3:27 - is something I learned from one of your previous videos and because of that I am subbing for your channel. For 6500 hours it never crossed my mind to relax and try to be calm in fights in a DM. This opened a whole new dimension about practicing my aim. I use my movement more, I had a bad habit of crouching and dying like a spraying idiot every time, so I unbinded my crouch buttone and you have no idea how much this helped me. I realized one thing tho - it's not my aim that it sucks. It's my psyche. I get overwhelmed with info, with the chaos, I don't look at the radar, I don't look at my team. I get tunnelvisioned and I panic to easily. You will ask: "How it's even possible dude you have 6500 hours in this game". Well I wasn't like that before, but I guess life and it's responsibilities (like a job, family etc) kicked in, wore me down and now I am a hollow shell of my former self within the game. I just suck. I never top frag, I never do anything crazy. I am too passive, I don't take risks and I always get outplayed. I somehow lost my confidence which I had in previous years. So not everything is about aim, but regardless of that after watching so many of your videos you earned a sub, because your guides and topics are nothing short of helpful. Thank you.
I feel that i took a huge break from 2013 to 2023 i was a beast in source getting my aim back in cs2 slowly atm my 100kill challenge in aimbotz is 109kpm
“Slow is smooth, smooth is fast.” Anyone who has ever played an instrument and wanted to learn a piece of music knows that in order to learn that piece of music you have to practice it slowly at first. As slow as it takes to play it clean and accurate. Over time you gradually increase the tempo by small increments until you can play it cleanly and accurately at speed. If you’ve memorized the piece and go straight to playing it fast, you’ll sound bad. A lot of musicians make this mistake, I am no exception. There is no doubt the same rules apply here. I wonder if adding a metronome one-tapping to a beat would be a good exercise. Gradually increasing the tempo over time. Great video @WilsonCS2
your content is just really really good! just had the "realization" that you kind of are to cs2 what warowl was for csgo. you are there from the start making really good and well researched and well put together guides for everyone. keep it up man, you're killing it
I haven't even watched the video yet but I already love it. S-tier editing. Seeing you with a microphone at standard angles makes me laugh uncontrollably
Very solid advice. One of the best videos on improving aim I have seen so far. There are some real gems here. First one being "slow is smooth, smooth is fast". The next one being "consistency is key". Also, your distinction of the way pro's practice and us casuals should practice I think is very important, as well as avoiding burnout by chasing unrealistic goals. And I would also add an extra concept I saw on a youtube video (don't remember from who): "Mindful exercising". This is actively trying to detect and correct your mistakes. Don't just mindlessly track and flick, but if you miss try to assess why you missed, and correct it for the next one.
I'm really glad you talked about tracking in this video, I've been using Kovaaks for about a year and did a lot of research on aim improvement, and even in clicking heavy games learning proper tracking is so important, because nobody is just gonna stand there and wait for you to kill them, everyone is moving, counter strafing, learning how to track is pretty important if you want to hit headshots consistently, tracking + click timing = headshot, sure you can flick, but thats more risky
any advice for scout player? I rely on flicking. if i have time to track, im already dead. its ether being a revolver hero or to die as a bot. playing feels like gamble at this point and i just wait for the times i cut throught them perfectly.
Banger video with a great distillation of various concepts into a comprehensive and cohesive routine. Editing style is also awesome and engaging. Thanks Wilson!
I knew a bunch of those videos already and am familiar with pretty much all these practices, but your video really helps to summarize everything, lays it out in pillars and I love the advice for the warmup routine at the end that really seals the deal. excellent video as always
I love this channel. I always wanted a faceit 10 friend to casually coach me, and that’s the vibes Wilson brings. I also love that Wilson serves as a reminder that high elo players aren’t necessarily untouchable genetic freaks, but instead disciplined students of the game, who work hard to be that good. It’s inspiring.
the best aimers that hold records in kovaaks and aim lab say that you shouldn't necessarily be going slow when practicing your aim. When practicing you should be pushing your boundaries, you know which tempo you can comfortably tap bots and have 90%+ success rate, when practicing you should look to go beyond that at least a bit to actually build that speed over time. In game its fine to take that little bit more time to make sure you are on the guy before shooting
I totally agree, pushing your limits and striving for improvement is super important. I do think that there's a lot of value with starting off slow, then speeding up. I would say only 5% of the warmup should be that slow tapping drill. I think of it as a calibration between you and your mouse.
I play guitar (see on my channel). If you try to learn a fast phrase and immediately go to 100% and learn it fast out of the gate you will play the riff very poorly. When you learn a phrase you play with a metronome and slow it down and play it at 50% speed. Gradually over time you increase the tempo and you can eventually make it to 100% and beyond. The end result is much more clean and “accurate” if learned this way.
