@@patootie3529 Its fortnite language. Translation : "CS:GO players are more likely to be way better than me in a 1v1 aim battle. In a fortnite battle i would easily beat him since i can only build walls fast and need 1 80% accurate hit with a shotgun when i jump over him to get a kill. TL;DR Im jealous." Hope it helps !
Maps used: 5 Sphere Hipfire Small (30 min a day) Ascended Tracking v3 (30 min a day) 1wall 6targets extra small (30 min a day) RexStrafesCata Invincible (30 min a day) He practiced about 2 hours a day (with a few off days)
@@gigachadtwixz7262 sorry if I dont catch your sarcasm... But if you only train those maps for 10 mind in total = no improvement, you simply just need to train more. It would be the same if you wanted to become a bodybuilder but you only trained 1 min. a day, you wouldn't get any results.. If you are doing each exercise for 10 min. daily, you would only be improving with 1/3 of the normal speed since you aren't following the program. Since I made this comment I've switch to another program which I will be doing a video on today, so feel free to give it a watch. LET'S IMPROVE TOGETHER!
@Gaapy 2 hours everyday spending on improving aiming is such a waste of time. Unless you're an actual esport pro, there is no need to spend that much time
For people wondering how does this translate to "real games": Do you ask yourself why doing squats would make a sprinter run faster too? Why would a soccer player train using an agility ladder if they won't run like that on the field? How would a swimmer benefit from doing burpees? They are all training a specific area of their field, in this case is pure aim (tracking, precision, overall mouse control)
And to those wondering if this really works, I've been doing it past few weeks, daily, at very least 30-60 min a day using different daily program though but in the end I do feel my aim became better especially tracking
Love the realistic approach in this video. You weren't trying to sell some 1 time easy tip, you just showed what commitment can do and that's very commendable. Definitely motivated me to stay on the grind since I've never really been even average at video games myself. Big thumbs up!
Stiddo I’m fine just didn’t think saying that would bring shade my way support the creators when you can every one is struggling with pandemic going around
@@Krispychikken because he already was above average when he started doing those. If anything, this should give you hope because if even a person who's better then you benefitted from this routine, so will you 100%
@@Krispychikken Where you start does not effect the end result. "The separation of talent and skill is one of the greatest misunderstood concepts for people who are trying to excel, who have dreams, who want to do things. Talent you have naturally. Skill is only developed by hours and hours and hours of beating on your craft." - Will Smith”
Downloaded this after seeing your tweet. Mainly to see how bad I was. I’ve had it for a few days and have seen some decent improvements. After watching this vid I will push through the plateau. Cheers. Gdluck.
played csgo for 6k hours and never used this, recently transitioned to valorant in search for a serious project. Also bought this on steam. There's a playlist called "Valorant" that i believe makes a lot of sense in terms of the reps and exercises you get from it. I warm up with tile frenzy and some other fast flicking stuff, then do the playlist. Afterwards i jump into deathmatch once or twice and i'm good to go for the day. I can feel my aim is far greater than what i was able to achieve on csgo only using aimbotz, and strongly recomend kovaaks for anyone having second thoughts. It's worth it. Got diamond only solo queueing playing whenever i had nothing else to practice/do. If your goal is to climb ranks, this is excelent in order to carry your team even when playing without a duelist (I main omen/cypher, usually get around 25-30 kills per game). I thought i was washed out at this point, but man was i surprised by giving this a good fair try. Believe in yourselves guys. You won't regret it.
What I like about your channel is because it is way different from the others. You are sooo open. You tell your audience what did you do to get better. You tell us what is going on and how do you feel about certain things. You show us that you work hard and also you tell us that you understand how stressful but you keep going. I love how you just spend time to understand. It’s what you are best at and is what I like about you.
This video is really useful and helpful because it makes you realize that it's not a continuous uphill journey for improvement. It has ups and downs, but if you stick with it, it will be a positive trend. Really helpful because you might get discouraged if you go in expecting to do better everyday.
Hey Marco, you’re probably not gonna read this but i just wanted to thank you for your previous content on The Division. I bought the game when it came out and never beat it, but I recently got the season pass on sale so I decided to go back and beat it and try getting some proper builds in it, and so far I’ve been having a really good time learning about the things in the game I never bothered to learn about before, like stat rolls and what they do. Some of your videos and content on the game may be on outdated patches like 1.5-1.7 and stuff, but they made me want to learn more about stuff in the game, and kinda makes me regret never giving the game a chance a few years back during its life cycle when it was still being worked on and more players were on. I’ve tried The Division 2 but it has a really slow and boring start (who knows, maybe it’s actually fun if I beat it and get some builds on it, just like the first game), so I’ve just been watching your older videos. Anyways I just wanted to say thank you for your Division content, even if you don’t really play the game anymore.
what the fuck, that is impressive. Zeeq has been doing this shit for a few years now and is insanely good. how you managed to get so close in such little time is ridiculous. idk when zeeq last played that scene but its still crazy
Dude got some Dutch accent, btw I also used this aimtrainer and now can outaim most of the players i play against (Now I just need to grind to develop game sense)
R6 is probs the best game sense trainer, for me personally i noticed a considerable improvement in clutch situations and quick on the spot thinking and stuff like that after about 4 months playing it
Cake 4life whatever game you want to play will be the best “game sense trainer.” If you want to get good at R6 play R6. If you play R6 and get godly gamesense, it won’t translate to valorant or any other game for the most part.
@@Dy1an.k Why would someone play R6 to get better at CSGO? Why would someone play Fortnite to get better at R6? They don't. It just doesn't make sense. NFL players dont play soccer to get better at football.
I've done nothing but tracking maps. MidRange Long Strafes Invincible CloseRange Long Strafes Invincible MidRange Fast Strafes Invincible CloseRange Fast Strafes Invincible All for about 40 Mins or so then I like to do Smoothness Training too, within probably the same time as you practiced about 21 days to a month, I was only practicing for maybe 15 minutes on each one and then I became a laser beam.
Majority of the streamers never make content on how to improve aim, matter of fact they make loadout setup (warzone) videos intentionally telling people shitty setups so they remain in advantage, glad you're sharing this info, even tho its out there and alot know about these aim trainers, there's alot more that still don't know. I played warzone for almost a year and reached a point where basically the last 3 months I just stopped at a point and couldn't get better. I began making lifestyle changes like diet and exercise to improve brain health, I am taking special supplements that help you restore natural dopamine levels in brain which are responsible for focus and awareness, I fixed my desk and modified it so that I have a consistent comfortable position, I set a solid mouse dpi that im comfortable with and I began doing these aim trainers and keeping track of progress, you won't belive how all this just changed my entire skill level and now I just enjoy gaming so much more! Thanks for sharing this, it was these type of aim videos that motivated me to change so much, I can't even imagine where ill be in a couple months!
Nice video, but just to note for all the people here, just because you're scores are getting better you're not necessarily improving and KovaaK is definetly something you need to be careful not to overplay, as it can give you a false feeling of success (and actually make you worse at games if you play it more than your main game btw). Most if not all of the scenarios in the video are very basic ones and especially the tracking ones come down to learning the patterns (which any of you would be able to do after just hours of grinding). There's a lot more depth to actual aim training and it requires a completely different and more disciplined approach to be taken.
