Aim Trainers (Aim Lab, Kovaak's) static aiming guide (Sixshot, 1wall 6targets small)

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  • čas přidán 9. 02. 2021
  • It's finally here! Of course give me as much feedback as you want and I'll maybe make a Part 2!
    If you want to help me out, either follow me on twitch:
    / bardozzz
    or consider using my Amazon Affiliate link for buying stuff!
    Here it is:
    geni.us/vBFpu
  • Hry

Komentáře • 215

  • @nervz
    @nervz Před 3 lety +447

    technique summary:
    - flick very fast with arm, and land pretty close to the dot
    - microcorrect with wrist (take ur time with the micro correction)
    -conciously try to underflick b/c it reduces overall distance

    • @hedysom3513
      @hedysom3513 Před 3 lety +11

      Don't be that limited, it's not a Bible. If you are using high sens (other games like OW and Apex) so it's not always your arm/wrist but sometimes it is wrist/fingers.

    • @schizballs
      @schizballs Před 3 lety +5

      @@hedysom3513 probably like 5% of people fingertip

    • @sudarsh_jain
      @sudarsh_jain Před 3 lety +7

      @@schizballs i also use finger tips but arm aimer.. 0.45 400dpi in valorant.. haha

    • @landanclips8676
      @landanclips8676 Před 3 lety +4

      @@sudarsh_jain get help

    • @sudarsh_jain
      @sudarsh_jain Před 3 lety +3

      @@landanclips8676 lmao xD

  • @jackliechtenstein660
    @jackliechtenstein660 Před 3 lety +220

    There's an expression used in the military to describe how you improve at tasks: "Slow is smooth; smooth is fast." The idea is to try to nail PERFECTLY the task you're trying to do, and over time you speed up through repetition. Eventually those slow perfect movements will build in speed as you gain experience.

    • @kiseijuu7420
      @kiseijuu7420 Před 3 lety +32

      Just watch the netero's training from hunter x hunter as an exemple, at first, he just wanted to pray 10000 times everyday, slowly, perfectly, cause he felt gratitude and wanted to truly express it, the first time, it took him the whole day to finish it. After years, he could do these 10000 prayers in only 1 hour, and managed to throw punchs faster than sound.

    • @npaul-
      @npaul- Před 3 lety +7

      launders fan

    • @zombiedeathrays8862
      @zombiedeathrays8862 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kiseijuu7420 so good!!

    • @kiseijuu7420
      @kiseijuu7420 Před rokem

      @@x_Oeuf 💀

    • @cool-ep5cu
      @cool-ep5cu Před rokem +2

      ​@Zombie Deathrays damn first I started out 👋🍆 pretty slow but now I mastered it and I can do it 100 times in 10 minutes

  • @sinizap
    @sinizap Před 3 lety +103

    Love the guide bard, good job

  • @bobcobb158
    @bobcobb158 Před 2 lety +6

    the flick fast, and take your time micro correcting was the perfect tip to break my plateau. Finally hit diamond benchmarks on voltaic today after using this method to break my 1w4ts plateau. Tracking is a breeze for me, but static dots are taking time to learn.. thanks for the vid bard, awesome guide

  • @PattycakesGaming
    @PattycakesGaming Před 3 lety +42

    Great guide! I'm so excited that you're starting to produce content like this :)

    • @kirins8892
      @kirins8892 Před 3 lety +4

      How’s the crucible treating you?

  • @hamdrew3748
    @hamdrew3748 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome video this explains some of the questions that I had, thank you for all the help last night. I have started on my aim training journey. Thank you!

  • @juuliano1383
    @juuliano1383 Před rokem

    My score instantly improved after applying what you taught in this video. I'm definitely subscribing

  • @schizballs
    @schizballs Před 3 lety +3

    It took me like a year to develop this habit now I feel stupid u just put it into words and it sounds super intuitive

  • @fabrice5737
    @fabrice5737 Před 3 lety +3

    This was an awesome video!
    Please make more guides, I'm trying to work on my precision as much as i can while speeding up as well.