@@JEL5150 i happen to be a guitarist as well, and you basically said what i said. If you want to get from 50% to that 100% speed you will have to push out of your comfort zone when going up in tempo gradually. otherwise you will always be stuck at said slower tempo. That is why I said you should go a little beyond your comfortable 90~% success rate. You don't get any faster if you stay in the comfort zone. My comments main point was that you have to push outside of your comfort zone and the example i gave is to go a little bit faster than you think you can consistently hit 90% of your headshots in practice. In game its fine to take your time
I wish I made that intro 🥲 I made a version of it and had an editor make one, and theirs was clearly much better so that's what ended up in the video hahaha. Everything beyond 1:30 was me but the editor did a stellar job on the intro
watching all those guides is rly taxing for busy working man like me, so this kind of guide that compress all of them into few important points is pretty much appreciated. Keep the good work man!
Liked the video before watching! really enjoying ur content as a returning cs player from 2016! U definitely are a reason why average player got better then in the past
I remember when I visited my grandmother at home and she dropped some serious wisdom on me, she said " My grandson, One day some people will waste their time reading your comment" Today is that day
hey man have been low lvl 10 faceit for couple of years and even tho it doesnt make me improve a insane ammount ive been loving to watch you videos and remember the basic couse sometimes i forget them and they are always important, allways straight to the point and great voice over, keep it up
Really good video! It really simplifies the stuff for us. I’ve seen super complicated routines with tons of exercises that take far too long and they also uso refrag. Your exercises don’t need third party softwares or payed subscriptions. Just steam workshop maps and that’s it. Amazing video! I would add a crosshair placement pillar btw
Picking up this game again for some casual fun with friends. Vid is helpful, intuitive and info provided in commentary is useful tips. You gained a new sub
Rlly great video. Love how consistently you find a good balance between making an entertaining & engaging video that is packed with a bunch of useful information. Honored to be mentioned :))
excellent video with a great overall view of the different components of aiming and plenty of excellent advices. I am just surprised you did not consider crosshair placement as a proper pillar of aiming, even though you mentioned it several times in the video. For those interested, it can be trained with maps like ypracc or 5e_prac now, or tools like refrag. Regarding DM, some like Styko advise to work different segments of your aim in DM, like you can practice 1 taps for 5min and then spray for another 5min. This makes the whole session less repetitive, on top of making you practice different pillars. Talking about Styko, his video on aim trainers is also well worth a look. Kudos for the 10m warmup routine, it looks super relevant and I am going to put it into practice rightaway. ps: Kudos for quoting your sources as well, I wish all youtubers had all the same ethics...
Good video and tips :) youve been an inspiration to me lately. i have almost the same amount of hours as you but im not very skilled. For some reason seeing that youve gotten to lvl 10 makes it feel less impossible so ty!
You've done good research on this and the editing is really great 👍. I will try these and watch for improvement. For next video I suggest can you cover resolution and how much it impacts the gameplay. Is 4:3 stretched really beneficial for getting tunnel vision to land shot accurately or stick to native and have wider fov. PS. you can set custom res 1920*960 (2:1) and have even wider fov than 1080p native.
I was on that training grind a little while back. I did many of these things intuitively and it’s very reassuring to see how highly recommended they are. I love using the metronome in aimbots to try to sync with higher and higher kills per minute. This was my personal best measure of improvement over time
P.S. this is one of your best videos to date. Reminds me of a type of academic paper type called a systematic review. Very effective way to concentrate information into a useable format, but a lot of effort on your end. Major props Wilson you are the man.
Something many aim and warm-up videos mention is that warm-up and practice are entirely separate things. Warm-up is not to make you better but to give you consistency in your games. Practice is generally a bit more strenuous, and you would probably want to do it after your games to focus on some specific part of your aim
Another thing you may want to keep in mind is that long aim training sessions, e.g. 60min session of a few specific drills, are not very good to do on the same day you want to have a 4 match session. Especially before playing. You burn all your energy in the training and run out of focus in the matches because of it.
Thanks for the video I’m also watching various videos to create my aim routine lol I do almost the same exercises except tracking ...and i confirm you see the results ...i play at cs2 from 3 months and for a month and a half I’m training seriously ....and I’ve never played any competitive game ....'cause before i played at console. My aim routine consist in 500-700 kills with aimbotz starting slowly and making faster and with various weapons and after i use another maps for moving targets ....'cause the problem is with them it's more difficult hit them and after i do 20 or 30 minutes deathmatch
My biggest issue besides this being the first FPS game I'm playing on mouse and keyboard is that I'm being too fast. I still have it in my mind that I'm playing a game like COD or Apex so I have to be super quick and use a bunch of movements when that doesn't apply here. What makes it worse is that I get panicky when I get ran up on. Hearing that "slow is smooth, and smooth is fast" really helped me understand where a lot of my problems lie. I hope to get better within the next few months so I can play confidently in CS and mouse and keyboard as a whole. This vid was extremely helpful :)
The secrets to have a good aim in CS2 is as follow: 1. Turn on your PC 2. Jump into the game 3. Have a high ping so you gain the high ping peakers advantage. 4. Make sure to defend sub-ticks, so your enemy will keep teleporting around. 5. Make sure to keep sh!t posting nonsense trash on reddit. 6. Install hacks (it has no consequences any way). 7. Wet your pants, because it just feels nice while gaming. 8. A true gamer picks his nose and gains a positive aim increase in you reach some "gold". (eating the "gold" i +25%) 9. Never was your hands after toilet. 10. NEVER communicate with your fellow teammember 11. Always be toxic 12. never praise your teammates. 13. Dont ever complaint in the forums of how bad the VAC really is. 14. Use all your money on opening loot crates! 15. Profit 16. You now got godlike aim. Fart loud to celebrate. This was as serious as Valve takes the anti-cheat serious which is on an absolute ZERO!