2 Questions - 1) How did you see your progress graphs? and 2) Did you adjust your sensitivity changes to also apply to whatever games you play? e.g. was your kovaak sense equivalent to the sense you play in games, and when you changed your kovaak sense did you also adjsut it in games?
My tracking was ok but most of the FPS I play are more about flicks & click timing. You don’t directly notice until you go into a game and play. Kovaaks definitely works. I was consistent everyday 20 min per aiming exercise.
@@leonsvideos personally keep it minimal 4-6 exercises will help you a lot more than doing 20 random ones, go for a split of 50-50 with flicking and tracking if your overall aim is bad. If you know your problems focus on what is best for you. I enjoy 6wallsTarget TE, 6wallsTargetsmall, reflex easy, cata strafe long and Cara strafe fast (for the short strafes). I hope this helped :)
Man wth, I'm subscribed and everything and haven't seen any content from you in months. I thought you might have quit YT. Now you pop up in my recommended videos because I started playing valorant
If you want to practice your aim to get better at any game, you got to play the game, aim trainers help a lot, but only if you constantly practice everyday on them. A few months back I tried and succeeded when improving my aim on kovaaks, but then I stopped using kovaaks and started only playing games like csgo/ valorant/ r6... and I realized that my aim started getting very rusty ( or at least not as good as my aim on koovaks ) even though I was playing these games everyday. So practicing for 1 month every single day will only make you understand how to aim better, but it will not make you better at a game if you stop practicing your aim after 1 month on these aim trainers.
litlle update: right now i think im making the most progress in game im mainly a warzone/cod player and i had a victory with 11 kills in trios yesterday its more than i achieved on console im now trieing to get more headshots because i still leg too much players
In my opinion (I'm 2000 hours cs:go bigstar and faceit lvl6, pubg 1200 hours, top 1500 Europe, #1374) you should practice everything inside the game. Even if your sensitive is absolutely the same it's still much more different feeling. Never try to train something that you mechanically won't use or/and can't replicate in the game (I'm talking about flicks, one taps, long spray control etc). Always train your reaction time (specially with sniper rifle, for example dust2 double doors, nuke between boxes, inferno long etc), always learn weapon patterns and correct spray control, always play deathmatch and try to kill as accurate and fast as possible, always try to guess where is the enemy and hold your crosshair as close as possible. Try to train your in-game sense and in-game 'brain'. Not every in game fight you can win with sharp aim, sometimes (much frequently than you think) you will have to use your brain (tactics, strategies, bait, changing positions and making sure you're not expected as much as you can). Don't try to make your aim perfect (even guys like s1mple or Niko not always hitting basic shots), instead make your self mix of everything. Good luck)
the biggest problems people have is that they don't stick to it. You only get really better if u play every day for a long time. Often people are disappointed if there not improving in a week or less. Just stick with it and you'll get better - a lot.
@@prodgalaxyy I got a lot better the first couple days using it. Then I got lazy. It's absolutely helpful and there are a ton of different tests you can do. I think if you take it seriously for a few weeks, Marco's results (in terms of gains, not necessarily ranking) are very feasible.
12:03 I will also be sucking at Valorant in the first few weeks I guess. Coming from Overwatch is a huge difference in aiming than CS:GO. I got insanely consistent after I created my own custom games in Overwatch and practiced hours in these so I really hope they have implemented a training range in the game so I dont need these extra tools like Kovaaks. I feel like you have to play the actual game to improve everything (not just standing still and aim at stuff).
They do actually have a good firing range in Valorant, You can change bots distance, strafe or no strafe, and so on, not as crazy as Kovaaks, but from what I've seen it looks pretty good.
@@your_average_cultured_dude disagree in some parts, the first few sprays are but the rest are random. Idk why they decide to make it random. I hope riot makes it a pattern instead. I feel like my aim is better in CSGO. The walking headshots are ridiculous tho, they need to change that as well.
@@user-c3jdf9lylzse but again, valorant in that area is more realistic. I know it is a game, but in real life, try getting the same spray pattern each time with for example a ak47 =p
2 to 3 hours a day is insane! I go for 1 hour and even if i've been trying hard like that for only the past 4 days, i have 44h on kovaak and it did helped me get better at aiming, big difference was my trackin when i was playing overwatch
Thanks for the inspiration man... I ll continue my routine and i was bellow average and already saw some improvements in game after a week of 90 minutes of training a day for one week
I have been toying around with 3D Aim trainer, the steam version. I thought oh, this won't help me much. I've noticed my tracking improved significantly. I notice I have a faster reaction time in Warzone 2 and win more fights. Shit really works. It's great because you can see where your weaknesses are. I knew tracking was terrible, but I've gotten silver and gold in most other categories. I have a master and expert in others, so I've mainly focused on tracking and seeing the gains.
@@lefi8522 I'm not sure about too much but less sleep is definitely bad, I have experienced it and sleep timings also matter, sleeping before 12am is ideal but it changes person to person, too much sleep can make you feel tired or lazy so it might hurt reaction time too
Ik keek je video's vroeger altijd met The Division, ik had alleen de hele video niet in de gaten dat jij het was omdat je zo goed Engels kan tot je op het eind "Zie je later" zei
I'm curious to see if you just imporved in those specific scenarios or in actual game situations where you don't have a red target on a blank background. Not insulting you, it's a genuine question cause I thought about trying one of those but I don't know if they actually help.
They train your reflexes, also it's different with everyone your brain may process this differently and you may actually be pretty good at this but you may be worse or just won't improve in your actual gameplay.
So I feel like this question gets asked a lot. I agree with most people though if you want to be better at a game you should be playing the game you want to be good at. However I feel like Aim Trainers help you learn and adjust to good aim habits. In the video Marco says that he would go over and watch his clips and see certain nitpicky things that could be fixed like the over shooting he mentioned. So if he was ONLY playing Valorant he may never have had the chance to realize that he's over shooting simply because he would still be thinking that player than killed him was simply better. But with Kovaaks you can slow down and see what is wrong with your aim and fix it based on the scenario.
@Vxerr Speaking from experience, no, they actually help SUBSTANTIALLY with EVERY FPS. Some days I feel like I have aimbot. I went from below average in FPS PVP to quite a bit above average. Edit: Extremely important to standardize your aim (example: moving your mouse across a 9 inch mousepad = 180 degrees for hip-fire/ADS). Although with practicing my Destiny aim, I'll cut the ADS aim by half to help with sniper aim. I should say my routine is substantially different and probably much more superior. Marco's seems pretty generic, whereas my routine focuses on specific aspects of aiming. I play Aimtastic w/: 360 tracking with the target the smallest size possible (10). And I play with a couple different speeds for 10 minutes each (5 minutes in and out of ADS for each target speed). Really helps with hitting really precise moving targets (like moving heads). Then I do the Assault Course (helps with aiming while strafing) Then pop-up targets with the smallest possible size and 2 targets up at a time and I try to hit them first try. If I miss a shot, then I flick to the next target, rather than moving my mouse slightly to hit it. Then I'll flick back to it after I hit or miss the target I moved on to. I also do pop-up targets with size 40 for less precise aim, more for speed. My aim seems permanently MUCH superior to what it was before. But there are some days where I really feel like I need a warm-up. That's when I go to my go-to warm-up.