  • @solly3p
    @solly3p Před 3 lety +1

    really smart really useful. I play an instrument so I have the same philosophy but I've never stuck to it grinding through low scores. thanks dude

  • @ApostropheYT
    @ApostropheYT Před 3 lety +1

    2 uploads in 2 days my brain cant handle so much awesomeness

  • @konrad9822
    @konrad9822 Před 3 lety

    This was a great video, which helped me out very much! I am focussing on accuracy first now in all my scenarios.

  • @bridgerwilliamson721
    @bridgerwilliamson721 Před 3 lety +2

    Great video man! I'd love to see more videos like this from you. Cheers!

  • @Ehxx
    @Ehxx Před rokem

    This is a great point, I think with a lot of things I've forgot about going slow first. (walk before you run).
    When I was taught to run an excavator for example, I was told to literally put the machine on a lower speed and slowly progress when practicing accurate grading. After a few days you get decent with it. It was always weird seeing people grade perfectly at full speed and I think thats part of the pitfall for a lot of people. You see someone do something at incredible speed and think you can just go through the motions. Which may work for some to a point, but this seems like a better way for to train your hand-eye coordination.

  • @jakobjanutka
    @jakobjanutka Před 3 lety +3

    Finally!! Thanks for this.

  • @Nurfed
    @Nurfed Před 3 lety +1

    love it bardOZ. keep up the good work

  • @KindOldRaven
    @KindOldRaven Před 2 lety +4

    Great video and explanation! PS: your records are pretty insane. I've been a casual shooter player for like 15 years (I'm old) and I always did muuuuch better in games like CS/Val than in others. Never took it serious and mostly played casuals and DMs and stuff. Decided to do some aiming benchmarks in Kovaak and it showed me exactly why: I instantly hit diamond in most voltaic static-dot variants, yet only hit between bronze and gold in tracking scenarios.

  • @MistyShadows
    @MistyShadows Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the video, going to try to implement this. Static has been such a pita for me.

  • @DevinDTV
    @DevinDTV Před 3 lety +9

    The point of a metronome is to use it as your minimum speed between targets, but still allow yourself to go faster when you can. It's very helpful for breaking plateaus sometimes.

  • @KiLVaiDeN
    @KiLVaiDeN Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks Bardoz for the excellent video, hope you'll invest some more time on "aiming science" :))
    I think there is also some basics that weren't corevered on this video for this kind of exercice :
    - Always have in mind your next target, and probably consciously visualize the pattern you'll follow on the next 4 to 5 shoots. This way, you know where you are going to flick, and how far. Having a good knowledge of the dots repartition is crucial into succeeding in this exercise. You have to somehow pay attention to newly spawned dots in order to know which pattern you will follow.
    - Don't do this exercise "passively". It's important to be focused on the task, because doing it passively, like while listenning to music hoping to beat a score is not going to build the muscle memory as well as doing it fully focused and conscious of your actions. So maybe use a white noise sound, something that permits focusing, instead of a fast beat that your brain will synchronize to while not being exactly the rythm you need in game.
    - About sensivity : Find the sweet spot between a fast enough and a too fast sens, that permits you to get from one side of the screen to another in one "easy" movement. By "easy", I mean fairly consistantly achievable, while still not having to "crisp" the arm or hand while micro correcting. Give the "PSA method" a try for this matter.
    - Another advice I can give about this, is to go some minutes on free play before any challenge sessions. By not having the pressure of "scoring", you relax your hand and your mind, and you learn even better. Then when confortable, you'll be able to do a good score for sure.
    - Pay attention to your posture, and adjust the height of your screen to a confortable level. Often people forget about their posture while "trying hard" and it leads to even less good performance.
    - Drink some water from time to time. Don't over drink, but don't forget to drink either. The brain needs to work at its max for those tasks and water is very important. Also, breathing and calming down in between sessions, is important. Drink some water, empty your mind by taking some deep breaths, then get ready to rock !
    - About going accuracy first before speeding up, from my own experience, it's important to be "at ease" with your aiming, and being slow but accurate at first seems like a good plan. When you are at ease with your aim, you can speed up, because you have a foundation on which to improve. If you try to get faster without control, you'll be like those headless chicken, maybe you'll beat a score once in a while, but never have consistant performance. The most important thing is to find a stability in scores, from which to improve, step by step.

