If this video helps you I'd massively appreciate you leaving a like on the video and considering subscribing to the channel. It genuinely helps me out more than you can know!
@DoggoRLYT4 ай бұрын
ive been subbed since before 50K
@goldsheep18414 ай бұрын
For the last 3 years thst all idid😂
@olegkhvorostov-kh4us4 ай бұрын
Ty for the tips this helps so much
@aysamalmashni5724 ай бұрын
done
@realityvanguard20524 ай бұрын
It's a funny thing you bringing up confidence like this today... I have been having a crisis of confidence ever since my cat died. I feel like I should have been able to do more to help him, and I don't understand why I didn't. Ever since then I have had this cloud of doubt over everything I decide. I will have to try and remember what school was like, when I would fake being confident, just to try and fit in, until faking it meant making it. I will try to make a conscious effort to assert more confidence moving forward.
@Virge4 ай бұрын
I always believed if you could let go of your doubts and be confident in yourself you’d change the game, Jack. And I’m sure many will agree when I say now you have and continue to do so! It’s really humbling to hear how your perspective on a topic we disagreed on years ago has changed as you’ve gained more experience in your career. You never stop learning and it’s something I admire and respect about you a lot! Aaaand I do vaguely remember you calling me something along the lines of an idiot back then for my stance on choosing confidence 😂 I’ve always been and always will be a huge fan of yours! Great video, great mindset, and great advice. Love following your story as you continue to grow and succeed as both a person and player. I’ll keep cheering you on even from the retirement home 🙌🏼👨🏼🦳
@prima_d82974 ай бұрын
This was so lovely to read😊
@ghad67994 ай бұрын
What a polite way of saying " I told you so". Jokes aside, that was really sweet coach
@chainuser17744 ай бұрын
Well that was the most kind comment I've read in a long time.
@airjordan4ever4 ай бұрын
Virge, I love your tutorials!!! What a classy comment, BTW.
@spoodyrl4 ай бұрын
as a 1900 i rarely see tips videos that have valuable advice for GC2+ but this was phenomenal, people don't understand that they have to push themselves to see improvement past a certain point and cant mindlessly freeplay and 2s to 2k
@Liluzibertgg4 ай бұрын
me reading this comment while trying to mindlessly freeplay and 2s to champ 1
@spoodyrl4 ай бұрын
@@Liluzibertgg lol but yeah one thing that jonk whos an ex-pro oce player turned coach told me a while ago when I was gc2ish that stuck was that when playing ranked you should be pushing yourself to play so aggressively that you're almost trolling until you can control that speed, then repeat process as you improve
@yaq70004 ай бұрын
@@spoodyrlbut then my teammates cry about me ballchasing and i just feel braindead
@davidkosiba6244 ай бұрын
I am only C1 officially eventho I do think my mechs are maybe CM/GC territory but what I noticed is exactly what that coach said , I started playing almost at that ballchasing speed and I started to improve very quickly , I used to get dusted in champ to the ball few months ago cause I just wasn't quick with decisions and with mechs , now I am the one who dust 95% of the players , I really don't follow any tip videos but the fact that I notice a tip that that coach gave just by playing shows how spot on that guy is with his tips@@spoodyrl
@spoodyrl4 ай бұрын
@@yaq7000 what i do when practicing is i play on an alternate account with chat off
@1Alixander4 ай бұрын
I don't know what to look for when im watching my replays or actually I can't notice my mistakes or I don't have the critical eye but I've found a way to fix that!! instead of needing a 3rd party to review my replays, I became the 3rd party. All I needed was to change perspectives. we all look at our teammates with the "critical eye" so we notice their mistakes with ease, so all I needed to do is become the "teammate" to notice my own mistakes. so all I do now is change to my teammates perspective and look at my gameplay from his view and it is much easier now. just a way to help those who struggle with replay analysis.
@DZ-jm1my4 ай бұрын
ABSOLUTELY, I'm so glad other people are realising this too. You might make a play that looks fine from your POV but looks like trolling from a teammate or opponent POV
@KravenZoro4 ай бұрын
That’s good discernment, great advice man. People need to do that more.