They wont help in perfect scenarios but it will help your overall gameplay and aim. you will get extreme muscle memory and thats basically only aim. Sooo yes.
Iam a little older now but I was highly addicted to playing Quake 2 and 3, Quake Live , Counterstrike 1.6 and Source. Sometimes I occasionally play some Quake Champions each time I go into a FPS witout playing for a long period of time I do get wrecked the first day , the second it will be a little bit better... the third day I will be getting comfortable with the game and settings again and I notice my aim is improving alot just by playing a game casually. By using a aim trainer which I didnt know exists Iam sure it does make your aim much better if you practice if for like half a hour a day. Nice video will definitely try this one myself and see how bad Iam at day one! :)
i have a genuine question: how does this translate to a real game? here, you don't have to move, really and the dots don't shoot back either, etc. so i guess i'm curious how much of this remains when you add the stress factor. (disclaimer: i dob't really use these cause i get bored very quickly)
Games usually have alot of things going on, once you are able to get used to one of the things thats going on, it lets your mind focus more on stuff youre not comfortable with yet, so for ex: lets say rainbow 6, you need to reinforce/drone, play/fight angles, get intel from cams or callouts, position yourself behind cover/lean/movement, aim in the right areas, track your opponents,etc etc. All of these take a mental tax if you have to think about everything actively, but if you can turn one of those into passive, you can focus more actively on the other details of the game
Training is best done in low stress scenarios to build reflexes but it only works to a certain point. For many people the frustration of failure in stressful situations actually hurts the learning process. Confidence is a much larger factor than many people realize.
There are tools online to help get your mouse sensitivity the same across different games. So if a person gets everything calibrated correctly, they should be developing muscle memory that will carry to different titles.
science proved that if you are learning to jump the piano notes accurately. the person who will be jumping the note from all sorts of notes will be better than the person jumping from the same note. The more you try to vary the gamemodes in this aim trainer, the better. i had to use the same word so many times.
"key part is consistency" lmao I don't have hours of time to daily spend on training my aim... Guess I'll just stay worst person on the team and get carried everytime
If you play kovaaks 30 mins a day for a few months you could overtake this guy on aiming, his aiming routine was pretty inefficient. The kovaak community is also really helpful in helping you out for your particular aiming goals/games. Most top aimers don't practise for more then 2 hours a day.
THIS VIDEO IS A LITTLE MISSLEADING. I want to make this clear, when he started playing kovaaks his aim was already far above averege. He only really smoothed things out. If you think that in a mere 3 weeks you can get we he is at you are dead wrong. Itll take months of constent practice if you are a very averege (Gold: Valorant / Overwatch...) player.
Wow! Seriously great stuff man! People like you inspired me to start my channel to do something similar but I'm struggling to find an audience. I'm just going to keep grinding and In due time I'll have some new friends :D
I used to be called dumb and stupid for using aim trainers. But here I am furthering my progress in being top 1.5% in the world with 157 clicks in 30 seconds, of course there are better people than me; But I am more ambitious to become the first dynamic and most advanced versatile certified personal coach. Highly enthuastic about what I do and how I'm willing to spend time to study and learn to teach more players how to be more faster, precise, and optimal in their gameplay.
@@quangnguyen-nf1oo Easy. The game is fucking broken. The devs don't know their own game or how to make right changes. Second, Div1 is already a far superior game in terms of solid content and fun activities than Div2 will ever be. The community is tired of bullshit and our time is not worth playing that crap who we thought would be an improvement over first iteration. That's about it.
@@marioandrade4278 it isn't, there are friends of mine who only did 30mins a day and improved visibly within the month. I did an hour a day for a week and I'm not necessarily better, but am waaayyyy more consistent.
GenoyTexy Not wrong. While you could keep going, it’s better to just practice for a decent amount of time and then play some games or else you’d be practicing for no reason. If you’re just practicing, practicing and practicing but not even playing, then why are you practicing? Plus it would get boring
You should work of flick shots and double shots. I hit a wall with aim and after I trained those two, I saw major improvement across the board. I also wouldn't give up any of the tracking, that helps everything and just general mouse movement. :)
It's how the brain works. The more you do something the more your neurons starts firing, making connection for it. The thing is most people don't have the patience for it. To improve any skill, you have to do it, almost daily, for at least month, to see any serious improvement
@@ZdahirTradez Use the psa method you basically put your mouse to one end of your mousepad then bring it all the way to the other side and it has to be a perfect 360 once u have the sen for a perfect 360 just put it in the psa method calculator jscalc.io/embed/vqOrqXRpMgmwb8tV
@@ZdahirTradez Once you put it in it gives you a low and a high sen you need to test them both and then pick which one you like the most and just repeat till it gives you your perfect sen
I like this kind of content, you obviously put some thought into it and it makes me wonder how I can improve my aim (but I play PS4). I don’t know what to expect from Valorant, but if you play it, I’ll watch it.
For ps4 you just need to play a lot and your aim will get better overtime, thats what i did when i used to play bo3 and the same thing happened with apex (stopped playing cuz its boring now)
I am a firm defender of mid-high sense and flick heavy fast mouse movement. Fine hand movements can in most cases be used for small corrections. Gameplay with more flick movement instead of smooth tracking is viable and effective in most situations. While low sens does have the advantage of easier fine aim and precision, this does in my opinion not suite many aggressive play styles. I think that the ability to reduce target to target latency and to quickly engage multiple targets is in most games far more valuable than some greater precision, especially if there is a lot of margin of error precision wise. Generally speaking, the faster the game can be played, the worse low sens gets. Then there is the human factor. I asked myself, how does a human process the information he sees on the screen and turns that into mouse movement? How can someone stay as effective as possible in a maximum stress, maximum output, so to say, situation? I do not have the time to explain my train of thought in full detail, however, I did come up with a few things. First of all, the way we handle a big visual information influx is coupled to our eyes and because of that, to the movement patterns of our eyes. Our eyes do not move linearly, we look at something, then rapidly move our eyes to another position, then to another position and so on. In my mind this speaks for the higher efficiency of flick heavy gameplay. While slow movement with little variance to the players perspective might not have a big influence on the players ability to acquire a target, latent low sensitivity movements are much worse in this regard than higher sens ones, as smooth linear movements of the camera are not something our brain is used to from the use of our eyes. This should be amplified by low refresh rate scenarios. Now, it should be pretty clear, but for those that it isn't, low sens players often use their arm heavily for fine aiming, which adds another level to the latency problem of low sensitivity. This can also lead to a reduction in competence of wrist and finger manipulation for aiming. Lastly I question the concentration that goes into fine movements. Is it worth the sacrifice in speed? How efficiently can one perform smooth fast movements under enorme pressure? I think that rapid point to point movements are more efficient than smooth tracking in many situations, as they are much less complex and easier to scale speed wise. And maybe I'm doing it wrong nowadays, but I have adapted my principles and instead of trying to stay on target perfectly in a smooth fashion, I often find myself adjusting to a moving targets position as many times per second as possible. Maybe my playstyle is flawed, maybe the low sens playstyle is, though. For me, personally a latency reduction works better than a precision increase. Anyways, enough rambling. Thank if you read this and I hope I could inspire some of your thoughts.