  • @kickedtea5335
    @kickedtea5335 Před 3 lety

    I am stuck on Voltaic Diamond cause i was moving too slow and not getting 100%, really needed this video!!!! and would like to see more in the future!

  • @morcosnabil1403
    @morcosnabil1403 Před rokem +18

    this cant be called a guide, this is legitmately a course we should all appreciate and support him for putting such crucial info in a free to watch video that we almost gonna never find anywhere else

  • @zZeeq7
    @zZeeq7 Před 3 lety +261

    Good video, agree with everything pretty much.
    Regarding what static is good for, a simple way it put it, is that it's good to be able to land you crosshair where you want.
    Also regarding speed vs accuracy, it's hard to say what is the correct approach, you have me, area, mbm who went for speed, and then you, who went for accuracy, and i find it hard to tell who is better between you and mbm atm. Also for real games, you can say someone who went for speed with 70% accuracy, is going to win more 1v1 duels, because he is going to shoot first, so it doesnt matter if the enemy has 100% accuracy, if he is going to be the secondary shooter anyways.

    • @DevinDTV
      @DevinDTV Před 3 lety +6

      Honestly the 2-step aiming thing isn't even practical for real games. In reality you just do one flick and if you miss you try again, 99.9% of the time. You even see it in this video in the valorant clips; he's just doing one flick to the target, no micro-correction. The only reason it's useful in 1w6ts is because the targets are so far apart while also being very small. 6 sphere hipfire is way more similar to real scenarios (much smaller angle between targets).

    • @mejxe
      @mejxe Před 3 lety +34

      @@DevinDTV I think that he's actually 2-step aiming in game, but he became so good at it that it's hard to see the micro-correction part. Mostly he just lands one flick that close, that his micro is very small. Imo 2-step aiming is good, but only if u become so good at it, that you don't have to correct alot of distance.

    • @dokkie9979
      @dokkie9979 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mejxe 2step aiming in game is extremely situational, its useful to know for sure, but u only use it for big flicks when ure surprised by an enemy, but in a game like valorant if you have to microcorrect alot it means ur crosshair placement is bad, you should have to barely adjust shots if youre playing correctly, and even when you do it should only be a single tiny flick

    • @DevinDTV
      @DevinDTV Před 3 lety +1

      @@mejxe he's not

    • @DJS12345678
      @DJS12345678 Před 3 lety +9

      @@DevinDTV I mean he does the same technique for 6 sphere too (#1 legit score afaik) you just don't see the 2-step because the micro-correction is less obvious with each dot.
      Also yeah literally everyone micro-corrects in games. The crosshair placement just replaces the majority of the flick. Your crosshair should be very close to the enemy in general and you should only be correcting for the specific peek they're taking (in Valo)

  • @bonfiggy5620
    @bonfiggy5620 Před 3 lety +17

    Static advice from static legend himself! Thank you :)

  • @airvalorant
    @airvalorant Před 3 lety

    bardOZ, you are the goat for this video.

  • @RoldyWins
    @RoldyWins Před 3 lety

    Great video, thank you for putting this out!

  • @Jacob1ill
    @Jacob1ill Před 3 lety +1

    Insta Sub, not too long, very detailed, good points, relaxed. Love it, thankyou.

