ×_×
@mrtoast2443 ай бұрын
I'm getting into video games and was kind of not sure how to get good at them but getting good mechanics seems the way to go (since winning is more fun than getting stomped lol). At first I was like "wow, 3 months to get good aim? that's a long time" but then I realised that it's not that different to learning a Language or an Instrument. I speak a few languages and play a few instruments and at first each one was really difficult, it took like a month before I started making much progress in them, but eventually they just became a part of my life and the skills actually transfer really well to other Languages and other Instruments. That's actually really similar to getting good aim and having that transfer to any game.
@Ginnetix10 ай бұрын
I have really bad performance anxiety if I’m playing solos, so I end up playing like trash. But if I take my anxiety meds, my anxiety is too low and I end up playing like trash 😂
@DarkFractals9 ай бұрын
Damn you worded that with a clear mind, I couldn't have said it better.
@iskabin7 ай бұрын
That kiss in the end really got me unprepared. Thanks for the guide man, took away lots of stuff, it'll help me a lot!
@val26874 Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure if I'm a claw grip guy or a palm grip guy - because if I need a claw I just curl my fingers and lift the sides of my palm, and if I need a palm I just relax them and settle more of the palm and fingers down. The former is really nice for micro aim but the latter feels much more secure for large swipes.
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
That's fine
@leeyo7778 ай бұрын
Yo, you're actually a fountain of knowledge and such a great teacher! Thanks for this vid
@GREED_EU8 ай бұрын
@swagboss Жыл бұрын
cant believe you only have almost 4k subs. amazing content.
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
@Jaybiggsinuk10 ай бұрын
I struggled to get by the really long intro but it was all worth it once you got into the scenarios. I recently switched to left hand so I thought to learn propperly this time. After watching your scenarios, I realized (and now hopefully rectify) that I was doing many of the bad habits you pointed out. Defo earned a sub, I'm looking forward to checking out your other vids.
@matthighlights Жыл бұрын
for tatical fps i personally think crosshair placement is really the key
@WhosDeity11 ай бұрын
Hi. Master in OW, Champ in Siege and Immo 3 (radiant peek) in Valorant. Although crosshair placement is a factor it’s not what you should focus on when training for tacshooters. But you should train microflicks and micro adjustments. Crosshair placement in a sense is really just a niche type of thing in a way. I have friends that are some of the best aimers in the world that have bad crosshair placement and they are the highest ranks in games they play. I also have friends who have the BEST crosshair placement you’ll ever see and are the lowest ranks because they just simply can’t aim and if you use crosshair placement as a crutch then your general game sense and aim will start to lack as you’re carried by hoping someone will just accidentally walk into your bullet by chance (doesn’t sound good when you put it like that now does it?)
@matthighlights11 ай бұрын
@@WhosDeity im faceit level 10 and peek top 100 in gamersclub (is basically a SA Faceit), at least in my experience the biggest problem to highelo players is poor crosshair placement, at least in csgo
@hammerred57558 ай бұрын
Thank you Brother, I'm really good at static clicking and speed switching but I've put the other types in my playlist and been seeing major improvement! Also with how hard you grip the mouse was a major mistake I was making in training.
@johnfortres2 жыл бұрын
I gotta take a nap so i can focus the fuck up when watching this
@theclerk3163 Жыл бұрын
“I have over 150 IQ” 🤣🤣
@LeatherNinja6 ай бұрын
"Good sleep" varies often depending on the person. Generally, around 8 hours is a good range for sleep for almost anyone, but there are exceptions where people can be great with more or less.
@patience3285 Жыл бұрын
Thought this was gonna be a normal aim guide even with the crazy intro and tittle but then i heard the iq drop and was like damn this bouta go crazy. (also cracked me up)
@agapic44511 ай бұрын
my best friend send me this video thinking I made it which is funny let me elaborate further also I would add a point to clarify something you said about how many days/weeks to practice (note: English is not my 1st language but I would try my best) first, this is type of things I am into I've been reading about neurochemistry since late 2018 i almost went to collage for it but choose smt else, and I attribute that to my ability to learn games and stuff super quickly that impress and sometimes annoy ppl around me, for me learning process still a mystery till this day since background and mentality (mentality and mindset is my main focus nowadays since I started to believe it is the most neglected part when it comes to learning process). your video is great man one of the best and most genuine content trying to help ppl get better, i would try in the near future share some discoveries later with you so you can test it out i want to clear up something regarding how long to stick to a specific skill. when you practice something over and over you develop myelin around neural pathways that can help with Faster Signal Transmission, this stuff won't get worse just because you ditched it for a long time and only focused on one different skill cause a simple warm up and the fact you play games along side aim training means you are applying all aiming skills daily.