Thank you so much this is so Helpful just by keeping those things in mind i already went from killing 7 every round to 26 24 being the top player of my team , hopefully with practicing i can finaly get out of the silver black hole
It might also be important to note that pros already have strong mechanics and know what they're doing to adjust them on the side while DMing, so DM helps get time with the hardest thing to isolate - getting used to how other humans are going to be moving and shooting
After 24 hours of grinding this video again and again, i am now dedicated to give myself 20 minutes per day of these exercise jist as wilson did and not play any single casual match. Crossing fingers chat. Love u all and skin monkey
thx bro my routine looks like this 1-5 Minute of tracking. 1-5 Minute of wrist and arm warming. up down and left and right! and speed up!!!! 3-5 Minutes of movement and straiffing and counter straifing. work on flicks and movement. 1-5 Minutes of spraying. 10 round sprays. peeking and spraying. and 30 round sprays with atleast 4 different guns! Crouch sprays shift sprays. 2-5 Minutes of doing everything fastly and moving ur wrists, do little bit of everything! Lastly but not leastly do what ever you want to do that day. Like tracking flickng straiffing or anything. Just do what you feel you want to do.
As a wild specimen of silver, I have to say that I find deathmatch with deagle or an ak to be a good way to 'gather' the aim into a real situation, it does take time but just 20min is pretty good. One full match of deathmatch is 10min.
this vid make i realize how p90 is super easy to use and 10k elo player love it they don't need perfect counter strafing, can keep moving more, can run as fast as they can easy recoil pattern, easy spray transfer easy burst basically just make 6 pillars in to 1 trade off is higher ttk, just casino game that can kill enemy if enemy miss or dead but either one will get killed
no reactive crosshair to get a sense of accuracy reset? i used a reactive crosshair, but the length was 1000. it basically divided my screen into 4 quarters but the middle section opened up as the shots got less accurate. this made it very easy to aim accurately even from greater angles and helped my timing immensely, especially while moving between shots.
im so glad i do pretty much all of this already. my aim is one thing i dont need to work on in my elo, def need better positioning. my util is almost there!
4:58 I prefer all wrist, i use 800 dpi and 3.7 ingame sens and i end most prem/comp (11.5k/nova) games with 60%+ hs ratio... Is it worth learning how to arm aim and combine that with wrist? Because i would completely have to relearn my shooting style? Genuine question cheers.
let me summarize ur video in this comment after doing your full video routine. and I can say I improved my aim by at least 20-30% only in those 3 days. Plan 1: I use the 6 pillars individually So I can create an aim routine that isolates every aim mechanic that's shown in this video. and it is like this: 1- slowly one-tap: A-slow is smooth, smooth is fast for 1 minute B- vertical one tap for 1 minute C- moving mouse fully from right to left for 1 minute D- wrist-aim one tap for 1 minute E- slowly counter-strafe with the arm and correct with the wrist for 2 minutes 2-tracking: A- for 2 minutes aimbots are shown in video. B-for 5 minutes reflex aimbot. take a rest for 3-5 minutes 3-Flicking: A-aimbot one bot reflex for 2 minutes B-csgostats rush mode two bots for 3-5 minutes C-csgostats counter-strafing with flick for 3 minutes 4-spray: A-spray on the wall minimum of 3 minutes or until ur feel ur recoil is good B-spray on bots for 1-2 mintues C-csgostats rush mode spray 2bots for 2-3 minutes take a rest for 3-5 minutes 5-movement: A-counter-strafing with the aim on aimbot for 5 minutes B- train your peeks in Aimbot with walls for 2 minutes take a rest for 3-5 minutes 6-Dm's as you like and wish but for me, I prefer using refrag for 10 minutes. take a rest for 20 minutes minimum before jumping to bugs. Plan 2: a warm-up routine, not an aim routine and it is shown in the video for 10 minutes u do it when u feel u r aim is off between bugs or warm up if u on a hurry to play and you don't have much time to do an aim routine.
and most important advice is to focus on your training, do your 100 percent, and don't try to train in an autopilot mode. focus and analyze your weaknesses so you can improve fast. and try to do analysis for the video in details so you can see what you are doing wrong and improve it. and also the spray routine is a monster. my spray used to suck very bad after my 5th bullet now I can spray until the 15 bullet accurately.