  • @SilkyCrisp
    @SilkyCrisp Před 3 lety +12

    Thanks for this video, i knew fast flick + micro correction was how I got better scores, but always thought drawing smooth straight lines from dot to dot was the "correct" way

    • @painy6588
      @painy6588 Před 3 lety +3

      The straighter the line the less wasted movement the faster the higher the score. So its not wrong. Humans just arent perfect enough so mostly straight line, decently accurate + micro correction comes out as optimal.

  • @leisureforce8448
    @leisureforce8448 Před 3 lety +1

    Bro your channel is so underrated

  • @user-rt9rc7zp3h
    @user-rt9rc7zp3h Před 3 lety

    would love to see more guides from you

  • @meatysmc
    @meatysmc Před 3 lety

    Absolute legend!

  • @Rodiac
    @Rodiac Před 3 lety +7

    Dude. You literally described the exact same philosophy I am using. But learning that you were stuck for so long (as I am right now)....man its getting hard. Its frustrating.
    Of course, someone will not understand this. But I am highly competitive but when you realize you're not that good. When you know you can be so much better....
    You want to improve. Doing the grind. It is so...dreadful. When you stagnate (the process of unlearning the bullshit and slowly improving your better habits).
    Anyway, I dont wanna get this longer, its already long...but yea, thank you a lot for this. Great reminder even if you know...its a grind.

    • @innaaii
      @innaaii Před rokem +1

      Hey, a little bit late but any update on your progress? Out of curiousity

    • @Rodiac
      @Rodiac Před rokem

      ​@@innaaii hey, necroing me :D
      erm...ups and downs...
      in terms of dynamic, static, evasive scenarios i am in 95+ percentile in most scenarios. some 99 and such.
      smooth scenarios i am in 90+ percentiles, some better some worse.
      reactive is around 80+ ....i have some 90+ percentile scenarios.
      when i wrote that comment i was only good in static scenarios, everything else was complete garbage. for example, my reactive scenarios were 60 on a good day.
      smooth was 70-80ish.
      dynamic was all over the place.
      it happened like two months ago when i figured it out how to be relaxed but firm in my grip. trying a lot to improve my focus on the target lately.
      i stopped "zoning" out during my training. since its not training. if i am not focused, i dont train. i rather stop and go play some game.
      playing with 38cm 360.
      dav3pro and saturn
      currently waiting for pulsar xlite v3 (large) and a mix from saturn and jupiter from LGG as well.

    • @innaaii
      @innaaii Před rokem

      @@Rodiac I see, thanks for the insight man. Consistent practice every day did the trick?

  • @stakmo9095
    @stakmo9095 Před 3 lety

    Thank you, for the guide helped out alot

  • @TheLetterDex
    @TheLetterDex Před 3 lety

    Love the advice videos ❤️

  • @ApostropheYT
    @ApostropheYT Před 3 lety +5

    hey bardoz will you make videos about tracking as well? Also the part about accuracy and speed was so helpful, i personally stuggle with accuracy while going fast although i can go pretty fast with above 85 accuracy its way too inconsistent and would like to keep it at above 95%

  • @PledgeBass
    @PledgeBass Před 2 lety

    really useful, to the point. Thank you! :)

  • @lex736
    @lex736 Před 3 lety

    I watched the video and instantly get 1500 thanks bardoz

  • @niyazcool1
    @niyazcool1 Před 2 lety

    thankyou for the encouragement

  • @NekoViper
    @NekoViper Před 6 měsíci

    On metronomes:
    They are very good for newer players who can use the metronome at a lower pace that provides time to correct after flicking and stomp out the habit of shooting immediately after the first flick. I used them when I was new to fps, and they helped until I started getting into the top 20-30% of scores on tasks.(which is pretty quick if you're serious about training)
    Like he says in the video: being dynamic in your aim is important, and when you get to a certain speed the metronome won't allow enough time for corrections when you need them.

  • @KZNer_Drag0n
    @KZNer_Drag0n Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the tips!