@OneOfMoMo10 ай бұрын
I dont know but I think I counted around 9999 "OBviouslys" this video
@The_Bloddy Жыл бұрын
I realy love the fact of u knowing realy specific things that can makes a difference on aiming Like u said on the auto pilot thing thats was a FACT and my main weakness is tracking and u realy enlightened me about it when u said dont over react to it or dont be ready for it to change direction because it will make u loose control and focus off the target I realy appreciate the knowledge u gave into this video and hope u have a happy future
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
@TheKidt Жыл бұрын
Very nice vid. I enjoyed the shatterline gameplay as well, such a shame it vanished that quick
@VoidTwo9 ай бұрын
thank you, this video was really useful and im going to try all of this out!
@neonoir__2 жыл бұрын
Getting my custom 13 gram zaunkoenig m2k next week, can't wait to start aim training again! That thing will go so fast on my skypad lmao. Will def use this guide
@DRNOval2 жыл бұрын
m2k+skypad truly is the god combo
@allan26652 жыл бұрын
how do you even get that mouse?
@DRNOval2 жыл бұрын
@@allan2665 u just buy it from their website
@allan26652 жыл бұрын
@@DRNOval they're sold out and not making anymore but I was talking about the 13g custom one since they are normally like 24g
@neonoir__2 жыл бұрын
@@allan2665 theres a guy that makes the 3d print skeleton, i tried to post the discord link but my comment got removed. The link is in a boardzy video about it. You basically buy the pcb (sold out unfortunately) and skates seperately and commission him to print it or buy the 3d print file from him. I paid a total of 140€ for everything, including shipping
@berkay69478 ай бұрын
i fixed my aim significantly over a course of 1 year. for me the most important thing was actually focusing on two things: where is my crosshair and where is the enemy. ı noticed most of the time ı was just spraying and praying. i think thats the main problem with avarage aimers. they dont compare if their crosshair actually on their target after the first flick. they just shoot at a general area. watch pros, even in non important games they focus on their target instantly with their eyes.
@americanrobot4215 Жыл бұрын
What do u think is the best benchmark
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
Is your aim perfect or not. That is the only benchmark required
@williamlevy696411 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to meet a top 500 overwatch player on console who had quite literally the most incredible aim I've ever seen. He said it took 3 years for him to achieve it and the way he trained his aim was the same for both tracking and flicking. I was definitely stuck with this false idea that I had to simply change my sensitivity depending on the character I was playing and the type of weapon they were using from fully automatic weapons to sniper rifles. The truth is that the only way to improve your aim is to master your aim on a hero that is the opposite of what you are biased toward. For some people they are biased toward tracking characters and others flicking. The good news is is that if you are biased toward one of the two aiming styles it means you have already mastered most of the components with that aiming style. The bad news is is that you have to begin an aiming journey from complete noob level to master the opposite style starting at a very low sensitivity.
@dergrizla125011 ай бұрын
i have over 150 iq got me hahahaha
@andyye78589 ай бұрын
I first frowned and then laughed out loud when you talked about sleep. Instant sub lmao
@8o__o8_ Жыл бұрын
Even for a controller player on console, this video is incredibly helpful, especially the way you explain the science behind everything. Just by watching I realised what my mistakes are (eg training on autopilot). Really huge W, this is one of the best tutorials on youtube
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it
@FlexxRG11 ай бұрын
what a hero doing this! ty
@marcelbrummer5098 Жыл бұрын
dude I havent finished listening to you video.but 8cm per 360 is really too sensitive,I'm no expert and my aiming needs a lot of work as I have been training for a long time.but I can see in your gameplay that you need to scale your sens down a bit and you will have much better aim
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
Not true but all good
@markshootsmonsters Жыл бұрын
Great stuff. Definitely corrected some misconceptions I had. I’ll put this into practice. An hour a day isn’t realistic for me but something is better than nothing.