@1Alixander4 ай бұрын
@@KravenZoro no problem man, I've struggled with this a lot and I wanted to help the likes of me with this issue
@KravenZoro4 ай бұрын
@@1Alixander I’ve wondered too, the times where I would invest in watching my replays, if Im getting anything out of it watching my POV or not. Watching replays to me is just as entertaining as playing the game.
@rtzzenthic20002 ай бұрын
Oh this was an amazing POV. Thanks!
@shannonsmith89144 ай бұрын
I'm an older player, and appreciate the down to earth comments you make. I am not trying to be a pro, but I like to have fun, and I like to generally play well in the games I am involved with. Not every team you go against will be the same, nor any team if you get matched up with people will play the same. Some people like to touch every ball possible, while others like to sit in the goal and play the 3rd man the whole game. I mostly just want to contribute in each game. Thank you for keeping the game fun for a LOT of us!!
@K1rbytheking4 ай бұрын
Jack I don’t know how to say this, but your the only content creator who explains it in a way so easily and understandable, I really like this video and appreciate the effort ❤
@metasamsara3 ай бұрын
being aggressive is more efficient to learn psychologically because you force opponents to outplay you in practice not from ego, you get used to seeing ALL you can get away with instead of just doing your own thing. I have worked very hard to get rid of my anger and aggressive nature but as I was hardstuck in lower ranks once more I realized you need to outrotate your opponent in order to pressure them into making mistakes. going faster is a very effective way to go about it as you get more opportunities in the same time frame and you force them to give their best not just mechanically but also about rotation and game sense and reads. putting pressure on opponents is important, it is vital even, against players who do not make mistakes.
@jessemarr61594 ай бұрын
Hey jack I was just telling my girlfriend how much of a fan I am of yours, and I don’t usually fangirl over influencers but I’m seriously inspired by you and your content. Ty
@ApparentlyJackRL4 ай бұрын
Means a lot to me man, thank you!
@nathanhaley13533 ай бұрын
Bros lying to the internet about having a gf.
@MARELY11073 ай бұрын
@@nathanhaley1353Did you have a bad day when you wrote that?
@lucassullivan2109Ай бұрын
@@MARELY1107We all know the answer to your question😅
@donnieji4825Ай бұрын
Our wives and lady friends don't care about rocket league. If you think she cares about hearing about it... marry her. She loves you.
@balladin92004 ай бұрын
Call this man the Car Ball Physicist, really insightful video
@mikelopez68434 ай бұрын
I’m a low GC2 and I’ve been pretty hard stuck for a long time. I’m definitely gonna try these tips! One thing definitely stuck out to me about being over critical of yourself causing low confidence. I’ve noticed this about myself and found that how I play in my first game on dictates the whole rest of the day. This video made me think about that way more so hopefully I can get out of that habit!
@Exsulator24 ай бұрын
A hidden advantage of playing confident, is that when you make "confident mistakes" it's very obvious what went wrong, so you can fix the thing in practice. When you don't play confidently, then you often take fewer risks, and it gets harder to pinpoint your weaknesses. Therefore, boldly make mistakes! Lean into your decisions heavily, and if they go wrong, use it as study material to improve
@swagmanjay.4 ай бұрын
same here, peak gc3, but sit mid gc2 on average, i believe once i get over this lack of confidence i go straight to ssl, its just that mental barrier i carry that prevents me from playing better
@MitsuoRLCoach4 ай бұрын
I'd love to back you up, Jack, on your assessment on why "being confident is a choice and a decision". Sport's psychologist Dr. Noel Brick has studied that the success of most athletes is through being proactive in your goal-setting and understanding which goals fall into certain categories. Since a lot of sports/esports/game practice cannot be learned successfully overnight, I think the most common and most feared type of goal is a 'process' goal. One where you know it's essential to the foundation of your ability to succeed but also know that it takes time. Most people aren't cut out for success in sports/esports/games, because they aren't gratified early on and they lose motivation. I think your coach, Virge, was absolutely spot on and knew that it was just a process for you and all other players to sprinkle in some proactive and forced 'confidence' to get the ball rolling and to motivate you to becoming the player you are presently. I recommend anyone reading this comment to read 'The Genius of Athletes'
@Exsulator24 ай бұрын
Copypasting myself but I thought this is good for conversation: A hidden advantage of playing confident, is that when you make "confident mistakes" it's very obvious what went wrong, so you can fix the thing in practice. When you don't play confidently, then you often take fewer risks, and it gets harder to pinpoint your weaknesses. Therefore, boldly make mistakes! Lean into your decisions heavily, and if they go wrong, use it as study material to improve
@MitsuoRLCoach4 ай бұрын
@@Exsulator2 I agree but I would word it a touch different. Only part that doesn't apply to certain topics is the "taking fewer risks", I think in a controlled environment you should allow yourself to take risks. Making mistakes is a risk, learning is a risk and dedicating your time is a risk....but I think a healthy risk that everyone must take to succeed.