So I quit games for a year and a half. I played games my whole life literally from like 2 playing online games with my grandad to having 2500 hours in cs by 13. I started this 3 days ago after getting back into gaming for a week playing valorant. I was getting frustrated about not being able to do stuff without thought and my aim being terrible. I couldn't stand being so bad and knowing I'm capable of much better. I was a 4.8 kd pubg and 8.5kd fortnite player way back when as well as being supreme and very briefly global on cs. Most recently I was a bronze one player on valorant. But enough of that the point is this is great for retraining as well as training.my score went from 10026 with an average of 8000 on first day of the invincible strafes for example to 12500 on the third day with an average of about 11000 and the same trend happened in everything. I feel like this training can be greatly enhanced by nootropics and meditation and most importantly good sleep (haven't tried that one yet). It's not about your scores however it's just improving and putting in the effort. 2 hours is long but in quarantine there is much more time for most so if you really want to improve do this or something like aim7's aiming guide. It feels great to watch yourself improve and anyone can do it.mdont get down if your scores are bad at first because the worse you are the more you will improve. Also this video was great and not some fortnite player just rambling about nothing for revenue to a bunch of 4 year olds. The video was nothing short of excellent and I'd like to say a big thank you for convincing me to start training my aim and showing the benefits in a great way. You are motivating people to do well with this.
@@zruss about 10 to 30 minutes a day, average 5 times a week I'd say. You see improvement really quickly and it's easy to see as your highscore for each individual scenario will improve. Tip: get Aimer7 guide for kovaaks. There you can see the ideal combination of scenarios for every skill level.
Good luck, i will be waiting :D
didn't know this at the time of making the video, but damn dude, you really are like number 1 in a lot of scenarios. you better pop off in valorant.
@@cpmarea wtf
Csgo players are thrash :D
@@bling9 thrash or trash?
@@patootie3529 Its fortnite language. Translation : "CS:GO players are more likely to be way better than me in a 1v1 aim battle. In a fortnite battle i would easily beat him since i can only build walls fast and need 1 80% accurate hit with a shotgun when i jump over him to get a kill. TL;DR Im jealous."
Hope it helps !
Now i can play Minesweeper professionally
Dávid Nagy I saw this comment and fucking died lmao
Jó ez jó volt😂
bro the pro minesweeper scene is nuts look it up
Stonks
No mis clicks
Maps used:
5 Sphere Hipfire Small (30 min a day)
Ascended Tracking v3 (30 min a day)
1wall 6targets extra small (30 min a day)
RexStrafesCata Invincible (30 min a day)
He practiced about 2 hours a day (with a few off days)
@Gaapy Totally agree, just wanted to point out what he said in the video :)
I practice these each for 10 mins but still my aim isn't improving
@@gigachadtwixz7262 sorry if I dont catch your sarcasm...
But if you only train those maps for 10 mind in total = no improvement, you simply just need to train more. It would be the same if you wanted to become a bodybuilder but you only trained 1 min. a day, you wouldn't get any results..
If you are doing each exercise for 10 min. daily, you would only be improving with 1/3 of the normal speed since you aren't following the program.
Since I made this comment I've switch to another program which I will be doing a video on today, so feel free to give it a watch.
LET'S IMPROVE TOGETHER!
@Gaapy 2 hours everyday spending on improving aiming is such a waste of time. Unless you're an actual esport pro, there is no need to spend that much time
@Gaapy I don't need insane aim, i never implied i did
For people wondering how does this translate to "real games":
Do you ask yourself why doing squats would make a sprinter run faster too? Why would a soccer player train using an agility ladder if they won't run like that on the field? How would a swimmer benefit from doing burpees? They are all training a specific area of their field, in this case is pure aim (tracking, precision, overall mouse control)
Thvrsis great comparison
And to those wondering if this really works, I've been doing it past few weeks, daily, at very least 30-60 min a day using different daily program though but in the end I do feel my aim became better especially tracking
But if you use different senses then it would have no result. The best way is: to adapt to one sens and aplying that to kovaaks.
@@omah979 that's not true at all. When you've mastered mouse control you'll be perform well regardless of what sens you have.
KingDragoYT this takes a lot of time tho. But yeah, G2 Pengu (pro R6 player) changes his aim every once in a while and is still good.
Love the realistic approach in this video. You weren't trying to sell some 1 time easy tip, you just showed what commitment can do and that's very commendable. Definitely motivated me to stay on the grind since I've never really been even average at video games myself. Big thumbs up!
I'll be able to click the skip ad button faster than ever
lol same
How bout you support the creator ? That's why adds are there
Mr. BennG how about you lighten up and take a joke
Stiddo I’m fine just didn’t think saying that would bring shade my way support the creators when you can every one is struggling with pandemic going around
@@MrBennG how bout when credit card aren't allowed for buying online in my country :v
So it took you 3 weeks, got it I’ll need about 8 months then
nah man, i think consistency is key. it's very doable if you just take the time daily.
@@MarcoStyle or sleepy did it
@@MarcoStyle Nah sir u got 5 sphere over 1200 in the first day, i played 2 hours a day for 3 days to get that
@@Krispychikken because he already was above average when he started doing those. If anything, this should give you hope because if even a person who's better then you benefitted from this routine, so will you 100%
@@Krispychikken Where you start does not effect the end result.
"The separation of talent and skill is one of the greatest misunderstood concepts for people who are trying to excel, who have dreams, who want to do things. Talent you have naturally. Skill is only developed by hours and hours and hours of beating on your craft." - Will Smith”
Day 12: *ROAD TO GOD*
Day 13: *I’MA RUIN THIS MANS WHOLE CAREER*
“You just gotta hit the Kovaaks” - SirD
Ah yes, I see you’re also a man of culture
Ah a manly man who has achieved true Knowledge and has transcended to the over man.
Ah, the knowledgeable
5 hours before every raid
Nice pfp 👌
I like how "sleepy is an idiot" is in the video tags
Where do u see that?
SleepyOW?
Get socialblade it tells that stuff
o SleepY0
MarcoStyle: i improve my aim
Me: loses eyes from playing aim trainer
wym?
The harder you focus on a screen, the worse your vision gets is the joke I think hes making.
I actually have to remember to blink with some of my Kovaaks scenarios, or else I won’t...
@@Fortunee44 ah the explanatiator v:
my eyes were so dry while focusing on aimtrainer, that i dropped like 5 tears. im not joking
Need that drunk aiming footage ASAP
Lol need that broto
S-DA--Te---
This guy legit came close to vF clan in 3 weeks
Well getting good is easy. Getting one of the best in the world is the hard part.
@Umbrella don't you dare waking nemesis up in real life
marco: *uploads no sleepy bully*
everyone: *everyone disliked that*
So true
@Tajny Typ lol
Downloaded this after seeing your tweet. Mainly to see how bad I was. I’ve had it for a few days and have seen some decent improvements. After watching this vid I will push through the plateau. Cheers. Gdluck.
