#Fingertip aiming

1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)

boreal shore
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Hello, i'm just trying to understand one thing:
I'm pretty bad at fingertip aiming since I just started to actually apply my fingers at aiming for the first time in my life yesterday, but I instantly noticed my aim getting better just because of this one change.
Is this placebo or does this actually make sense? All i'm saying is: how can I be better now if I suck at fingertip aiming?

dim wave
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Although this is the kind of thing where a lot of information seems needed, a guess came to mind so I will convey it. The following is entirely self-projection from self-observation so take it with a grain of salt.

When the main muscle group you use to do an adjustment is not suitable in terms of range, what happens is shake during the transition between main muscle groups if you push for speed, and therefore when you start applying your fingers the correction doesn't generate as much shake, making it easier to aim.

Hence, I can see that in scenarios where your aim is normally almost on the target but not really on, like stability-heavy tracking scenarios like bounce tracking and slow-movement scenarios like micro control , you will see great improvement.

In terms of being "bad at fingertip control from being a newbie at it", this is obviously not true as you have experience from daily life; you use your hands daily right? Especially if you have a hobby like sowing/knitting/photography/writing/calligraphy/ music instrument / sport, or even simply like brushing teeth extremely carefully and gently or being gentle with your hands in general etc.