  • @danilocarboni8774
    @danilocarboni8774 Před 3 lety

    Grande! un aim beast dalla sardegna

  • @cho8225
    @cho8225 Před 3 lety

    Thank this video really help me a lot.

  • @chaztired
    @chaztired Před 3 lety +1

    such a good video, thanks :)

  • @zammm
    @zammm Před 3 lety

    thank you bardoz

  • @LighthawkFPSAimTraining

    Still the static goat in my heart

  • @FosterStrngth
    @FosterStrngth Před 3 lety

    Love u bard

  • @MrJuzJoe
    @MrJuzJoe Před 3 lety

    Thank you for the video.

  • @ethanwasme4307
    @ethanwasme4307 Před rokem

    that dot thing is so true... when you're comfortable you can start learning how to look at a target and have that dot "turn black" ;)

  • @rodrigofigueroa7987
    @rodrigofigueroa7987 Před 2 lety

    I think your advices and reflections are very accurated. Ha! Shooter's Jokes!
    Thanks, really

  • @iam73en
    @iam73en Před 3 lety +1

    best video ive seen, thank you. Please do tracking

  • @sn0t532
    @sn0t532 Před 2 lety

    great tips!

  • @Ze.NiTH_
    @Ze.NiTH_ Před 3 lety

    Great content 👌🏽

  • @nerd_one_ai2157
    @nerd_one_ai2157 Před 3 lety +2

    Solid. I just started playing small dots over large. My first shot accuracy is a lot better. I play way to many aim games lol. More than real games. I find it calming and a lot more fun tbh lol. Nice vid. Just found your vids. Subbed.

    • @tjjackson242
      @tjjackson242 Před rokem

      I play just abt the same amount in aim trainers nd games. Ik you have to play the game to get better, but I love spending abt an hour warming up, 2 playing, then 1 hour as a cool down

  • @alef3356
    @alef3356 Před 3 lety

    Thx for the tips!!!

  • @yukoval
    @yukoval Před 2 lety

    i can confirm that this works... watched this vid 10 minutes ago and tried it out... my first score in sixshot was 60k or sth cause i had to get used to it (my pb 83k) at my second try i got 67k in the next 2 over 70k and already at my fifth try i beat my pb with 84k... gonna keep doing it for the next months... lets see what results imma get ^^

  • @Submetry
    @Submetry Před 2 lety

    very useful love the video

  • @Gilix
    @Gilix Před 2 lety

    tried to go for 100% accuracy and beat my old highscore by 100 somehow lol. Great Guide!

  • @BattleBulko
    @BattleBulko Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you. Helped me to jump from 650 where I was stuck for a while to 840. I've been beating records one after another for last two days. :)
    I've started using my forearm to aim in 1wall6targets small, but I still prefer to use a wrist and fingers in many other scenarios (Reflex Flick - Easy for example).
    Thinking about is it necessary to start using forearm as main to aim, or I wouldl manage to improve with wrist+fingers.
    It is hard for me to understand how to fight against fast moving enemy in close quarters if I use forearm. Mousepad seem too small for this. Even my (which is bigger than yours). I used to die a lot because of that.

  • @BattleBulko
    @BattleBulko Před 3 lety

    Thank you

  • @BenBrown2000
    @BenBrown2000 Před 3 lety

    Great video 👍

  • @orangejuice6795
    @orangejuice6795 Před rokem +1

    ottimo video

  • @psych2117
    @psych2117 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice dude! I recently did the same thing(tried to be 100% accurate). And made some decent progress. Even made a video about it. Great information!

  • @painy6588
    @painy6588 Před 3 lety

    Thanks!