@blaaze4656 Жыл бұрын
When it comes to dynamic clicking, should one anticipate the trajectory and click at the right moment, or should one simply strive to place the cursor on the target?
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
Aiming directly onto the target is always what comes first, as you get better the anticipation will become natural and won't be forced.
@939Productions11 ай бұрын
Ever since i started aimtraining accuray is my main focus in every scenario. I've started gaming again and well it has been a rough start. Going over the basics again after 3 years off. I love how you are on 8cm/360 and I'm going lower then i've ever gone with 81cm/360 in valorant. Great video!
@KarmaOTS9 ай бұрын
bro i use the same EXACT cm/360 lmaoo
@-eclipse5411 Жыл бұрын
can you make a tutorial for peeking? (i play cs2)
@snoweu11 ай бұрын
I was global, faceit level 10 on CS, used to win prizes on UK Ladder Circuits, took a break for 4 years, come back, now I’m so unbelievably frustrated with how much I suck, this video is a god send, I feel like I’ve forgotten everything Jesus Christ man
@elliotspence498811 ай бұрын
im in a similar situation. I havent played fps games properly like a year. I was easily averaging up 1.5 kd games in LE in cs and now I feel like ive never played an fps before and its making me lowkey upset
@Chinfu2013 ай бұрын
What game is this
@unlucky744011 ай бұрын
Very awesome video man thank you for your help and wisdom you gave to me and my team. you're awesome!
@Warrior25 Жыл бұрын
Watched the whole vid, time for me to ascend as an aimer 🗿🗿.
@baydenwanaisie773 ай бұрын
Where are you now??? Have you ascended?
@mahdi-ev9ye11 ай бұрын
This is a great guide, people can also use Voltaic benchmarks to gauge improvement for specific mechanics
@Noodliest Жыл бұрын
Did this guy just mention his IQ? I can't tell if the rest of the video is satire now? xD. I will keep watching but that was so random haha.
@agarion10111 ай бұрын
quick little side note. i feel muscle memory is a crutch you could use if you really feel like you cant play on a certain day. ive played so many hours i could autopilot myself to just click heads but after a certain amount of time i actually start to feel tired and have to start using my senses to aim. i used to do it all the time when i had a job and wassnt gaming alot, however would get burnt out within 30 min i feel it really depends what kind of gamer you are whether you use muscle memory or go with the flow based off what you see. id love to debate it however theres too many words to put it in a comment section. i genuienly feel there are 2 kinds of gamers, people who enjoy the game and go with the flow when trying to execute a kill, or someone who memorizes just about every aspect of the game and ego it out (pushing things as fast and precise as possible based off expectation of the aim rather than flowing with what they see in the moment, aka working harder not smarter) i tried to ego it out when i was 12-15 and whenever an unorthodox playstyle comes my way (a noob, a unique playstyle) i barely if ever see something like that and am unable to adapt even though my aim and game sense was above average.
@nerdquisentbon Жыл бұрын
thx for your work and for your take on some importants point! i see you always mentionning kovaak, is it because you're used to use it and you just dont switch to aimlab or is there a precise reason you dont use aimlab?
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
I like the freedom kovaaks gives me, plus the familiarity with it since I've used it for almost 5 years now. I haven't touched aimlabs for a long time now so im unsure if its any good or not
@nerdquisentbon Жыл бұрын
@@GREED_EU ok thx for your answer, i'll stick to aimlab then because i actually feel the same way you feel for kovaak. keep up with your videos its really great to have technicals infos that actually matters
@Pferdezuechter14 ай бұрын
27:14 jup, found that one out the hard way a couple years ago. I was going with the g pro lightspeed but my enormous, heavy hands just made it incredibly hard to control it. Went with the 903 afterwards and improved alot just because of the sheer mouse weight and size
@mz.416z Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this great guide .. I'm not familiar with kovaak's aim trainer so I don't really know hat scenarios to play .. and if I want to play for 3 hours should I play One aim category for the day or play all of them in one day
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
3 hours or training is pushing too much. 90 mins is a much nicer time/ And it's really up to you, you're the one training, you decide what you need to improve on
@erkandegilerkam11 ай бұрын
I watched this video 1.5 months ago knowing nothing, didn’t have any experience in an aimtrainers and I now started to hit top %0.5-1 in click timing scenarios (consistently %2-3), my tracking and switching still developing but I am at consistent %5 at those as well (maybe because I hardly played medium ttk games in my life). Anyways, I just wanted to thank you for this masterpiece, it helped me a lot (especially about how to play a scenario so I can translate it into the real game).
