As the great Bruce Lee once said: "You have to train. You have to keep your reflexes, so when you want it - it's there. When you want to move, you're moving." Great distinction between reaction time and reflex homie! Good yap!
In layman's terms: Reaction time is how quickly your eye/brain registers the information. While reflexes are how fast and *well* your mechanics (aka arms/hands) can act on that information.
Excellent video. The age meme is based on a very flawed study. I'm 36 and I hit the 120-130 range on human benchmark. Way better than when I was a teenager.
Bro that's crazy! I just saw the audio reaction training on aim labs today and was wondering whether i should do it. Lol. I'm definitely adding it now to my routine.
This a pretty good content ur dropping ur addressing the stuff that big val creators dont. I have 500 hours on aim labs i think i want to buy kavaks now 🤔
Yo shotty, how would you rank reaction, precision, and smoothness, in terms of importance? I saw your other video where you mentioned that smoothness was also very important
smoothness, reaction Then precision. Smoothness is in all of your aim and I also think that its a huge issue for most players. reaction and precision can be interchangeable but imo reaction is really important because if you can react quickly, you can adjust your aim faster, and in general it will make your aim more responsive and snappy.
@VideoGamesSimplified I won't stop until I hit my goal (masters) and I'll maybe continue after if I want. I'm starting to see a big difference in my aim and I'm really getting consistent with it
I still can't aim in valo, my aim trainer scores are good but whenever I hop in valo i aim like apeshit and I genuinely cant tell why I can't hit a guy sticking the spike while he isn't moving
@@StagprinceTF i dont think aiming at non shooting back targets requires movement, i lowered my sens and started doing better but its always only been a temporary fix
thanks for the vid! a few years ago i was playing ping pong with my dad and he complemented my reaction time (i dont often get good words from my dad so i appreciate it a lot) and since then i think that my reaction is quite good, but on humanbenchmark i get only like 230 on average, eventhough in val or cs i can get quick kills here and there and you basically confirmed my thoughts that our brain reacts to different things with different time, and i dont have to worry about clicking on a sign if it turns red on some website, being able to react quickly on stuff that is important for me is much more valuable!
my real reaction time with proper tests is 140-160 upgrading your monitor is the way to improve your reaction time the most if you already train it normally my normal reaction time went from 190-210 all the way down to 140-160 avg just from that alone you can also improve reaction time further by supplementing/adding foods into your diet that have Omega 3 DHA/EPA and L-Theanine caffeine also helps and regular exercise to. Distractions also affect reaction time, also doing reflex/reaction based brain games schulte table would be a good example Another thing to note is aiming reaction time is slightly different from normal reaction time you have to recruit more muscles and use your head more to react to the targets properly making aiming reaction time higher than your normal one also yes to what you said in the video sleep and hydration also affect it
@@zzzz-0-z Upgrading the monitor isn't that big of a deal for reaction time. The reason why many people think it is, is because online tests like human benchmark limit the fps of the test to your monitors refresh rate so the impact of monitor refresh rate is doubled and maybe there is some more funky stuff going on like frame buffering. In reality a 60Hz monitor only adds 8ms on average to your reaction time, 144hz adds 3,5ms and 240hz adds 2ms but in human bench mark you'll be like 20+ms worse if you set your monitor to 60hz.
@@Katze822228 sorry but you are completely incorrect yes i know browsers cap fps but monitors have pixel AND panel response times normally pixel response times are all the same cross all the hz unless it's OLED but panel response time is entirely up to the manufacturer how low it goes pixel response times usually are at 60hz=16.67ms 250hz=4ms and just double those alone when accounting for browser fps cap panel response times usually range from the same or higher than that of the pixel response times unless you are going for high hz top of the line monitors some of those dip to sub 0.5ms panel response times but like thats not the norm for even high hz
As the great Bruce Lee once said: "You have to train. You have to keep your reflexes, so when you want it - it's there. When you want to move, you're moving."
Great distinction between reaction time and reflex homie! Good yap!
Keep up with the free knowledge bro it helps a lot :)
Ill keep doing my best!
I'm 45 and a former ice hockey goalie, playing valorant now and just did the human benchmark and clocked 147ms
In layman's terms:
Reaction time is how quickly your eye/brain registers the information.
While reflexes are how fast and *well* your mechanics (aka arms/hands) can act on that information.
WE GOING VIRAL WITH THIS ONE BOYSSSSS 🙏
121 views in 1 hour bro fell off 🙏😭
Real
"Sleep is so important for you reaction time"
Me watching at 3AM, 4 business days after hearing it:
Excellent video. The age meme is based on a very flawed study. I'm 36 and I hit the 120-130 range on human benchmark. Way better than when I was a teenager.
Bro that's crazy! I just saw the audio reaction training on aim labs today and was wondering whether i should do it. Lol. I'm definitely adding it now to my routine.
waste of time
@@arcadesenpaiwhy?
