#Several questions

1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)

loud wyvern
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Using different senses is worth it any level, given that different sensitivities train different aspects of your aim and you cannot force 1 sens into every category.

In terms of routine, do whatever you want. Just re-benchmark yourself at the end of th week again

sullen nest
loud wyvern
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In-game use whatever fits the game and is comfortable

sullen nest
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Ok thanks a lot

sullen nest
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I now have 3 different sensitivities for Tracking, Dynamic & Switching and Static.

Is there a frequency at which I should change them? I'm trying to keep them between 20-40, 30-50 and 40-80 respectively. How big a change should I make?

loud wyvern
# sullen nest I now have 3 different sensitivities for Tracking, Dynamic & Switching and Stati...

You change them based on what you need or what you want to work on.

For example: if you want to work on wrist smoothness, using 20cm/360 on tracking scenarios can help you force that. Issue is however that this will not work for all scenarios.

You might encounter a scenario with a thinner and/or smaller target, making 20cm incredibly impractical to use. Dropping it to 25 or 30cm will then help more.

Long story short - you base it off the scenario.

sullen nest
loud wyvern
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Yes.

And just so you know, what you do is fine, especially as a beginner. But eventually you get into the groove of things

sullen nest
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Yea, I've read that it's a good idea to change your sensitivity often, because the "Muscle Memory" we hear about is very reductive for aiming.
I don't want to get used to a particular sens, but rather to my mouse.

Having a sens according to the category allowed me to greatly increase my benchmark score

loud wyvern
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Exactly. Aiming isn't muscle memory. It is just hand-eye coordination. A lot of things that contribute to aiming cannot even have "muscle memory" build around it.

Aiming is continuous adaptation. With aim training, you build mouse control. You just learn how to efficiently move the mouse within that continuous adaptation.