It's very informative and thank you for making one guide 😂😂, I'm inconsistent and I'm trying to improve my aim and learn the basics more. I watched your counterstrafing video and it helped me a lot so I'm sure this will be helpful too. Thank god for my boyfriend telling me to watch your videos.
I feel like I always had problem with separating wrist and hand aiming, very helpful part with exercises about it, besides that from my point of view pretty obvious intel xd
Good video, though a hot take that I will give on it is that while I'd agree that playing DM is a good way to improve your aim, in my opinion it's actually ineffective or at least irritating method of improving your aim if most of your gameplay on it is just searching for enemies, getting shot in the back or from 2 completely different directions, especially given how mediocre Valve DM is. Other than that, great vid!
Hey good video. I said this before but you understandably didn't notice it probably. So again, here' a video idea. How about you make a "how to play this map" video for all maps in active duty? Certainly would help relatively lower rank players and might get you some views too
The problem with rush mode is that he horizontal bot movement is quite small. You should have the bots counter strafe horizontally to learn the maximum enemy strafe speed.
Hello everyone. Love the vid.. I don't really know anyone that plays it and just been soloing so was wondering if I'm doing really bad or sort of average. I have 50 hours but I'm always either the bottom or near bottom of table with 50-65 adr. (Sometimes 25 😂) The thing I have problem with is I can do the counter strafe and spray control ok in practice but as soon as I'm in game it goes out the window in the moment. Like someone pops out where I didn't expect and I spray and forget to pull down and left. Or I'm so focused on going around the corner and where matey is I forgot to counter. Is this stuff that will just come naturally at some point?
Whats that aim map called where you are aiming at moving, colored dots instead of bots? I dont want to take the nice feeling away of shooting my opponents by doing to much bots shooting.
any advice for scout player? I rely on flicking. if i have time to track, im already dead. its ether being a revolver hero or to die as a bot. playing feels like gamble at this point and i just wait for the times i cut throught them perfectly.
big wilson
Big Willy 💀
A video that launders made
3:27 - is something I learned from one of your previous videos and because of that I am subbing for your channel. For 6500 hours it never crossed my mind to relax and try to be calm in fights in a DM. This opened a whole new dimension about practicing my aim. I use my movement more, I had a bad habit of crouching and dying like a spraying idiot every time, so I unbinded my crouch buttone and you have no idea how much this helped me. I realized one thing tho - it's not my aim that it sucks. It's my psyche. I get overwhelmed with info, with the chaos, I don't look at the radar, I don't look at my team. I get tunnelvisioned and I panic to easily. You will ask: "How it's even possible dude you have 6500 hours in this game". Well I wasn't like that before, but I guess life and it's responsibilities (like a job, family etc) kicked in, wore me down and now I am a hollow shell of my former self within the game. I just suck. I never top frag, I never do anything crazy. I am too passive, I don't take risks and I always get outplayed. I somehow lost my confidence which I had in previous years. So not everything is about aim, but regardless of that after watching so many of your videos you earned a sub, because your guides and topics are nothing short of helpful. Thank you.
I feel that i took a huge break from 2013 to 2023 i was a beast in source getting my aim back in cs2 slowly atm my 100kill challenge in aimbotz is 109kpm
But it is very defeating knowing how u used to play
damn same i feel washed up too but i'm getting back to my previous mechanical level soon just have to keep the routine!
“Slow is smooth, smooth is fast.”
Anyone who has ever played an instrument and wanted to learn a piece of music knows that in order to learn that piece of music you have to practice it slowly at first. As slow as it takes to play it clean and accurate. Over time you gradually increase the tempo by small increments until you can play it cleanly and accurately at speed. If you’ve memorized the piece and go straight to playing it fast, you’ll sound bad. A lot of musicians make this mistake, I am no exception.
There is no doubt the same rules apply here. I wonder if adding a metronome one-tapping to a beat would be a good exercise. Gradually increasing the tempo over time.
Great video @WilsonCS2
i saw that someone actually use metronome for practice tho, dk if its good or not
it's a good habit but not many people do it, but it definitely helps with tempo
You could make a whole series of "Mirage 101" or "Vertigo 101" that's this in depth and I'd watch them all
fr
or office 101
your content is just really really good! just had the "realization" that you kind of are to cs2 what warowl was for csgo. you are there from the start making really good and well researched and well put together guides for everyone. keep it up man, you're killing it
hahaha mannnn thank you tons. That's really nice of you to say.
I haven't even watched the video yet but I already love it. S-tier editing. Seeing you with a microphone at standard angles makes me laugh uncontrollably
Thank you so much bro!:)
Great idea for a video mate, awesome to see all these top tier tips consolidated and acknowledged. Also, love the General Sam style.