@GREED_EU11 ай бұрын
@utentecaal566011 ай бұрын
@@GREED_EU i was wondering what's the game in the background?
@choymatthew48 Жыл бұрын
What are your thoughts on mouse sensor position? been experimenting with a high sens aimstyle where the smallest horizontal adjustments are done by sort of 'twisting' motion of the fingers but I found that I needed to grip the mouse in line with or just behind the sensor to get any sort of consistency. This feels a bit uncomfortable on my mouse because the sensor is so far back. Considering getting a mouse with a higher sensor position but with my current sensitivity and aimstyle, my wrist movements already aren't particularly smooth and I worry the higher sensor placement will make my wrist even jerkier
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
It's really all about your practice and developing that comfort, if you continue to try your grip style and it doesn't feel comfortable because of the mouse, I would suggest a new mouse or a new grip style, whichever you would prefer. But it's gonna come down to practice, there isn't some magical thing thats gonna make your aim good because your gear has improved, your aim will probably be identical between both mice in terms of accuracy and control. So whatever is more comfortable and consistent, I would move towards
@TheDC-ks3tw Жыл бұрын
Have you tried using mouse accel to rotate the sensor? This is what the asus harpie mouse does with aim lab
@ksual_10 ай бұрын
So much time lost not knowing this video exists
@fromnothingtoeverything1419 Жыл бұрын
I see you mentioned iq. Does that really matter? I would imagine that iq would just speed up how fast you get to the top rather then gatekeeping you. Am I correct?
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
It's mentioned to give more weight to what I'm saying, as well as the fact I've been studying aim theory for long. Being able to learn much faster than average due to my higher iq also helps to get my point across due to my time investment
@GREED_EU Жыл бұрын
@@unity6926 The Serebriakoff Advanced Culture Fair Test Mensa Norway Mensa Sweden Mensa Denmark Nicologic Mensa Finland. All IQ scores averaged gave me 151 IQ. Though IQ tests and scores meanings can vary depending on type of test and things of that nature. You don't have to believe me, it doesn't change anything regardless.
@nazunalover Жыл бұрын
i listened this like a podcast and it was pretty chill also i think i improved my understanding on aim
@ProductivityRunner11 ай бұрын
Bro invented a new accent
@kreatos105 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. this is helping me sort the bs so to speak. ... Btw you are correct; i am within the top 10% of aimer in aim lab with like maybe 4 days of max an hour practice. I did find it really odd considering i find myself terrible. That said when i think of most people that ik play on pc. there is only one person that best my aim and the margin with lower people on this list is like 10 fold. So this 10% information the software gave me make sense now. Thanks for reminding me also that i need to practice all the parts separately. I have garbage tracking compared to the 2 others which is probably my bottleneck. I will keep practicing tracking more intensely.
@kaylanvanniekerk85942 жыл бұрын
Did you play high sens from the start or did you switch to it later on? Just curious because everyone keeps on talking about how bad high sens is and how you'll never be consistent with it.
@GREED_EU2 жыл бұрын
Always played high sens
@DRNOval2 жыл бұрын
High sens is harder to be consistent with but theoretically has a higher skill ceiling though there are people who play extremely low and extremely high sens with top aim. If you are just starting you should go with something in between
@zombiedeathrays886211 ай бұрын
1:30:59 edge tracking is a good strategy for reactive and if you have that precision it will translate to game. My reactive scores are way higher than anything else cause my main game is apex. for me dynamic clicking is by far the hardest.
@nightcoreperson997211 ай бұрын
The iq flex was kinda funny
@truckmuncher89989 ай бұрын
I’m not on mouse and keyboard currently I’m just a console pleb on controller HOWEVER this video is still extremely helpful to me in how I understand how to train myself and I can understand and apply this information to my own aim even on controller and learn how to adapt this advice to my needs and understanding how I need to train and improve so thank you so much for this