Good job bro! I hope you reach your goal, please share back if this was effective for you.
Aim has improved. Not using it as much as I should be but it’s definitely helping.
Chris Gibbs do you have find the maps mainly from steam workshop or is there a bunch of premade maps too
@@Bumbr2 all maps are from the workshop
Lord Leckatall oh I thought some came already downloaded because I’ve heard loading time takes forever since it loads all maps or something
played csgo for 6k hours and never used this, recently transitioned to valorant in search for a serious project. Also bought this on steam. There's a playlist called "Valorant" that i believe makes a lot of sense in terms of the reps and exercises you get from it. I warm up with tile frenzy and some other fast flicking stuff, then do the playlist. Afterwards i jump into deathmatch once or twice and i'm good to go for the day. I can feel my aim is far greater than what i was able to achieve on csgo only using aimbotz, and strongly recomend kovaaks for anyone having second thoughts. It's worth it. Got diamond only solo queueing playing whenever i had nothing else to practice/do. If your goal is to climb ranks, this is excelent in order to carry your team even when playing without a duelist (I main omen/cypher, usually get around 25-30 kills per game). I thought i was washed out at this point, but man was i surprised by giving this a good fair try. Believe in yourselves guys. You won't regret it.
9:43
Marco: i ended up having a pretty bad hang over
Average score graph: u made me dissappear dude
What I like about your channel is because it is way different from the others. You are sooo open. You tell your audience what did you do to get better. You tell us what is going on and how do you feel about certain things. You show us that you work hard and also you tell us that you understand how stressful but you keep going. I love how you just spend time to understand. It’s what you are best at and is what I like about you.
Consistancy is key, doesnt matter if you do 30 mins or 3 hours anything is better than nothing along as you stay consistent
This video is really useful and helpful because it makes you realize that it's not a continuous uphill journey for improvement. It has ups and downs, but if you stick with it, it will be a positive trend. Really helpful because you might get discouraged if you go in expecting to do better everyday.
Hey Marco, you’re probably not gonna read this but i just wanted to thank you for your previous content on The Division. I bought the game when it came out and never beat it, but I recently got the season pass on sale so I decided to go back and beat it and try getting some proper builds in it, and so far I’ve been having a really good time learning about the things in the game I never bothered to learn about before, like stat rolls and what they do. Some of your videos and content on the game may be on outdated patches like 1.5-1.7 and stuff, but they made me want to learn more about stuff in the game, and kinda makes me regret never giving the game a chance a few years back during its life cycle when it was still being worked on and more players were on. I’ve tried The Division 2 but it has a really slow and boring start (who knows, maybe it’s actually fun if I beat it and get some builds on it, just like the first game), so I’ve just been watching your older videos. Anyways I just wanted to say thank you for your Division content, even if you don’t really play the game anymore.
what the fuck, that is impressive. Zeeq has been doing this shit for a few years now and is insanely good. how you managed to get so close in such little time is ridiculous. idk when zeeq last played that scene but its still crazy
Damn mate, it took about 45 seconds until I realized why that voice sounds so familiar. Best Division I analyst back in the days ;)
Dancing Bear I loved him
thx for this video. this motivated me to do my own 2 week challenge for kovaaks. I'm already seeing hella improvement.
Dude got some Dutch accent, btw I also used this aimtrainer and now can outaim most of the players i play against (Now I just need to grind to develop game sense)
R6 is probs the best game sense trainer, for me personally i noticed a considerable improvement in clutch situations and quick on the spot thinking and stuff like that after about 4 months playing it
Cake 4life whatever game you want to play will be the best “game sense trainer.” If you want to get good at R6 play R6. If you play R6 and get godly gamesense, it won’t translate to valorant or any other game for the most part.
@@nail181 it did for me, especially in positioning, its a good base line
@@Dy1an.k Why would someone play R6 to get better at CSGO? Why would someone play Fortnite to get better at R6? They don't. It just doesn't make sense. NFL players dont play soccer to get better at football.
@DasChunksta He is talking about game sense, not mechanical skill.
I've done nothing but tracking maps.
MidRange Long Strafes Invincible
CloseRange Long Strafes Invincible
MidRange Fast Strafes Invincible
CloseRange Fast Strafes Invincible
All for about 40 Mins or so then I like to do Smoothness Training too, within probably the same time as you practiced about 21 days to a month, I was only practicing for maybe 15 minutes on each one and then I became a laser beam.
Love that little message at the end, real motivation for me to stop being so trash at FPS!
I hope this game helps, I really need it!
Thank you :)
Majority of the streamers never make content on how to improve aim, matter of fact they make loadout setup (warzone) videos intentionally telling people shitty setups so they remain in advantage, glad you're sharing this info, even tho its out there and alot know about these aim trainers, there's alot more that still don't know. I played warzone for almost a year and reached a point where basically the last 3 months I just stopped at a point and couldn't get better. I began making lifestyle changes like diet and exercise to improve brain health, I am taking special supplements that help you restore natural dopamine levels in brain which are responsible for focus and awareness, I fixed my desk and modified it so that I have a consistent comfortable position, I set a solid mouse dpi that im comfortable with and I began doing these aim trainers and keeping track of progress, you won't belive how all this just changed my entire skill level and now I just enjoy gaming so much more! Thanks for sharing this, it was these type of aim videos that motivated me to change so much, I can't even imagine where ill be in a couple months!
quarantine is great for this sort of thing. Thanks for the good video!
My aiming routine : 1 Wall 6 Targets TE -> Tile Frenzy 180 Tracking 200 -> Ascended Tracking V3 at 1.5-2 speed -> RexStrafesCata -> Tile Frenzy 180 Flick -> 1 Wall 6 Targets XSmall. 10 minutes of each.
Nice video, but just to note for all the people here, just because you're scores are getting better you're not necessarily improving and KovaaK is definetly something you need to be careful not to overplay, as it can give you a false feeling of success (and actually make you worse at games if you play it more than your main game btw). Most if not all of the scenarios in the video are very basic ones and especially the tracking ones come down to learning the patterns (which any of you would be able to do after just hours of grinding). There's a lot more depth to actual aim training and it requires a completely different and more disciplined approach to be taken.
2 Questions - 1) How did you see your progress graphs? and 2) Did you adjust your sensitivity changes to also apply to whatever games you play? e.g. was your kovaak sense equivalent to the sense you play in games, and when you changed your kovaak sense did you also adjsut it in games?
My job just closed the doors for 3 weeks. I know what I’m doing for 3 weeks lol
any update
My tracking was ok but most of the FPS I play are more about flicks & click timing. You don’t directly notice until you go into a game and play. Kovaaks definitely works. I was consistent everyday 20 min per aiming exercise.
@@CallDMc how many exercises did you do each day?
@@leonsvideos personally keep it minimal 4-6 exercises will help you a lot more than doing 20 random ones, go for a split of 50-50 with flicking and tracking if your overall aim is bad. If you know your problems focus on what is best for you. I enjoy 6wallsTarget TE, 6wallsTargetsmall, reflex easy, cata strafe long and Cara strafe fast (for the short strafes). I hope this helped :)
Chaos Thank you so much!
