#Help on where to start.

1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)

waxen patrol
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Looking for some advice on where to start with aim training as the concept is new to me (as I've discovered now, it's nothing like ive done before)

  • Took a 3 year break from CSGO, came back around 4 months ago in CS2
  • Played ESEA advanced back in 2020 & played with and/or coached players that are now part of the T1/T2 pro scene. This to reinforce what im trying to say: my strong point was always my understanding of the game, not my personal performance/aim. My aim/personal performance is basically dreadful considering the level I competed at & has always been that way.
  • 3year hiatus obviously didn't do my personal play any good (severe understatement) and even though I'm just playing for fun (with no intention for anything more than that), I'm intrigued to see how far I could go to improve my personal performance/aim in CS2 after I saw the podcast of ddk with minigod. Aim training the way it is approached here is not something ever I considered, I'm a competitive guy and I want to see where this 'rabbithole' takes me. Especially knowing that this was never a priority for me when I was still competing.
  • Started out doing the voltaic benchmark (results below) and I'm currently doing the Elige amped routine on a daily basis.
  • Wondering if there are other/better recommendations on where to go and/or start, if what I'm doing seems good considering where I'm at, other recommendations, etc..
pallid tundra
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You can do the fundamentals or VDIM routine, found in #resources. Which of the 2 you do comes down to preference, given they have a different approach.

Either novice VDIM or gold fundamentals.

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1 run of the playlist per day is enough (which often results in 30 min - 2 hours max of training). Doing more is not recommended due to diminishing returns.

waxen patrol
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Thanks @pallid tundra - what's the TLDR difference between the fundamentals & daily improvement? I'll go through the 50 pages description later 🙂

pallid tundra
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If fundamentals is a full-body workout, then VDIM is an arm, chest, back, legs and shoulder routine

waxen patrol
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check