Hello, have you ever encountered such a problem that any sensitivity that you set seems very high to you, for example, I played with a really high sensitivity of 0.409 800 dpi, but after a while I switched to 0.27 dpi (VALORANT), after a week of use this sensitivity seems to me high. Maybe I need to lower this even further, what are your ideas, maybe someone had the same thing
#I feel any sens high :(
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its kinda hard to understand
Do u mean 0.27 800 dpi is high for u even tho u used .409 before
i mean ive been plaing on 0.27 for a week and i noticed that became a bit high
i feel when i get used to sens. i am starting feel it high
Normal, get more mouse control and ignore the feeling
As u get better u will be better with more sens’s
Dont lower further, i recommend u stay on 0.35 or so on valorant without changing
On trainer train high sens and low sens
More higher sens
1.2x than in game is a good choice imo, most of the time when u want to work on precision
U need to learn to control the “landing of flicks” and improving smoothness
You can try lowering it further and further until it feels comfortable. It's just another option.
he mentioned 0.27 800 in valo which is already very low, and still feels high after a week, even though it felt good after lowering from 0.4 for that week
You can always go lower :P
Yes, when I adjust from a higher sens to a lower sens it immediately feels more controllable and clean, but then over time I adapt and it feels "higher" than it did originally. Overall Id say if you are going to commit to aim training stick with the higher sens in val, over time it will get easier and youll adjust and if you can aim well on a higher val sens its a lot easier in game. Everything is personal preference though, you can go lower, Demon1 plays on .1 1600, but I would suggest not going for that novelty of popping off when you immediately lower it, just find something you think works for you or that a player you like has and stick with it and train on it.
Also check out dgzin, dudes a pro and plays duelist on .2 400 most of the time, its def possible, but you really have to adjust the way you play around super super low sens.
Thx alot guys for your advices. I guess i should to stay on this sens not less than 1 month to rly get used to.
Which sens
0.27 800
I recommend 0.33 if ur goal is mouse control improvement, rather than 0.27
Its still low
Spam team dm and aimtrain, stay consistent in game with this sens and u will perform a lot better
Aim for headshots
Thx but why is the 0.33 better than 0.27?
my opinion that i have problems with arm aiming/ and this is why iam trying to aim almost only by arm
*better for mouse control in general
U didnt mention arm issues as the main problem, didnt u use high sens in val for first time, then was hard, then u lowered?
Sounds like mouse control issue
Because its harder to control but still lower than ur previous one, making it a challenging sens, but also more confortable than previous
Sounds good to me, if u jeep training consistently with it
Keep
Ive been nice in aimlab with high sens. but in valorant i had some shakiness while shooting or holding an angle. That is my main reason rhy i switched the sens
Sounds like u get stressed in val then
Work on having “outcome independence” have the goal to win but dont fear losing
Yeah true. Thx i will work on it)
Glhf man
Shakiness is always a personal hand issue, if you're shaky then you need to hold the mouse differently. You can't always be stable while being fluid, so it may warrant keeping a lower sens in order to keep all within the same control group of your arm/hand, if you feel good at 0.27 then stay at 0.27 and try it out for not less than 1 month as you previously stated. 1 month is a good time period for you to really nail down most sensitivities (for most people).
Shakiness can come from mental even if u have good grip, which he admitted to having stress in game specifically
I understand what you mean, but at its root, it’s always a physical problem and can be fixed by a better grip regardless of your mental stillness. Trust me, I freak out in nearly every fight, but having a better grip on my mouse makes or breaks my ability to stay afloat and keep aiming or even sometimes turn that mini “freak out” into a controlled flick that kills my enemy.
True, i think he should stay on slightly higher than 0.27 specifically tho
It’s honestly up to him, his preference, and his comfortable range of motion. That’s why I’ve kind of stayed neutral about it but tried to encourage experimentation.
As in the muscle group you control the mouse with out of your fingers, hand, wrist, arms, or shoulder all depending on the type of movement you are making. For instance, when I run out of range of motion for my wrist/fingers when tracking left or right, I don’t start moving my arm because it’s too inaccurate when tracking it would just cause me to skip past target due to the high static friction in moving such a large part of my body in comparison to the movement I was just making and it would cause me to lose finger aiming stability. So instead, I start to rotate my wrist around the backside of my mouse so that the bottom of my mouse slowly starts having the sensor rotated for further rightward movement and after reaching the end of that, if further motion is needed, I’ve now opened my wrist to a new opportunity for further finger-led rightward movement.
I see
Essentially, the first mouse movement has my wrist as the anchor and my fingers are moving the mouse. The second mouse movement has my fingers as the anchor and my wrist is rotating in the direction my fingers were. The third mouse movement can repeat the movement of the first if need be and the cycle continues.
(I know the original explanation is shoddy lol)
It can definitely be trained tho, to use all in sync(as in make it more seamless, wont be 100 percent the same)
I get what u mean tho
I think ive used that technique very small amount of time but thats cuz i dont use ur sens
I also have a left-side sensor which makes that movement more applicable for me :P
But yeah, if he is having to skip from one range of motion to another without it being seamless, it’s not ideal and it would be helpful to start out on a sens that he won’t have to deal with finding get-arounds for it.
G300s
i reached acs with 0.7 💀, sens doesnt matter too much, find something you can track and flick with then just play for a month with it to get used to it then lower/ higher if it is too hard to learn on
Need more play time to be as good with 0.7, assuming no other downsides like space etc, lower than 0.7 is better.
But ye u can get used to anything
I used to play 0.3 but my aim couldn’t keep up with my aggressive play style
Depends on play style and how you aim (wrist, arm) and what games you played previously
Well ye, but did u try that range at least
Unless u have multiple years on very high sens, like something, i cant recommend it for tacfps
A lot of very aggressive highsens duelists use 0.35-0.5
Just easier to be precise with
While still having high mobility
Learning to use arm is beneficial, if that was the issue
The shakiness is probably because of your mouse grip… but in Valo u can play low sense like 0.2 800 DPI like Demon1 or high like f0rsaken… it depends on you and on witch you feel comfortable… I play on 0.345 and have the same problem like you I think sometimes… but the problem is that I can’t play low sense… or maybe i should try 🙂
0.3 was too slow so i tryed 0.5 and just randomly decided "hay lets up it even more" and now here we are
You use such a high sens do you have tention iin your hand wrist or finger? When i ve been playing with 0.409 only way how i could to aim to get almost relaxed hand
You want to avoid tension as much as possible, and the problem fast sensitivities are that people tend to squeeze the mouse harder thinking that it gives them more stability, but it actually does the opposite.
You only want to apply a minor form of tension/pressure when you need that extra stability, for lets say with flicks. Everywhere else you want to keep your grip neutral
A little footnote here: if your sens is higher than 10cm/360°, THAT is when you want to start applying pressure for stability, because at that point you are no longer aiming with large movements except for when flicking or close aiming in which you use your arm or wrist or both.
It also matters where the tension is applied, some types of tension in the wrist can cause carpal tunnel, while other types of tension will just provide you a death grip on the mouse without limiting movement and fluidity.
Using anything around 15cm or faster is usually not really recommended anyway, so better to be avoided.