@toyhtoplays25824 ай бұрын
Don't call me crazy but I think the things Jack said are really similar as things you have to work on while playing football. For example the confidently playing and nitpicking yourself. I think that even though rl is very different to football in terms of mechanic's, the games do back each other up quite well. Also great tips! ❤
@eduardoleiva71554 ай бұрын
You're not crazy, man. Rocket League is a sport like any other. Some of these can apply to any sport.
@edgeribble4 ай бұрын
RL is based on football. They have the same foundation so makes sense they have the same principles for improvement
@zackismo29054 ай бұрын
@@edgeribbleSame Foundation😭 Its so different from eachother. Football is based on physical Health, but ofc also factors as confidence - but just a coincedence. Also i would choose humble over confidence in football for sure. But What Else lol.
@ar-nish4 ай бұрын
2, 4, and 5 are overlooked by most players, but will absolutely help most players improve. It's the simple things that will help you improve the most that most people overlook due to some ego or pride. Great video jack.
@Taybro4 ай бұрын
literally the best tips ive ever recieved, im a c1 and you literally mentioned all of my mistakes and making mr understand i play bad. thank you and i believe you will become rank 1 in 1v1 very soon
@zapender4 ай бұрын
Truly insightful and universal advice. This gives me the motivation and path to improve, so thanks
@limitbreaker104 ай бұрын
Im only gc but a tip that helped me personally: everything in rocket league takes time! Mechs, game sense, comms, etc. Some learn quicker some slower. Don’t rush yourself and get too critical with urself bc of it
@DeusTerram4 ай бұрын
Man! I’ve been watching you for years now! You’re literally my favorite rocket league KZbinr! Thank you for this I’m champ trying to grind to GC and just don’t know what to work on. Thank you!
@ckeyz4 ай бұрын
i am currently in the c2-c3 range and i found the first tip abt not trying to be an everything player very helpful ❤️
@junstirr18604 ай бұрын
If you asked me what I thought about AppJack, I’d tell you he my favorite player. But if you asked me on a deeper level… I’d tell you that every waking moment my soul relies on the hope that soon I would get a KZbin notification that he’s uploaded another video. I’d also tell you that I get such joy from seeing him play the game and my spirit gets motivation when I see him flick the ball to the top right corner with such passion. Lastly, I would say every word he speaks in his beautiful accent makes me think everything will be okay.
@Khswart1Ай бұрын
That very last tip is huge. Just play like you’re trying to prove to the opponent that you’re a very confident and skilled player. I can already tell what a mindset shift this will cause.
@ahahaahaha3444 ай бұрын
Coming from a gc1 he is absolutely right about EVERYTHING especially the tilt aspect. Don’t let your teammates tilt you guys , it will only effect you negatively just go next game
@vvwast4 ай бұрын
“Coming from a gc1” this guy who is a pro is right, thanks for the input
@liamstevenson6764 ай бұрын
Gc1 ain’t shit bro sorry 😭
@ahahaahaha3444 ай бұрын
@@vvwast 😭 I been watching him for years I’m literally agreeing with what he’s saying 😭
@ahahaahaha3444 ай бұрын
@@vvwast I’m just saying it’s easy to get tilted if you let any little thing tilt you so I’m saying not to do that how is that wrong? Lmao
@vvwast4 ай бұрын
@@ahahaahaha344 it’s not that deep, it’s just the way you worded it like ME A GC1 player agrees so you should trust what this guy says
@Therealsanta1154 ай бұрын
I completely agree with the playing aggressive tip, I was hard stuck improvement wise until I started playing consistently with a low level friend. Because he was gold 3 while I was champ 1 it meant I had to be the person challenging in the air every time even if I was still rotating back which has drastically improved my consistency and confidence with Ariels.