Man wth, I'm subscribed and everything and haven't seen any content from you in months. I thought you might have quit YT. Now you pop up in my recommended videos because I started playing valorant
I played aim trainer 8 hours a day, and got insane performance in 5 days
How insane, asking for myself
I got a carpal tunnel so i cant play for a while, sadge
@@YanDale07 lmao
@@YanDale07 is it a permanent issue?? I hope not
If you want to practice your aim to get better at any game, you got to play the game, aim trainers help a lot, but only if you constantly practice everyday on them. A few months back I tried and succeeded when improving my aim on kovaaks, but then I stopped using kovaaks and started only playing games like csgo/ valorant/ r6... and I realized that my aim started getting very rusty ( or at least not as good as my aim on koovaks ) even though I was playing these games everyday. So practicing for 1 month every single day will only make you understand how to aim better, but it will not make you better at a game if you stop practicing your aim after 1 month on these aim trainers.
Im new to pc gaming and im gonna try this out from tommorow for a month every day i will post the results in here
@@raphtaliaaa5183?
any update?
@@motiondesire8786 im getting better i'm still below avarage in the rankings on kovaak though i think the hardest part for me is tracking
litlle update: right now i think im making the most progress in game im mainly a warzone/cod player and i had a victory with 11 kills in trios yesterday its more than i achieved on console im now trieing to get more headshots because i still leg too much players
plagiocephalyadultx 123 ayyyy good job dude
In my opinion (I'm 2000 hours cs:go bigstar and faceit lvl6, pubg 1200 hours, top 1500 Europe, #1374) you should practice everything inside the game. Even if your sensitive is absolutely the same it's still much more different feeling. Never try to train something that you mechanically won't use or/and can't replicate in the game (I'm talking about flicks, one taps, long spray control etc). Always train your reaction time (specially with sniper rifle, for example dust2 double doors, nuke between boxes, inferno long etc), always learn weapon patterns and correct spray control, always play deathmatch and try to kill as accurate and fast as possible, always try to guess where is the enemy and hold your crosshair as close as possible. Try to train your in-game sense and in-game 'brain'. Not every in game fight you can win with sharp aim, sometimes (much frequently than you think) you will have to use your brain (tactics, strategies, bait, changing positions and making sure you're not expected as much as you can). Don't try to make your aim perfect (even guys like s1mple or Niko not always hitting basic shots), instead make your self mix of everything. Good luck)
So now I’m going to actually have to worry about countering a misfit in crucible
MovableFormula it’s actually good now
the biggest problems people have is that they don't stick to it. You only get really better if u play every day for a long time. Often people are disappointed if there not improving in a week or less. Just stick with it and you'll get better - a lot.
Didn't even realize they make programs like this. Thank you for making this video! Got Kovaak, let's see how it works out. Definitely can't hurt.
BlueEternities updates?
@@prodgalaxyy I got a lot better the first couple days using it. Then I got lazy. It's absolutely helpful and there are a ton of different tests you can do. I think if you take it seriously for a few weeks, Marco's results (in terms of gains, not necessarily ranking) are very feasible.
Awesome progress!
12:03 I will also be sucking at Valorant in the first few weeks I guess.
Coming from Overwatch is a huge difference in aiming than CS:GO.
I got insanely consistent after I created my own custom games in Overwatch and practiced hours in these so I really hope they have implemented a training range in the game so I dont need these extra tools like Kovaaks.
I feel like you have to play the actual game to improve everything (not just standing still and aim at stuff).
They do actually have a good firing range in Valorant, You can change bots distance, strafe or no strafe, and so on, not as crazy as Kovaaks, but from what I've seen it looks pretty good.
Valorant is waaaaay easier than csgo. Spraying is super easy.
@@your_average_cultured_dude disagree in some parts, the first few sprays are but the rest are random. Idk why they decide to make it random. I hope riot makes it a pattern instead. I feel like my aim is better in CSGO. The walking headshots are ridiculous tho, they need to change that as well.
@@user-c3jdf9lylzse but again, valorant in that area is more realistic. I know it is a game, but in real life, try getting the same spray pattern each time with for example a ak47 =p
2 to 3 hours a day is insane! I go for 1 hour and even if i've been trying hard like that for only the past 4 days, i have 44h on kovaak and it did helped me get better at aiming, big difference was my trackin when i was playing overwatch
Damn.. used to watch you during the og division days. That’s voice
Great dedication paid off Gg
Damn Marco quit destiny to play valorant some respect
Did he really quit destiny???
Lets hope Sleepy and him still have the energy to go for Trials.
Destiny is garbage right now but Valorant is not looking good, honestly
Charles Müller yea but it’s not the players fault
@ as someone who played d2 on day 1, destiny was always trash
Thanks for the inspiration man... I ll continue my routine and i was bellow average and already saw some improvements in game after a week of 90 minutes of training a day for one week
1 year ago.. How did you get along? :D
Yeah you slaying now?
1:45 there is a option for hiding weapon that is how
where is the option to hide the lazer?
I have been toying around with 3D Aim trainer, the steam version. I thought oh, this won't help me much. I've noticed my tracking improved significantly. I notice I have a faster reaction time in Warzone 2 and win more fights. Shit really works. It's great because you can see where your weaknesses are. I knew tracking was terrible, but I've gotten silver and gold in most other categories. I have a master and expert in others, so I've mainly focused on tracking and seeing the gains.
also I've observed sleep affects reaction time and aim a lot maybe you can track that also
would TOO much sleep be bad for reaction time? (Say around 9-10 hours)
@@lefi8522 I'm not sure about too much but less sleep is definitely bad, I have experienced it and sleep timings also matter, sleeping before 12am is ideal but it changes person to person, too much sleep can make you feel tired or lazy so it might hurt reaction time too
@@nishantghorpade4820 thanks!
@@nishantghorpade4820 If you want to take it a step further, look up circadian rhythms.
Nice! Would be cool if we can see a before and after your gameplay at FPSs games
Can you post a list of each kovaaks scenario that you think is specifically good for valorant/csgo type ingame scenarios
My best youtube is here been waiting all that time for him to upload the video. Keep up my man
When he uploads 2 times in 1 week
Ik keek je video's vroeger altijd met The Division, ik had alleen de hele video niet in de gaten dat jij het was omdat je zo goed Engels kan tot je op het eind "Zie je later" zei
I'm curious to see if you just imporved in those specific scenarios or in actual game situations where you don't have a red target on a blank background. Not insulting you, it's a genuine question cause I thought about trying one of those but I don't know if they actually help.
They train your reflexes, also it's different with everyone your brain may process this differently and you may actually be pretty good at this but you may be worse or just won't improve in your actual gameplay.
Brandon Custodio did you just call him stupid?
So I feel like this question gets asked a lot. I agree with most people though if you want to be better at a game you should be playing the game you want to be good at. However I feel like Aim Trainers help you learn and adjust to good aim habits. In the video Marco says that he would go over and watch his clips and see certain nitpicky things that could be fixed like the over shooting he mentioned. So if he was ONLY playing Valorant he may never have had the chance to realize that he's over shooting simply because he would still be thinking that player than killed him was simply better. But with Kovaaks you can slow down and see what is wrong with your aim and fix it based on the scenario.