Very solid advice. One of the best videos on improving aim I have seen so far. There are some real gems here. First one being "slow is smooth, smooth is fast". The next one being "consistency is key". Also, your distinction of the way pro's practice and us casuals should practice I think is very important, as well as avoiding burnout by chasing unrealistic goals.
And I would also add an extra concept I saw on a youtube video (don't remember from who): "Mindful exercising". This is actively trying to detect and correct your mistakes. Don't just mindlessly track and flick, but if you miss try to assess why you missed, and correct it for the next one.
I'm really glad you talked about tracking in this video, I've been using Kovaaks for about a year and did a lot of research on aim improvement, and even in clicking heavy games learning proper tracking is so important, because nobody is just gonna stand there and wait for you to kill them, everyone is moving, counter strafing, learning how to track is pretty important if you want to hit headshots consistently, tracking + click timing = headshot, sure you can flick, but thats more risky
Totally! also if you have a good flick to adjust and a good tracking on a moving target, you can melt people spraying
any advice for scout player? I rely on flicking. if i have time to track, im already dead. its ether being a revolver hero or to die as a bot. playing feels like gamble at this point and i just wait for the times i cut throught them perfectly.
Banger video with a great distillation of various concepts into a comprehensive and cohesive routine. Editing style is also awesome and engaging. Thanks Wilson!
Thank you so much tyke!:)
I knew a bunch of those videos already and am familiar with pretty much all these practices, but your video really helps to summarize everything, lays it out in pillars and I love the advice for the warmup routine at the end that really seals the deal. excellent video as always
pillars are the key
I love this channel. I always wanted a faceit 10 friend to casually coach me, and that’s the vibes Wilson brings.
I also love that Wilson serves as a reminder that high elo players aren’t necessarily untouchable genetic freaks, but instead disciplined students of the game, who work hard to be that good. It’s inspiring.
Or just half Asian LOL
the best aimers that hold records in kovaaks and aim lab say that you shouldn't necessarily be going slow when practicing your aim. When practicing you should be pushing your boundaries, you know which tempo you can comfortably tap bots and have 90%+ success rate, when practicing you should look to go beyond that at least a bit to actually build that speed over time. In game its fine to take that little bit more time to make sure you are on the guy before shooting
I totally agree, pushing your limits and striving for improvement is super important. I do think that there's a lot of value with starting off slow, then speeding up. I would say only 5% of the warmup should be that slow tapping drill. I think of it as a calibration between you and your mouse.
I play guitar (see on my channel). If you try to learn a fast phrase and immediately go to 100% and learn it fast out of the gate you will play the riff very poorly. When you learn a phrase you play with a metronome and slow it down and play it at 50% speed. Gradually over time you increase the tempo and you can eventually make it to 100% and beyond. The end result is much more clean and “accurate” if learned this way.
@@JEL5150 i happen to be a guitarist as well, and you basically said what i said. If you want to get from 50% to that 100% speed you will have to push out of your comfort zone when going up in tempo gradually. otherwise you will always be stuck at said slower tempo. That is why I said you should go a little beyond your comfortable 90~% success rate. You don't get any faster if you stay in the comfort zone. My comments main point was that you have to push outside of your comfort zone and the example i gave is to go a little bit faster than you think you can consistently hit 90% of your headshots in practice. In game its fine to take your time
You should start doing that when ur perfected ur fundamentals. U can’t just aimlessly shoot basketball continuously without basic techniques.
@@Locusss 100% agree
Wilson your editing skills absolutely wildin out on this vid!!! Fantastic guide video as always 🤝🏼🔥💯
I wish I made that intro 🥲 I made a version of it and had an editor make one, and theirs was clearly much better so that's what ended up in the video hahaha. Everything beyond 1:30 was me but the editor did a stellar job on the intro
@@WilsonCS2 still the mastermind behind it ofc, but then I think you found your editing duo!!
Favors General Sam from Tarkov they way he does it
watching all those guides is rly taxing for busy working man like me, so this kind of guide that compress all of them into few important points is pretty much appreciated. Keep the good work man!
Liked the video before watching! really enjoying ur content as a returning cs player from 2016! U definitely are a reason why average player got better then in the past
Hell yes bro! Thank you so much:)
Really great to see your videos getting sponsored. Love to see the progress of passionate content creators.
Thank you brother!:)
I remember when I visited my grandmother at home and she dropped some serious wisdom on me, she said " My grandson, One day some people will waste their time reading your comment" Today is that day
Damnit
hey man have been low lvl 10 faceit for couple of years and even tho it doesnt make me improve a insane ammount ive been loving to watch you videos and remember the basic couse sometimes i forget them and they are always important, allways straight to the point and great voice over, keep it up
No your not lol your a 6 at best. 1v1 me for 2k
LOVE the new style walking around the maps a la nakey jakey, we getting goofy with it
a little silly!!!
your editing is only getting better man. stick it at its what will make you stand out from all the other cs youtubers
great video, great channel. you helping me take the game to a next level going from a scrub to competent. you a real one wilson
Really good video! It really simplifies the stuff for us. I’ve seen super complicated routines with tons of exercises that take far too long and they also uso refrag. Your exercises don’t need third party softwares or payed subscriptions. Just steam workshop maps and that’s it. Amazing video!