@drewjones20124 ай бұрын
Absolute legend 👏🏻 Great reminder about watching what players around you can do in new ranks. Much love, Jack. Excited to see your run at worlds ❤
@thatpotatotho67922 ай бұрын
Id imagine playing aggressive is better because you make mistakes more often, and can see the mistakes directly along with making it easier to see how to fix those mistakes. If youre always passive it becomes much more difficult to see what youre doing wrong. I always found doing too much and pulling the throttle down is much easier than doing too little and gradually increasing your aggressiveness in games
@itsdamu23 күн бұрын
Something that helped me with confidence is not focusing on how my teammates are doing and the outcome of the match. Faking confidence and going for every attempt i can without compromising my rotation or position is more important than what my teammates performance is so whether we’re winning or losing its about me and if I did the best I could do again, even if im with two idiots who cant hit a ball at all that just gives me more opportunities to try for myself and i make sure i hit those opportunities and if i dont i know i need to work on that either in free play or in game.
@olegkhvorostov-kh4us4 ай бұрын
All of that made so much sense 😊
@kazehanaa4 ай бұрын
jack: "a lot of peoples main focus in freeplay is to watch youtube on the side" me watching this vid while in freeplay: shit jokes aside, thanks for the tips
@syx_rl14 күн бұрын
the pro which made me play this game more and more, after i stoped watching u, i also stoped playing much... BRO U ARE THE REASON WHY I AM NOW PLAYING BETTER!!! also u are a pro which never changed his character and never getting other toughts by other people, u are just near to ur community and everything, hope we all enjoy the on going journey of you as a rlcs pro :D and also i hope we see u in a few seasons winning worlds ^^
@Exsulator24 ай бұрын
5:20 I'd add to the whole "true intention" thing, it works wonders to go watch a video of some pro achieving the shot you're practicing, and looking what you do different from them. The "image" in your mind is the super important. You can't always imagine it right by yourself how to hit the ball or pull of the mechanic correctly, but literally watching the mechanic multiple times creates this "Image" in your brain of how it should look. So going one by one, practicing a mechanic while also seeing a clip of it pulled off, then doing the next mechanic, is very good training
@dirtybaker2 ай бұрын
My main attribute is passing, especially in 1v1s.
@aysamalmashni5724 ай бұрын
really appreciate the care for your viewers as a pro
@willgilhespy4 ай бұрын
This man, is an absolute legend
@webby69444 ай бұрын
As a gc3 on Xbox is stopped playing a few months back and now have bought a Pc and are gonna try and grind the game again, this video has come at a perfect time.
@ginga_rl4 ай бұрын
Yea same here bro apart from pc gl with the grind
@bang87823 ай бұрын
I switched from console to pc and immediately went up an entire rank. It’s so much better.
@Aaron-jh3qh4 ай бұрын
im a low gc3 trying to make that final push to ssl and ive always tried to figure out what that final piece ive been missing was. however there were a few great points in this video that really stood out to me and that i cant wait to incorporate in my gameplay. thank you so much jack :)
@chrymix31794 ай бұрын
I used to be champ 1, but after taking a break for a year or so I dropped to D2 so if I end up taking RL seriously again these tips will help tremendously to help me get back to champ
@connection12_4 ай бұрын
Really insightful video!! Since going to London RLCS I've really wanted to get back into playing RL and improving. I'm always really focused on moving up in ranks but the connection with improving actually being more likely to result in loss of mmr is really interesting and something I've never really thought of. Big thank you for making this video!! Gonna get on the solo queue grind!
@edgeribble4 ай бұрын
U play valorant? it's mmr in RL
@connection12_4 ай бұрын
@@edgeribble oh yh mbmb
@edgeribble4 ай бұрын
@@connection12_ the process of improving might make u see a drop in rank but eventually ur increased skill will translate to a higher rank. Notice how he says improving makes it take longer to reach the NEXT rank but it will make reaching the rank after that easier
@connection12_4 ай бұрын
@@edgeribble for sure!