Humans audio reaction time is faster than visual reaction time. Even though the speed of light is extremely fast.
dont let aizen soul see this
This a pretty good content ur dropping ur addressing the stuff that big val creators dont. I have 500 hours on aim labs i think i want to buy kavaks now 🤔
bro's is majestic
Prelude vandal goated
Excellent video brother you were well spoken also
Helpful!
Yo shotty, how would you rank reaction, precision, and smoothness, in terms of importance? I saw your other video where you mentioned that smoothness was also very important
smoothness, reaction Then precision. Smoothness is in all of your aim and I also think that its a huge issue for most players. reaction and precision can be interchangeable but imo reaction is really important because if you can react quickly, you can adjust your aim faster, and in general it will make your aim more responsive and snappy.
Tight. I thought I was too old but I guess not.
new Shotty video always 🔥 background noise
bros a qt
Stop the cap lol
I got from silver to plat in less than 2 weeks on the voltaic benchmarks. Is this good ?
thats great! Just keep at it and make sure you practice on harder and harder scenarios!
@VideoGamesSimplified I won't stop until I hit my goal (masters) and I'll maybe continue after if I want.
I'm starting to see a big difference in my aim and I'm really getting consistent with it
Who’s saving the yap sesh for dinner?
Reaction time isnt the most important thing to focus on: reflexes are way more important
Aren't they the same thing?
Agreed
@mistyfaderia No and I explained why I believe that in the second half of the video
yepper
How much water would you say we need a day??
I have a gallon and a half a day but for normal sized people I would say a gallon is enough
@@Coach_Shotty so 124 ounces
@@Coach_Shotty I drink 64 ounces is that good
Yo us came back to valo watched u 4 months ago, boutta watch sum
I hope you enjoy brother
I still can't aim in valo, my aim trainer scores are good but whenever I hop in valo i aim like apeshit and I genuinely cant tell why I can't hit a guy sticking the spike while he isn't moving
My next video is about Why players are good in practice but bad in game! Hopefully ill have that video out for you sometime next week!
@@Coach_Shotty Alright looking forward to it
probably you have bad movement compared to your aim
@@StagprinceTF i dont think aiming at non shooting back targets requires movement, i lowered my sens and started doing better but its always only been a temporary fix
thanks for the vid!
a few years ago i was playing ping pong with my dad and he complemented my reaction time (i dont often get good words from my dad so i appreciate it a lot) and since then i think that my reaction is quite good, but on humanbenchmark i get only like 230 on average, eventhough in val or cs i can get quick kills here and there
and you basically confirmed my thoughts that our brain reacts to different things with different time, and i dont have to worry about clicking on a sign if it turns red on some website, being able to react quickly on stuff that is important for me is much more valuable!
nice video, but the explanation of reaction time and principaly reflex isnt right
Mine is 170 ms no training
nice video but you gotta shorten the script
nah i got 16 ms
i avg 20 ms on that f1 test its dumb not intuitive at all u can just predict every time with 100% acc and sub 20ms
my real reaction time with proper tests is 140-160
upgrading your monitor is the way to improve your reaction time the most if you already train it normally
my normal reaction time went from 190-210 all the way down to 140-160 avg just from that alone
you can also improve reaction time further by supplementing/adding foods into your diet that have Omega 3 DHA/EPA and L-Theanine
caffeine also helps and regular exercise to. Distractions also affect reaction time, also doing reflex/reaction based brain games schulte table would be a good example
Another thing to note is aiming reaction time is slightly different from normal reaction time you have to recruit more muscles and use your head more to react to the targets properly making aiming reaction time higher than your normal one
also yes to what you said in the video sleep and hydration also affect it
@@zzzz-0-z Upgrading the monitor isn't that big of a deal for reaction time. The reason why many people think it is, is because online tests like human benchmark limit the fps of the test to your monitors refresh rate so the impact of monitor refresh rate is doubled and maybe there is some more funky stuff going on like frame buffering. In reality a 60Hz monitor only adds 8ms on average to your reaction time, 144hz adds 3,5ms and 240hz adds 2ms but in human bench mark you'll be like 20+ms worse if you set your monitor to 60hz.
@@Katze822228 sorry but you are completely incorrect
yes i know browsers cap fps
but monitors have pixel AND panel response times
normally pixel response times are all the same cross all the hz unless it's OLED but panel response time is entirely up to the manufacturer how low it goes
pixel response times usually are at 60hz=16.67ms 250hz=4ms and just double those alone when accounting for browser fps cap
panel response times usually range from the same or higher than that of the pixel response times unless you are going for high hz top of the line monitors some of those dip to sub 0.5ms panel response times but like thats not the norm for even high hz
get some neurogum (im jk idrk if it works)
1rd
first
damn it
second?