I would add a crosshair placement pillar btw
Picking up this game again for some casual fun with friends. Vid is helpful, intuitive and info provided in commentary is useful tips. You gained a new sub
Rlly great video. Love how consistently you find a good balance between making an entertaining & engaging video that is packed with a bunch of useful information. Honored to be mentioned :))
Thank you tristan:)
Your editing gets better and better wilsyonnnn
An editor made the intro for me, they did an amazing job!
excellent video with a great overall view of the different components of aiming and plenty of excellent advices.
I am just surprised you did not consider crosshair placement as a proper pillar of aiming, even though you mentioned it several times in the video.
For those interested, it can be trained with maps like ypracc or 5e_prac now, or tools like refrag.
Regarding DM, some like Styko advise to work different segments of your aim in DM, like you can practice 1 taps for 5min and then spray for another 5min. This makes the whole session less repetitive, on top of making you practice different pillars. Talking about Styko, his video on aim trainers is also well worth a look.
Kudos for the 10m warmup routine, it looks super relevant and I am going to put it into practice rightaway.
ps: Kudos for quoting your sources as well, I wish all youtubers had all the same ethics...
amazing work man ! thx a lot
Very nice video, definitely recommend people bookmark and refer to this video if they’re ever struggling with their aim:D
Good video and tips :) youve been an inspiration to me lately. i have almost the same amount of hours as you but im not very skilled. For some reason seeing that youve gotten to lvl 10 makes it feel less impossible so ty!
Man, I can't believe Paul Dano is giving CS2 tips. This is awesome!
You've done good research on this and the editing is really great 👍. I will try these and watch for improvement.
For next video I suggest can you cover resolution and how much it impacts the gameplay. Is 4:3 stretched really beneficial for getting tunnel vision to land shot accurately or stick to native and have wider fov. PS. you can set custom res 1920*960 (2:1) and have even wider fov than 1080p native.
I was on that training grind a little while back. I did many of these things intuitively and it’s very reassuring to see how highly recommended they are.
I love using the metronome in aimbots to try to sync with higher and higher kills per minute. This was my personal best measure of improvement over time
This has been highly motivating and I think I’ll try to practice more again. I did see vast improvements when I was training consistently.
P.S. this is one of your best videos to date. Reminds me of a type of academic paper type called a systematic review. Very effective way to concentrate information into a useable format, but a lot of effort on your end. Major props Wilson you are the man.
Something many aim and warm-up videos mention is that warm-up and practice are entirely separate things. Warm-up is not to make you better but to give you consistency in your games. Practice is generally a bit more strenuous, and you would probably want to do it after your games to focus on some specific part of your aim
Another thing you may want to keep in mind is that long aim training sessions, e.g. 60min session of a few specific drills, are not very good to do on the same day you want to have a 4 match session. Especially before playing. You burn all your energy in the training and run out of focus in the matches because of it.
Thanks for the video I’m also watching various videos to create my aim routine lol I do almost the same exercises except tracking ...and i confirm you see the results ...i play at cs2 from 3 months and for a month and a half I’m training seriously ....and I’ve never played any competitive game ....'cause before i played at console. My aim routine consist in 500-700 kills with aimbotz starting slowly and making faster and with various weapons and after i use another maps for moving targets ....'cause the problem is with them it's more difficult hit them and after i do 20 or 30 minutes deathmatch
sweet middle part dude
The video barely started yet , and you already standing in popular positions we should pre-aim at.
best tutorial yet.
My biggest issue besides this being the first FPS game I'm playing on mouse and keyboard is that I'm being too fast. I still have it in my mind that I'm playing a game like COD or Apex so I have to be super quick and use a bunch of movements when that doesn't apply here. What makes it worse is that I get panicky when I get ran up on. Hearing that "slow is smooth, and smooth is fast" really helped me understand where a lot of my problems lie.
I hope to get better within the next few months so I can play confidently in CS and mouse and keyboard as a whole. This vid was extremely helpful :)
The secrets to have a good aim in CS2 is as follow:
1. Turn on your PC
2. Jump into the game
3. Have a high ping so you gain the high ping peakers advantage.
4. Make sure to defend sub-ticks, so your enemy will keep teleporting around.
5. Make sure to keep sh!t posting nonsense trash on reddit.
6. Install hacks (it has no consequences any way).
7. Wet your pants, because it just feels nice while gaming.
8. A true gamer picks his nose and gains a positive aim increase in you reach some "gold". (eating the "gold" i +25%)
9. Never was your hands after toilet.
10. NEVER communicate with your fellow teammember
11. Always be toxic
12. never praise your teammates.