@bang87823 ай бұрын
I remember it taking me forever to get out of c3. Now I’m finding it impossible to get out of gc2. It’s win a few. Lose a few. I play a ton of free play with no thought other than hit the ball around like you are. These were some great tips. Thanks dude.
@JoshuaWilliams-yz3yt2 ай бұрын
This is the greatest RL educational video I have ever watched. Truly phenomenal.
@pjente15214 күн бұрын
I hit GC in 2s after 2,5k hours and found this awsome video to change my mindset and improve, thx jack! By the way that confidence story was really funny :D
@dhenderson07862 ай бұрын
Good luck at Worlds my man, i'll be there cheering for ya. Thanks for the tips!
@dominichayles22714 ай бұрын
So I get how confidence can be a choice, but I'm just not confident at all, I'm a very humble person and understand that I could be doing some things better then what I am, I just don't know how to.
@BrooksSnider-j9i4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tips Jack. I have one thing to add that might be obvious but getting good sleep is pivotal. I never feel better than when I have a good night of sleep.
@shkr_rl3 ай бұрын
16:40 this is a big problem for me, i was once told "theres always something you couldve done to avoid conceding" and ever since then i get tilted and upset at my own gameplay, it doesnt matter how but if i lost the game id be upset at myself for not being perfect
@curseword30403 ай бұрын
Gyat
@shkr_rl3 ай бұрын
@@curseword3040 me too
@2s2bs4 ай бұрын
I think the confidence factor is actually from players who don't hesitant or second-guess themselves. Such as myself, I doubt myself a lot, in two minds about plays and I get beat to the ball, etc
@MagnusSandvik-f8f4 ай бұрын
btw something for the last tip if your tm8 plays very agressive play a little more passive or the other way around that has helped me atleast up to gc after getting back to ranked
@matthewhamilton50104 ай бұрын
Love the Virge shoutout! That dude is a beast coach
@Yackolos4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video Mister. I like the part when you talk about confidence.
@Yukino135021 күн бұрын
Absolute great video man, I love how honest and true it was thank you dude this is good advice
@sammybisson86054 ай бұрын
Appreciate this video, I don’t generally spend a full near 20 minutes watching a tutorial type video but this was really helpful. I struggle personally as a gc1 with confidence.. there are times I’m so confident for whatever reason and will just plow through ranks and other times I feel like a terrible loser and lose all my ranks! Haha I do believe confidence is huuuuge if you have even some of the skill to back it up. Thanks for the effort🤟🏼
@Geoff-m4z3 ай бұрын
Enjoyed the video, very useful and explanatory. Completely agree with your views on aggression and confidence. Only criticism I can make on this video is the water slurping between edits 😂
@Zane-z7z3 ай бұрын
so my question is what do you think about listening to music while playing cause sometimes i think its better but sometimes not
@Tekatogokuta4 ай бұрын
thx jack you are right confidence makes you think faster and not doubt your self
@iLOVEheals3 ай бұрын
i watch your content for years already and just realized that i didnt sub. This video was helpful for me in terms of getting a different perspective on the mental side of a RL Player. I always wondered what i should train, this video answered it. I was improving very quickly and your section about aggro/ confi players gave me a great deal of understanding which always occupied my mind for years. Because my friend that introduced me to RL is not improving anymore or put differently I got better way faster and your explanation/ opinion gave me a great deal of hope to get to gc. :) keep it up. Regards from Germany.
@GregTurismo4 ай бұрын
Great advice, Jack!
@bobbythomusic63764 ай бұрын
Thanks Jack. I feel guilty accepting this for free. You’re a legend! 🙌
@iluvdralii4 ай бұрын
W tips jack ❤
@MFJACH4 ай бұрын
You made me realize why I didn't agree with shuishy's teachings in his road to ssl's. He was giving the advice to get you to a certain rank, which is completely different from improving as a player.
@TheOfficialKyo4 ай бұрын
i can attest to this confidence is key. i have the skill stuck in c3 trying to get gc... before i was kinda playing more passive when playing aggressive players yesterday took a aggressive approach and went up a 100mmr.
@jayjay1drum1skate4 ай бұрын
My first ever intro to app jack on a Scrubkilla ranked ones vid “thus guy jus spams flecks!”
