#Need guidance

1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)

desert geyser
#

Greetings. I am a valorant player, my rank is gold 2. I have been using Aimlabs and Kovaaks both for 1.5 years, used different routines and tasks but always looking for a new room to improve my aim and movement. I am new to voltaic and I have seen the resources which has the tasks for both Aimlab and Kovaaks. I have tried out game specific routines for both and also tried out the new Ramp warmup. I have few questions to clear.

  1. Should I do the Kovaaks or Aimlabs? I cannot use both because I think it would be a waste of time so I only want to use one.

  2. When should I specifically use the game-specific routines and how long should I do the aim training? Also I noticed there are other scenarios of voltaic. Should I do those additionally?

  3. I need an aim routine of voltaic for range in Valorant which will help me a lot with in-game mechanics such as movement, flicking, tracking, reactivity, precision. I have seen a lot of videos on it but I don’t know which one to use.

  4. Which routines should I do in order: Before game, After game.

A little detail on my specifications

Mouse: Lamzu Atlantis
DPI: 800
In game sensitivity: 0.27
Raw Input buffer: Off

Thank you and I look forward to your response and the guidance you will provide.

gray zenith
# desert geyser Greetings. I am a valorant player, my rank is gold 2. I have been using Aimlabs ...
  1. Either of the 2 is fine. Some prefer the look and feel of Kovaaks and some prefer the look and feel of Aimlabs. From my understanding from other users - Kovaaks scenarios seem to be a little bit more challenging, according to some anecdotale pieces that I have read.

  2. Game-specific routines are usually recommended if you play 1 specific game and 1 specific game only for a very long time. So if you basically only play Valorant and nothing really else, the Valorant-routine will be more tailored for improving for that specific game only, however, that does not mean that the fundamental routines or other routines will not work in your favour. Fundamental routines for example train your overall aim, and some people prefer to train every catergory.

It is usually recommended to train from somwhere between 30 minutes up to 2 hours. There doesn't seem to be an inherent benefit from going on much longer, and Voltaic still recommends you to spend more time in your game rather than your aim training.

2 hours of aim training is also quite fatiguing, so there is no real point in pushing beyond that. This usually comes down to 1 full playlist run, because certain playlists can last up to 1 to 2 hours.

  1. Personally I am not very familiar with plenty of scenario playlists, but I don't think you can go wrong with either the game-specific routine or the fundamental routines.

The fundamental routines however will fit your description of "working on flicking, tracking, reactivity precision" more because these are basically all the aim categories. In terms of learning movement, you are better off just playing the game. Aim trainers aren't really suited for this type of thing.

  1. I repeat - I am not very familiar with scenarios so I cannot really recommend any playlists, but you can always pick the the game-specific playlist, and tailor it to your time-needs. I read that the Valorant-specific playlist can take up to 1 to 1.30 hour, so it is advised to
#

make the playlist a bit shorter to avoid fatiguing yourself before you go play your game.

You can use a short version to warm up before you game, and then you can decide to play a full playlist (game specific or fundamentals) after you have played. But you can also choose to play a full playlist before you game, but then you should take a good break to shake off some of the fatigue. there is not real right or wrong here. It is just up to you and how much time you have.

#

If you haven't yet, make sure at least to do the benchmarks that can be found in #resources. Then you can pick a playlist that is closer to your aim-rank.

desert geyser