13. Dont ever complaint in the forums of how bad the VAC really is.
14. Use all your money on opening loot crates!
15. Profit
16. You now got godlike aim. Fart loud to celebrate.
This was as serious as Valve takes the anti-cheat serious which is on an absolute ZERO!
really professionally done, thanks!
Thank you!
Thank you so much this is so Helpful just by keeping those things in mind i already went from killing 7 every round to 26 24 being the top player of my team , hopefully with practicing i can finaly get out of the silver black hole
Let’s go man!!!
It might also be important to note that pros already have strong mechanics and know what they're doing to adjust them on the side while DMing, so DM helps get time with the hardest thing to isolate - getting used to how other humans are going to be moving and shooting
Cool that you include Mahi in this video, he is still small but is also doing great cs videos.
He’s awesome man, dude is sharp
I liked the video for its quality of tips and editing, but i subscribed to support another classic fade enjoyer.
Sploingus industries to the stars. Best guides of CS2 on the internet
I love the flicking part of the video its what I knew but needed to hear thanks again.
Great video, man! Thank you!
Very nice guide. Thanks man!
No problem, thank you!
Very informative video from the WILSONATOR! I will be sure to practice turning my monitor on and buying a $2000 rgb gaming chair to improve my aim!
The shots at 1:59 feel home xd :
1) standing still
2) hasnt shot yet
3) not that far away
4) crosshair is dead on the head
5) still miss
best aim tutorial ever, thank you bro
Absoloutely amazing video, great routine, you just gained me *the green carpet*
After 24 hours of grinding this video again and again, i am now dedicated to give myself 20 minutes per day of these exercise jist as wilson did and not play any single casual match. Crossing fingers chat. Love u all and skin monkey
Update us brother
@@AZuRaFPS obviously, didn't work out. i gotta go to school bro lol
0:02 Wilson gets F*CKING SHOT!
"Something else you can do to improve your tracking in CS2...AHHH" 8:55
2 bot rush mode in CSSstats has me the 2 bots spawning from behind same box over and over again
Amazing! Thanks for the video
No problem!
I knew youd be goated from the start of your channel
thx bro my routine looks like this
1-5 Minute of tracking.
1-5 Minute of wrist and arm warming. up down and left and right! and speed up!!!!
3-5 Minutes of movement and straiffing and counter straifing. work on flicks and movement.
1-5 Minutes of spraying. 10 round sprays. peeking and spraying. and 30 round sprays with atleast 4 different guns!
Crouch sprays shift sprays.
2-5 Minutes of doing everything fastly and moving ur wrists, do little bit of everything!
Lastly but not leastly do what ever you want to do that day. Like tracking flickng straiffing or anything. Just do what you feel you want to do.
As a wild specimen of silver, I have to say that I find deathmatch with deagle or an ak to be a good way to 'gather' the aim into a real situation, it does take time but just 20min is pretty good. One full match of deathmatch is 10min.
this vid make i realize how p90 is super easy to use and 10k elo player love it
they don't need perfect counter strafing, can keep moving more, can run as fast as they can
easy recoil pattern, easy spray transfer easy burst
basically just make 6 pillars in to 1
trade off is higher ttk, just casino game that can kill enemy if enemy miss or dead but either one will get killed
Movement is honestly the most important aspect, when in aimbotz i recomend always moving and try not to crouch
no reactive crosshair to get a sense of accuracy reset?
i used a reactive crosshair, but the length was 1000. it basically divided my screen into 4 quarters but the middle section opened up as the shots got less accurate.
this made it very easy to aim accurately even from greater angles and helped my timing immensely, especially while moving between shots.
im so glad i do pretty much all of this already. my aim is one thing i dont need to work on in my elo, def need better positioning. my util is almost there!
Hell yeah man 💪
l1ghtN1ng killed it with that intro❤ Great video Wilson
Great video my goat
4:58 I prefer all wrist, i use 800 dpi and 3.7 ingame sens and i end most prem/comp (11.5k/nova) games with 60%+ hs ratio... Is it worth learning how to arm aim and combine that with wrist? Because i would completely have to relearn my shooting style? Genuine question cheers.
Good stuff as always mr Wilson cs2
Yesterday watched the vid and today i did a warmup with these methods and my aim feels awesome again.
There is no one like you man, you are my favorite channel, for real ❤
There is , its me
let me summarize ur video in this comment after doing your full video routine. and I can say I improved my aim by at least 20-30% only in those 3 days.