@Vxerr
Speaking from experience, no, they actually help SUBSTANTIALLY with EVERY FPS. Some days I feel like I have aimbot. I went from below average in FPS PVP to quite a bit above average.
Edit: Extremely important to standardize your aim (example: moving your mouse across a 9 inch mousepad = 180 degrees for hip-fire/ADS). Although with practicing my Destiny aim, I'll cut the ADS aim by half to help with sniper aim.
I should say my routine is substantially different and probably much more superior. Marco's seems pretty generic, whereas my routine focuses on specific aspects of aiming.
I play Aimtastic w/:
360 tracking with the target the smallest size possible (10). And I play with a couple different speeds for 10 minutes each (5 minutes in and out of ADS for each target speed).
Really helps with hitting really precise moving targets (like moving heads).
Then I do the Assault Course (helps with aiming while strafing)
Then pop-up targets with the smallest possible size and 2 targets up at a time and I try to hit them first try.
If I miss a shot, then I flick to the next target, rather than moving my mouse slightly to hit it. Then I'll flick back to it after I hit or miss the target I moved on to.
I also do pop-up targets with size 40 for less precise aim, more for speed.
My aim seems permanently MUCH superior to what it was before. But there are some days where I really feel like I need a warm-up. That's when I go to my go-to warm-up.
They wont help in perfect scenarios but it will help your overall gameplay and aim. you will get extreme muscle memory and thats basically only aim. Sooo yes.
Me when tryying to play an aimtraier...
*makes it to target but hand moves a little and aims slowly all over the target*
Your trying to go too fast. Slow down while learning, and eventually you'll naturally speed up.
Slow is smooth, smooth is fast.
Iam a little older now but I was highly addicted to playing Quake 2 and 3, Quake Live , Counterstrike 1.6 and Source. Sometimes I occasionally play some Quake Champions each time I go into a FPS witout playing for a long period of time I do get wrecked the first day , the second it will be a little bit better... the third day I will be getting comfortable with the game and settings again and I notice my aim is improving alot just by playing a game casually. By using a aim trainer which I didnt know exists Iam sure it does make your aim much better if you practice if for like half a hour a day. Nice video will definitely try this one myself and see how bad Iam at day one! :)
just play cs go headshot-deathmatch your aim will get insane
ascended tracking has improved my tracking a lot
i have a genuine question: how does this translate to a real game? here, you don't have to move, really and the dots don't shoot back either, etc. so i guess i'm curious how much of this remains when you add the stress factor. (disclaimer: i dob't really use these cause i get bored very quickly)
thats more of game sense, this is only aim and precision.
Games usually have alot of things going on, once you are able to get used to one of the things thats going on, it lets your mind focus more on stuff youre not comfortable with yet, so for ex: lets say rainbow 6, you need to reinforce/drone, play/fight angles, get intel from cams or callouts, position yourself behind cover/lean/movement, aim in the right areas, track your opponents,etc etc. All of these take a mental tax if you have to think about everything actively, but if you can turn one of those into passive, you can focus more actively on the other details of the game
@@MahNameE yeah i that's true it may help a lot with the muscle memory.
Training is best done in low stress scenarios to build reflexes but it only works to a certain point. For many people the frustration of failure in stressful situations actually hurts the learning process. Confidence is a much larger factor than many people realize.
There are tools online to help get your mouse sensitivity the same across different games. So if a person gets everything calibrated correctly, they should be developing muscle memory that will carry to different titles.
science proved that if you are learning to jump the piano notes accurately. the person who will be jumping the note from all sorts of notes will be better than the person jumping from the same note.
The more you try to vary the gamemodes in this aim trainer, the better.
i had to use the same word so many times.
"key part is consistency"
lmao I don't have hours of time to daily spend on training my aim... Guess I'll just stay worst person on the team and get carried everytime
If you play kovaaks 30 mins a day for a few months you could overtake this guy on aiming, his aiming routine was pretty inefficient. The kovaak community is also really helpful in helping you out for your particular aiming goals/games. Most top aimers don't practise for more then 2 hours a day.
@@minimiseval This guy gets it. This is like mid level training, the scenarios in the video are not high difficulty. It's all about consistency.
Minimise where can I go to get a really efficient routine
@@vanity1390 Look up Aimer7's kovack routines
@@ExtremeCrashCam theyre outdated tbh atleast the big guide he once made
this is great thank you! i can't wait too see a new video about the update!
As a console player, once I make the switch to the master platform I’m 100% gonna use this
Please dont call it the master platform
@@jklusky2425 well he's not wrong
Muscle Memory in field of favorite activity, simple if you love your job or training than you will own it , joy at living.
THIS VIDEO IS A LITTLE MISSLEADING. I want to make this clear, when he started playing kovaaks his aim was already far above averege. He only really smoothed things out. If you think that in a mere 3 weeks you can get we he is at you are dead wrong. Itll take months of constent practice if you are a very averege (Gold: Valorant / Overwatch...) player.
Thanks for the video I really appreciate it!
Are there any kind of aim trainers for console or controller players?
My brain is just constantly urging this guy to reload
everything is better than destiny 2, keep it up!)
you clearly havent played it
Wow! Seriously great stuff man!
People like you inspired me to start my channel to do something similar but I'm struggling to find an audience.
I'm just going to keep grinding and In due time I'll have some new friends :D
When I play Kovaak, I can only shoot a couple of times before it decides to no longer shoot and goes into a phase we can call “reload” I need help.
try different scenario
I used to be called dumb and stupid for using aim trainers. But here I am furthering my progress in being top 1.5% in the world with 157 clicks in 30 seconds, of course there are better people than me; But I am more ambitious to become the first dynamic and most advanced versatile certified personal coach. Highly enthuastic about what I do and how I'm willing to spend time to study and learn to teach more players how to be more faster, precise, and optimal in their gameplay.
"Kovaaks Aim Trainer"
Still better game that The Division 2...
Everything is better than Division 2.
Why The Division 2 is hated?
@@quangnguyen-nf1oo Easy. The game is fucking broken. The devs don't know their own game or how to make right changes. Second, Div1 is already a far superior game in terms of solid content and fun activities than Div2 will ever be. The community is tired of bullshit and our time is not worth playing that crap who we thought would be an improvement over first iteration. That's about it.
I'm thinking of starting to do these during useless/boring online classes. Don't have that much time outside of that.
Title should be *HOW TO MAKE YOUR AIM MASTERCLASS NOT CLICKBAIT ,DOCTORS HATE HIM*
EVERYBODY IN WHATEVER TOWN YOU LIVE IN, IS GOING CRAZY FOR THIS AIM TRAINER!
Finally, inspiration that shows its worth training aim
-How i got extreme aim playing csgo in 3 weeks
Oh, you are going to play Valorant? Had no idea you were interested in that game.
Good luck with your new adventure!
