You know this random video popped up on my yt and I can't help but wonder. Whether you've got over 3000k elo on faceit in this game, it means that you really dedicated a lot of your spare time to this cause, therefore my questions are: How exactly do you benefit off this activity? Do you stream? Does somebody pay you or do you make any money by playing at such a professional level? Don't get me wrong I'm not trying to shame you, it's just pure curiosity. If this is just your hobby then please let me know too. I also wonder whether you've got a normal job and if yes then how do you manage to combine those 2 things together in your life? Much appreciated M8.
i dont have normal job i just have alot of free time to post videos and yt shorts. i earn money from cs and now spending what i earn. also streaming on twitch when i have mood to stream and rn i try to earn money from twitch and yt.
I have friends that have 2500 elo on faceit eu with normal jobs, (I am not one of them, quit playing activaly years ago but started playing recently for fun). What they been doing is not playing so much but they had a good group of players where many were dedicated to the game, as with all competive sports this will be a snowball effect where they teach eachother tactics, aim, gameplay etc. To go solo (as most CS players these days do) is a completely different story then when you play a stack / clan with friends that are dedicated. Like its two different things, with friends that are on a high level playing you will advance quick thanks to them helping you, if you play solo with random faceit players that rages every second game you will get hardstuck elo. My point is just, depending on how "lucky" you are you will quickly raise in ranks thanks to people around you. People that played CS 1.6 for example were used to always play in a team with set players because you didnt have faceit back in the days, these days the young kids are tackling the game like a call of duty lobby just running around selfish and trying to solo win. This will never get you to the top
@@usemorebrainplz-is7gyWhat exactly are you trying to say here? Many in fact most players these days get to play in teams because they have thousands of hours in faceit. Faceit IS the way to get better in the game and is the opportunity for most players to reach the highest levels of cs. Most up and coming pros today come from fpl/high elo faceit. It is really rare for a player to rise to the top from playing with a clan/team like you used to in 1.6 when lans were often local and small. You need to get good first in pugs and then you will be good enough for a team in most cases.
@@bcc1876 well almost all players who go pro have something in common. They play the game 8+ hours a day and have 8000 hours on record at least when they really start to improve and do well in teams. How do you think they spent those hours? Just playing the game a lot. I am not saying it is impossible to go pro with low time like 2 hours a day but it is statistically very very rare.
Much better without xray, we can really see what you see in game
yeah,ty for the idea
how many hz you play on? im 2.1k still using 60hz thinking about upgrading
@@ownage8742i have 240hz
@@Layiecs im buying 240 soon
You know this random video popped up on my yt and I can't help but wonder. Whether you've got over 3000k elo on faceit in this game, it means that you really dedicated a lot of your spare time to this cause, therefore my questions are: How exactly do you benefit off this activity? Do you stream? Does somebody pay you or do you make any money by playing at such a professional level? Don't get me wrong I'm not trying to shame you, it's just pure curiosity. If this is just your hobby then please let me know too. I also wonder whether you've got a normal job and if yes then how do you manage to combine those 2 things together in your life? Much appreciated M8.
i dont have normal job i just have alot of free time to post videos and yt shorts. i earn money from cs and now spending what i earn. also streaming on twitch when i have mood to stream and rn i try to earn money from twitch and yt.
I have friends that have 2500 elo on faceit eu with normal jobs, (I am not one of them, quit playing activaly years ago but started playing recently for fun). What they been doing is not playing so much but they had a good group of players where many were dedicated to the game, as with all competive sports this will be a snowball effect where they teach eachother tactics, aim, gameplay etc. To go solo (as most CS players these days do) is a completely different story then when you play a stack / clan with friends that are dedicated.
Like its two different things, with friends that are on a high level playing you will advance quick thanks to them helping you, if you play solo with random faceit players that rages every second game you will get hardstuck elo.
My point is just, depending on how "lucky" you are you will quickly raise in ranks thanks to people around you. People that played CS 1.6 for example were used to always play in a team with set players because you didnt have faceit back in the days, these days the young kids are tackling the game like a call of duty lobby just running around selfish and trying to solo win. This will never get you to the top
@@usemorebrainplz-is7gyWhat exactly are you trying to say here? Many in fact most players these days get to play in teams because they have thousands of hours in faceit. Faceit IS the way to get better in the game and is the opportunity for most players to reach the highest levels of cs. Most up and coming pros today come from fpl/high elo faceit. It is really rare for a player to rise to the top from playing with a clan/team like you used to in 1.6 when lans were often local and small. You need to get good first in pugs and then you will be good enough for a team in most cases.
Its about using your time in a game to improve and not to care about elo or whatever u can be playing 2 hours a day and have high elo
@@bcc1876 well almost all players who go pro have something in common. They play the game 8+ hours a day and have 8000 hours on record at least when they really start to improve and do well in teams. How do you think they spent those hours? Just playing the game a lot. I am not saying it is impossible to go pro with low time like 2 hours a day but it is statistically very very rare.