Plan 1: I use the 6 pillars individually So I can create an aim routine that isolates every aim mechanic that's shown in this video. and it is like this:
1- slowly one-tap:
A-slow is smooth, smooth is fast for 1 minute
B- vertical one tap for 1 minute
C- moving mouse fully from right to left for 1 minute
D- wrist-aim one tap for 1 minute
E- slowly counter-strafe with the arm and correct with the wrist for 2 minutes
2-tracking:
A- for 2 minutes aimbots are shown in video.
B-for 5 minutes reflex aimbot.
take a rest for 3-5 minutes
3-Flicking:
A-aimbot one bot reflex for 2 minutes
B-csgostats rush mode two bots for 3-5 minutes
C-csgostats counter-strafing with flick for 3 minutes
4-spray:
A-spray on the wall minimum of 3 minutes or until ur feel ur recoil is good
B-spray on bots for 1-2 mintues
C-csgostats rush mode spray 2bots for 2-3 minutes
take a rest for 3-5 minutes
5-movement:
A-counter-strafing with the aim on aimbot for 5 minutes
B- train your peeks in Aimbot with walls for 2 minutes
take a rest for 3-5 minutes
6-Dm's as you like and wish but for me, I prefer using refrag for 10 minutes.
take a rest for 20 minutes minimum before jumping to bugs.
Plan 2: a warm-up routine, not an aim routine and it is shown in the video for 10 minutes u do it when u feel u r aim is off between bugs or warm up if u on a hurry to play and you don't have much time to do an aim routine.
and most important advice is to focus on your training, do your 100 percent, and don't try to train in an autopilot mode. focus and analyze your weaknesses so you can improve fast. and try to do analysis for the video in details so you can see what you are doing wrong and improve it.
and also the spray routine is a monster. my spray used to suck very bad after my 5th bullet now I can spray until the 15 bullet accurately.
Awesome tutorial! Hope to have another one on how to use rifles like when to tap or burst or spray?
slow is smooth and smooth is far is also a danny lindahl quote for disc golf form, almost the same
GAgagaga this man made my day up ...... congrats dude nice video and new subscriber on it
i will isolate for 1 week with all these information. ty brother
crazy video my guy
It's very informative and thank you for making one guide 😂😂, I'm inconsistent and I'm trying to improve my aim and learn the basics more. I watched your counterstrafing video and it helped me a lot so I'm sure this will be helpful too. Thank god for my boyfriend telling me to watch your videos.
10 minute warmup:
1 Min strafe tracking
1 Min static wrist aim (Slow!)
3 Min counter strafing taps
1 min spraying walls/bots
4 min 2 bot rush freestyle
this is at least a Master thesis in aiming
I feel like I always had problem with separating wrist and hand aiming, very helpful part with exercises about it, besides that from my point of view pretty obvious intel xd
Good video, though a hot take that I will give on it is that while I'd agree that playing DM is a good way to improve your aim, in my opinion it's actually ineffective or at least irritating method of improving your aim if most of your gameplay on it is just searching for enemies, getting shot in the back or from 2 completely different directions, especially given how mediocre Valve DM is. Other than that, great vid!
yet another wilson W you and austincs carry NA cs yt 🔥🔥
Hey good video. I said this before but you understandably didn't notice it probably. So again, here' a video idea.
How about you make a "how to play this map" video for all maps in active duty? Certainly would help relatively lower rank players and might get you some views too
i love this guy video, its great, its detail and really realistic
Basically you are the WinRar of CS Guide Videos 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Thx for Saving time though HAHA
The problem with rush mode is that he horizontal bot movement is quite small. You should have the bots counter strafe horizontally to learn the maximum enemy strafe speed.
great video man =)
this is great wilson!!
The 10 minute drill takes the same amount of time as a 10 minute deathmatch (normal length)
bro just one-upped every cs2 aim tutorial there is💀💀
Really good video 🔥🔥
Hello everyone. Love the vid.. I don't really know anyone that plays it and just been soloing so was wondering if I'm doing really bad or sort of average. I have 50 hours but I'm always either the bottom or near bottom of table with 50-65 adr. (Sometimes 25 😂)
The thing I have problem with is I can do the counter strafe and spray control ok in practice but as soon as I'm in game it goes out the window in the moment.
Like someone pops out where I didn't expect and I spray and forget to pull down and left.
Or I'm so focused on going around the corner and where matey is I forgot to counter.
Is this stuff that will just come naturally at some point?
I’m struggling with the same thing at the moment
This channel is a banger
Whats that aim map called where you are aiming at moving, colored dots instead of bots?
I dont want to take the nice feeling away of shooting my opponents by doing to much bots shooting.
any advice for scout player? I rely on flicking. if i have time to track, im already dead. its ether being a revolver hero or to die as a bot. playing feels like gamble at this point and i just wait for the times i cut throught them perfectly.
Amazing video! Wow 💪 Well done! 😍
Thx from France for this video, great !!
Thanks for watching it!:)
Bro just created systematic review of aiming 😭🔥
20:25 no, thanks for making this video
Great vid. Love the presentation,just got into this game and am seriously in need of help lol.