  • @DiamaraldGaming
    @DiamaraldGaming Před 2 lety

    amazing

  • @FlipsMG
    @FlipsMG Před 2 lety +9

    This is exactly what I did when I started aim training, but after months of doing it this EXACT method I completely plateaued and realized when I started turning off my brain and not even confirming mentally if my crosshair was over a target I started breaking all my plateaus and CRUSHING my previous scores instantly. I'm not saying that this way isn't valid or right to do, maybe me doing that initially was necessary to build the control I needed to be accurate enough while turning my brain off and going for speed. Either way, that's how I progressed extremely quickly in aim trainers.

    • @aarondinio8258
      @aarondinio8258 Před 2 lety

      i would say the way how he explained it is the best way to actualy train. If u try to ignore the rules and just keep you focus on clicking you will land a new high score bcs you learned something already and now you can see your actuall improvement.

  • @taraskuzyk8985
    @taraskuzyk8985 Před rokem

    this is so fucking useful, I beat my high score that I was stuck on for 2+ weeks a few minutes after watching this

  • @someCentox
    @someCentox Před 3 lety +2

    finally

  • @tungvindtkukeri
    @tungvindtkukeri Před 5 měsíci

    Old but gold. Would this apply similary at dynamic as well?

  • @kepler180
    @kepler180 Před 2 lety

    going for accuracy and not speed is a tough pill to swallow but i'll do it

  • @Woef718
    @Woef718 Před 3 lety +1

    should I go smoothly on the microcorecction? or do like a small calculated flick?

  • @juanfunes8549
    @juanfunes8549 Před 3 lety

    Ciao bardozz, which is your dpi and sensitivity? and which mousepad you use?

  • @zracoo
    @zracoo Před 3 lety

    Thx for this :)

  • @rooski7
    @rooski7 Před 3 lety

    tyvm

  • @machinerite9186
    @machinerite9186 Před 3 lety +432

    you just ruined the career of many aim coaches LMAO.

    • @heysaka2390
      @heysaka2390 Před 3 lety +13

      Rip those aim coaches lmao

    • @user-js5wq3ym9j
      @user-js5wq3ym9j Před 3 lety +66

      Fuck em, barely added value. Sick of the algorithm promoting Rambo Kim and aim lab sponsored people

    • @mxusoleum
      @mxusoleum Před 3 lety +22

      aim coach is an imaginary job which means no possible carrier

    • @desolatemoon7377
      @desolatemoon7377 Před 3 lety +11

      @@user-js5wq3ym9j Rambo kim has some good vids but his recent vids been bland.

    • @elizarr3069
      @elizarr3069 Před 2 lety +2

      Aim coaches are a joke, there are very few who are actually good.

  • @Eric998475
    @Eric998475 Před 3 lety

    Can you also do a dynamic aiming guide?

  • @rbz0
    @rbz0 Před 3 lety

    keep it up

  • @g-kems
    @g-kems Před 2 lety

    Bel consiglio Bardoz

  • @shikhaverma4374
    @shikhaverma4374 Před 3 lety +1

    What should I use artisan hein or zero?. I play both cs and apex. And thankyou!

  • @plant-ex7819
    @plant-ex7819 Před 2 lety

    but will my initial flick improve with recorrecting my flick?, if i flick far and i keep recorrecting correctly, will i get closer to the target over time?

  • @arita6224
    @arita6224 Před 3 lety

    if im high sens, i still flick fast with wrist and micro correct right? because flicking with my arm on my sens is extremely inaccurate for me, i only swipe to do 180 or 90 degree turns

  • @user-js5wq3ym9j
    @user-js5wq3ym9j Před 3 lety

    👑

  • @steve8990
    @steve8990 Před 3 lety +1

    do you play a on a different sens in game vs kovaaks?