@poseurlol4 ай бұрын
that absolute banger of a redirect at 9:40 😮
@killz3233 ай бұрын
The casual pro level mechanic muscle memory your showing is insane
@maskedgamer12003 ай бұрын
This has really helped and I fell confident to play rank even if I go down I don’t mind now
@CaptainKyles4 ай бұрын
Jack, if you haven't heard of it, and viewers, the book The Inner Game of Tennis goes very much in depth into improving your own mental in sports.
@hakkis_4 ай бұрын
Great stuff, 1700 rn myself only able to play on the weekends. I notice that it's so free wins when you let the opponent do mistakes. Playing a bit more passively, ofc within reason but most of the time you just get a free ball because they mess up a shot
@carsonw94054 ай бұрын
“Confidence is a choice” fantastic quote
@BatmanRobin-wy1id3 ай бұрын
As a casual diamond to champ player To all those under diamond 1 Confidence is key and to play calm and collected Every game that i chose to play calm i made better decisions and my movement felt smoother Dont feel rushed and always play the 2nd man role as a way to get your tm8 back in rotation Learn aerials at goal height as most will believe you cant reach certain angles And watch virges video on shooting and car alignment ❤ Also waytons aerial video those 2 along with the advice from jack will change your game Take a few minutes to readjust your thoughts on shooting and it will almost rank you out of gold into platinum Learn back post and backboard defense you should be able to reach diamond ❤
@damattboii54954 ай бұрын
I'm low champ 3 high champ 2 as a nearly purely positional player. An I unknowingly was doing this "don't be an everything player" as my flicks are pretty decent, " although likely that of a d3 or c1 in all honesty. I fit all of these almost perfectly besides the aggressive part. I'm confident in my ability to rank up. But with that I still made it to my rank 300 hours ahead of average (using wayton pilkins numbers)
@jeremyratliff66754 ай бұрын
Squishy dropped almost an hr vid of him just in freeplay years ago. Ive wat hed it so many times. Would love to see how you go about free play
@serenityrl2073Ай бұрын
thank you for an extremely useful video jack. im trying to go for rlcs top 8 in SSA tho, so ik the joke region but yea, awesome advice appreciate it
@KarLitoDE_TV4 ай бұрын
The last part with the confidence and don't blame others is the most important part - even in real life.
@RLduels4 ай бұрын
Would love to see a video like this specifically for 1v1 mains.
@YiftachCo4 ай бұрын
amazing tips, thanks jack!
@andyshmandyrl4 ай бұрын
I’ve been 1370 in 1s and I’m trying to reach 1500 one day and these little high level tips are huge, because all the improvement vids are targeted towards champ and below it seems, so thanks for making this
@Tattletales402Ай бұрын
I’ve def played you in 1s before recognize ur name
@andyshmandyrlАй бұрын
@@Tattletales402 what’s your ign
@realityvanguard20524 ай бұрын
My natural tendency is to be aggressive, but Qing solo will result in losing every game to empty-net goals against due to tms failing to read plays, or position themselves properly. Resulting in having to play with worse players after enough losses. Forcing you to play weirder and weirder in order to force wins...
@Perfumery_by_Sabin4 ай бұрын
Yeah that air dribble bump for champ is definitely something I need to work on. Hardstuck diamond here
@MitsuoRLCoach4 ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more. Thanks so much for your help, mate. You're well appreciated where I come from and I wouldn't be who I am without you blazing the trail.
@yanky_4 ай бұрын
I’ve reached Champ 1 consistently (last 3 seasons) under the average game time. I’m still under 700 hours. I’m now approaching the point I feel like I either should give the game up or commit to radically improving mechanics and decision making.
@wouhy4 ай бұрын
18minutes talking clean like that is wild. Great video
@Delly74 ай бұрын
Really great video jack 👍🏻👍🏻
@GetOffTheLawn4 ай бұрын
I can almost without fail own goal. It's my specialty.
@brentjohnson34212 ай бұрын
Do you think you could give video examples of being aggressive, and the different types and what not to do for context?
