#Will using a static weakness specific aim routine help me in dynamic as well?
1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
Yes and no. The issue is that static specific routines are going to inherently lack tracking scenarios, which serve as a way to learn reading patterns better as well as reacting changes in direction. Click timing in dynamic is much harder, since you don't want to just flick and hit the target. Dynamic makes you sort of learn to track the target before clicking, which becomes more and more unnoticeable the better someone is. Other than that, static routines should at least increase target-to-target accuracy. At least that's my take on it.
isnt it not good to track the target for a bit then take the shot on pasu?
thats what ur supposed to do on pasu... LOL
🗿🗿🗿🗿ok then
you track it for a bit to confirm you'll hit the target, then actually click it
matty said that was a common mistake on his pasu guide though
I didn't mean to track it directly, that IS bad
you try to track it very briefly and read its movement to confirm your shot (hit confirming)
this is also explained in voltaic's dynamic guide https://youtu.be/nnDHvHPlQ1Y?t=127
Aim at ANY moving target like a PRO - Dynamic Aim Ep.2
» You can find all our resources in our discord: https://discord.gg/voltaic
» Improve your Aim https://aimlab.pro/voltaic
Aiming at moving targets can be a challenge especially in games like Valorant with a low ttk. In this video we define this style of aiming as Dynamic Clicking. Voltaic ...
ahh ic
Yeah, that's why I wrote "Dynamic makes you sort of learn to track the target before clicking, which becomes more and more unnoticeable the better someone is." Basically at higher levels it just looks like someone is straight up clicking, but there's still a slight tracking motion if you look closely.
especially noticable (least for me) on 0.5 or 0.75x speed (if you are watching matty’s runs lol)
well then is there a way to stop clicking randomly while trying to chase targets?
For sure you could just focus on that aspect while grinding dynamic tasks