  • @Neuroszima
    @Neuroszima Před 3 lety +5

    i also have heard a lot of different opinions, that i "should do this do that", and i will have certain questions for you, if you will ever read it, which will be nice
    1:50 - I have started with my gaming experience being none, basically i picked up Kovaaks and my first ever score was around 20-25% accuracy at CLSI, i picked it up beacuse i felt i am 20 years of PvP experience behind everyone else...
    3:50 - how about, talking in terms of scores, sacrificing a desired amount of time in freeplay and forgetting this "challenge only, do the playlists" mentality, which is pure garbage in my personal opinion, and then "benchmark/challenge" when feeling ready? I found an advantage that i don't get constantly interrupted (with scenario ending) and mad at myself that i failed the challenge, i don't get to play with RNG some scenarios are prone to (like for example slightly closer faster-to-flick-to arrangements of dots in 1w6t TE) and affect the score? Also some of the challenges are badly designed, Vertical strafes require you to flick upwords at the start of every challenge. Nobody did present to me advantage of playing challenges, and when asked i saw response with one word and one word only - "challenges" - like they were blindly following the cult.
    4:30 - ok, i finally found peace, thank you, i wanted to make a comment about how at 1:28 most of it seemed like "flick immidietaly with one move" but you touched on this so i am happy
    7:30 - i find music, any kind, extreamly distracting just because i have some sort of metronome in my head that dictates speed when i hear the rythm, i do everything with just the sound from the game
    8:45 - would grind them because targets in the game i play are increadibly small on my screen and with my FoV, any practice on them is incredibly valuable, also to flick to heads better (no need to explain head is way smaller than full hitbox)
    All in all very nice video i liked it, made me more motivated to play

  • @L1LM1K3
    @L1LM1K3 Před rokem

    after watching this i beat my high score second round in

  • @flux3033
    @flux3033 Před 3 lety

    BARDD

  • @Elpirt6
    @Elpirt6 Před 3 lety +1

    BardOZ did playing kovaaks improve you in any games

  • @nolan6733
    @nolan6733 Před 6 měsíci

    I don't think a metronome is necessarily bad if you're using it to keep someone on target while slowly doing the flick/micro technique. Once they have the technique down, then you won't want to use a metronome so they can adapt to the dynamic nature of the task

  • @DaSeeker
    @DaSeeker Před 3 lety

    So I play mostly at night or with my windows closed so i like to play more with white dots on a low light background like greyish

  • @harrymorris9406
    @harrymorris9406 Před 3 lety +11

    A dynamic clicking and reactive tracking guide would be POG!

  • @NexusSpace
    @NexusSpace Před 3 lety

    Damm gonna try this and come back being doing it wrong

  • @Pikaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
    @Pikaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Před 3 lety

    also i notice that when i use a dot crosshair it helps with static

  • @Pikaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
    @Pikaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Před 3 lety

    one more question dose tilting your monitor help

  • @hunterrussell9263
    @hunterrussell9263 Před 2 lety +1

    In regard to the metronome I would actually subdivide the beat into 2 or 3 parts for clusters in order to avoid the issue you described while still having a point of reference to stay on pace.
    That being said, Its still not that good in many contexts.

  • @Hakushi-gt4xv
    @Hakushi-gt4xv Před 3 lety

    Ur a fuken genius. Thank you for this!

  • @xKale
    @xKale Před 3 lety

    BardOZ video? Dropping a fat sub and like rn

  • @aLLdAY556
    @aLLdAY556 Před 3 lety

    nice video

  • @Eliteplayer1988
    @Eliteplayer1988 Před 2 lety

    what mouse sensitivity would you recommend? I've seen you play 37cm/360° and over 60/360. I have tried different sensitivities (50+ cm my arm gets really tired if I have to do 180 turn and at 35+ cm I feel like a have to much tension in the arm and wrist)

    • @1ava
      @1ava Před 2 lety

      40-45cm should be fine for you

  • @shikhaverma4374
    @shikhaverma4374 Před 3 lety

    What is best sitting posture?

  • @worldvol
    @worldvol Před 3 lety

    👏👏

  • @TPB270
    @TPB270 Před 9 měsíci

    Hi bardOZ, how do I know I'm doing straight lines and when should I increase speed?