@saurabh36704 ай бұрын
love these improvement videos
@Abdulsalam.Allahim4 ай бұрын
if you have the time, could you do a road to top 100 in 2s but only solo Q. i think it could be a banger series plz like to let jack see it
@dj_thegameryt41464 ай бұрын
Jack and Squishy are hands the down the smartest in the game
@MrDilwo4 ай бұрын
For others thinking about tip #5, learn how to practice with a critical mind (Intent), and then learn how to play with a confident/aggressive mindset. These two things should feed into eachother. When you've practiced something a bunch you'll have confidence in doing it, and when you don't feel confident in doing something, go back and practice it with intent. Also, during practice it's totally okay to think "Wow I'm bad at this, why am I bad at this?" when you mess up and critically break down your mistakes. However during the game/tournament you should just say "Ah unlucky, I'll get it next time" if you mess up, avoiding overthinking about mistakes or negativity and focusing on your muscle memory doing what it knows and positive reinforcement.
@goon3034 ай бұрын
The biggest problem with most players I see online is just their attitudes. Giving up too easily, expecting too much from their teammates, behaving like children, taunting when they lose, shit talking when they win... it's disgusting and Psyonix seems to have completely given up on enforcing any kind of community rules and guidelines...
@learnix_clips4 ай бұрын
awesome tips but also holy fuck are these shots wild 😭😭😭bro is hitting insane shots while just chatting and its fucking ridiculous how easy he makes it look
@edgeribble4 ай бұрын
He is a pro
@RoboWarriorGhosT4 ай бұрын
@@edgeribblewait really?
@edgeribble4 ай бұрын
@@RoboWarriorGhosT in my head I emphasised the 'is'. Just realised to other ppl it just sounds like i'm saying he's a pro
@l0rdbubs9984 ай бұрын
@@edgeribblelol that makes more sense now😂
@dirtybaker2 ай бұрын
I think the best tip I got from this video is turning off goals in free play. Didn't even know that was a thing!
@pinpoyntRL4 ай бұрын
hey Jack any tips for not getting tilted in 1s, i’m GC 1 in 1s and struggle to keep my mental and end up tilting and throwing any tips?
@joaocastro57354 ай бұрын
Great vid jack, I would like to ask you this question cuz I don’t see many pros giving their opinion on the subject ; what is your perspective on having 2 directional air rolls ? Is it mandatory ? Some of the most mechanical players have it, but for example zen doesn’t which is ironic considering he might be the best in that regard.
@luiscuaraqui63214 ай бұрын
I think it helps a lot but this is coming from someone without directional air roll lmao
@ApparentlyJackRL4 ай бұрын
Not mandatory at all. Some of the best players in the world use only 1 however I do believe in 5 years time the best pro players will all be using both directional air rolls My advice would be to stick to using at least one directional air roll for now, but if you really want to add another one then go ahead! Sometimes doing what you truly feel like doing because you think it might be fun to learn something new is the best way to improve quickly. So truly go with what you believe you should do rather than just my advice if you feel differently than me!
@POLYTHIA3 күн бұрын
So i’ve gotta develop my weapon and reproduce my goals
@dragonstar8124 ай бұрын
As a gc3 I do feel like I do fall into the all player a lot and I do think the finding something that will make me stand out and shit will help push me to be better and also looking at what ssl players do when they face me
@Its_Samrudh.4 ай бұрын
Thank you Jack ❤
@Stank944 ай бұрын
So should you always play aggressively to improve, then naturally, your rank will catch up? Or should you alternate? And play to improve for maybe a season, then play to peak your rank the next?
@dr.ozitron2095Ай бұрын
Did you experienced this? I am 41 years old and playing for a month. And some days I played for more than 10 hours/day. Yesterday I started playing 3v3 and it happened. The game was like half speed or even 1/3 speed. Playing slowmotion, just like the fist scene on spiderman movie. I did impossible moves as "calculated". But it was only while playing, not while watching replays or youtube videos... I m just wondering if anybody else felt like this before??
@RambinoYT4 ай бұрын
1. Brain 2. Mechanics You're welcome
@enyraries4 ай бұрын
The dichotomy of rocket league. You either get better, or you rank up.
@ejwayy4 ай бұрын
preciate you appjack
@Hannsom74 ай бұрын
so ironic you say this, i have been playing really patient and not aggressive and i have became like a brick wall in hoops