Couple hours a day? Literally all my free time, if I'm even lucky to get that much lol
Joel H 1-1:30 hour max anything more than that will just exhaust you and not really help you improve
GenoyTexy lmao explain how that’s wrong
@@marioandrade4278 it isn't, there are friends of mine who only did 30mins a day and improved visibly within the month. I did an hour a day for a week and I'm not necessarily better, but am waaayyyy more consistent.
GenoyTexy Not wrong. While you could keep going, it’s better to just practice for a decent amount of time and then play some games or else you’d be practicing for no reason. If you’re just practicing, practicing and practicing but not even playing, then why are you practicing? Plus it would get boring
You should work of flick shots and double shots. I hit a wall with aim and after I trained those two, I saw major improvement across the board. I also wouldn't give up any of the tracking, that helps everything and just general mouse movement. :)
Me: *gets a headshot after 2000 games in Unrated valorant matches of dying with 0 kills*
Also me: OMG IM SO GOOD BRUH IM SHROUD
Bro when you said Fragzy it sounded so much like my name i was like Damn who else came up with my name
"Lobbies used to call me noob and told me I should uninstall. Now I'm reported for being a hacker.
Great Success."
LMAO
I think it might help for me. Striker needs good aim and trigger discipline to work properly, so I think I will try this out too. Thanks marco.
how should i adjust my sense on the aim trainer to fit my sens in the game tho
theres different websites that will translate the sensitivity from game to game
It's how the brain works. The more you do something the more your neurons starts firing, making connection for it. The thing is most people don't have the patience for it. To improve any skill, you have to do it, almost daily, for at least month, to see any serious improvement
I'm literally doing the same thing and I'm on day 6 atm
DanNS1 how do u get the sense
@@ZdahirTradez Use the psa method you basically put your mouse to one end of your mousepad then bring it all the way to the other side and it has to be a perfect 360 once u have the sen for a perfect 360 just put it in the psa method calculator jscalc.io/embed/vqOrqXRpMgmwb8tV
@@ZdahirTradez Once you put it in it gives you a low and a high sen you need to test them both and then pick which one you like the most and just repeat till it gives you your perfect sen
@xMatiArg Just read what they put on the website
@xMatiArg jscalc-blog.com/psa-method-calculator/
I like this kind of content, you obviously put some thought into it and it makes me wonder how I can improve my aim (but I play PS4). I don’t know what to expect from Valorant, but if you play it, I’ll watch it.
For ps4 you just need to play a lot and your aim will get better overtime, thats what i did when i used to play bo3 and the same thing happened with apex (stopped playing cuz its boring now)
Well time to improve my aim. And to kick you off the leader board 😂
I just play OSU! before I start playing shooters and my aim is wicked good but I might try this out one day
it makes sense if you want to compete... but wasting a couple of hours practicing instead of actually playing is weird
Well it helps a lot in the long run so it’s worth it
focusing on a single mechanic when you know youre lacking in that area is always a good idea.
also his skill doubled so it worked
I am a firm defender of mid-high sense and flick heavy fast mouse movement.
Fine hand movements can in most cases be used for small corrections. Gameplay with more flick movement instead of smooth tracking is viable and effective in most situations.
While low sens does have the advantage of easier fine aim and precision, this does in my opinion not suite many aggressive play styles.
I think that the ability to reduce target to target latency and to quickly engage multiple targets is in most games far more valuable than some greater precision, especially if there is a lot of margin of error precision wise.
Generally speaking, the faster the game can be played, the worse low sens gets.
Then there is the human factor. I asked myself, how does a human process the information he sees on the screen and turns that into mouse movement?
How can someone stay as effective as possible in a maximum stress, maximum output, so to say, situation?
I do not have the time to explain my train of thought in full detail, however, I did come up with a few things.
First of all, the way we handle a big visual information influx is coupled to our eyes and because of that, to the movement patterns of our eyes.
Our eyes do not move linearly, we look at something, then rapidly move our eyes to another position, then to another position and so on.
In my mind this speaks for the higher efficiency of flick heavy gameplay.
While slow movement with little variance to the players perspective might not have a big influence on the players ability to acquire a target, latent low sensitivity movements are much worse in this regard than higher sens ones, as smooth linear movements of the camera are not something our brain is used to from the use of our eyes.
This should be amplified by low refresh rate scenarios.
Now, it should be pretty clear, but for those that it isn't, low sens players often use their arm heavily for fine aiming, which adds another level to the latency problem of low sensitivity.
This can also lead to a reduction in competence of wrist and finger manipulation for aiming.
Lastly I question the concentration that goes into fine movements. Is it worth the sacrifice in speed?
How efficiently can one perform smooth fast movements under enorme pressure? I think that rapid point to point movements are more efficient than smooth tracking in many situations, as they are much less complex and easier to scale speed wise.
And maybe I'm doing it wrong nowadays, but I have adapted my principles and instead of trying to stay on target perfectly in a smooth fashion, I often find myself adjusting to a moving targets position as many times per second as possible.
Maybe my playstyle is flawed, maybe the low sens playstyle is, though.
For me, personally a latency reduction works better than a precision increase.
Anyways, enough rambling. Thank if you read this and I hope I could inspire some of your thoughts.
After doing this every day i lost all my hair
Saitamaaaaaaaaa
Thanks Marco, I think I'll give this a try. Hope everything's going well!
"I hit a wall! :(("
"For three days! ;W;"
pfff ok
So I quit games for a year and a half. I played games my whole life literally from like 2 playing online games with my grandad to having 2500 hours in cs by 13. I started this 3 days ago after getting back into gaming for a week playing valorant. I was getting frustrated about not being able to do stuff without thought and my aim being terrible. I couldn't stand being so bad and knowing I'm capable of much better. I was a 4.8 kd pubg and 8.5kd fortnite player way back when as well as being supreme and very briefly global on cs. Most recently I was a bronze one player on valorant. But enough of that the point is this is great for retraining as well as training.my score went from 10026 with an average of 8000 on first day of the invincible strafes for example to 12500 on the third day with an average of about 11000 and the same trend happened in everything. I feel like this training can be greatly enhanced by nootropics and meditation and most importantly good sleep (haven't tried that one yet). It's not about your scores however it's just improving and putting in the effort. 2 hours is long but in quarantine there is much more time for most so if you really want to improve do this or something like aim7's aiming guide. It feels great to watch yourself improve and anyone can do it.mdont get down if your scores are bad at first because the worse you are the more you will improve. Also this video was great and not some fortnite player just rambling about nothing for revenue to a bunch of 4 year olds. The video was nothing short of excellent and I'd like to say a big thank you for convincing me to start training my aim and showing the benefits in a great way. You are motivating people to do well with this.
I've been using kovaaks for 2 weeks now and it really helps! Got me up to diamond in apex :D
10 minutes exercises?
Each exercise is about 1 min long. I do 10 different exercises up to a few times each. Total work time about 10-30 minutes I'd say.
KSK Mic First of all thanks for the quick answer
So you spent 30 minutes per day for 2 weeks?
@@zruss about 10 to 30 minutes a day, average 5 times a week I'd say. You see improvement really quickly and it's easy to see as your highscore for each individual scenario will improve.
Tip: get Aimer7 guide for kovaaks. There you can see the ideal combination of scenarios for every skill level.