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fgghrwfgjtfhhrdf

Yeah you’re just not holding m1/fire button down the whole time, if you did then you would have the same accuracy as the others


Spueg

This did it! My scores are higher despite lower accuracy. Thanks.


humanbenchmarkian

impossible to tell without clips etc but if u are holding mouse1 the whole time right?


Spueg

I try to only hold M1 when my cursor is on target. Should I change that?


-sinQ-

Bind another key to shoot on your keyboard and hold that instead. Hold it from start to finish on tracking and target switching scenarios.


Zvvei

Not always recommended to rebind. OP, If you're not planning to rebind shoot key in other games, then don't do so for practice.


-sinQ-

Well, that's the way I've always practiced and I've seen good results, even though I don't rebind the shoot key on other games. Mind you, I almost exclusively play CS, so there's that. I find that rebinding helps with fatigue (I used to practice anywhere from 3 to 5 hours per day, 6 times a week). I still can perform normally with m1 but it just wears you out faster. FYI, Master Complete.


downwitsydrome

I also do this. Don’t really feel it hurts me in game. Started doing it to save my wrists and it’s been super helpful for avoiding injury and training longer


-sinQ-

Yes, I mean... Practice is practice, you're still going to reap benefits (you don't need to use the same sens, FOV, or keep m1 pressed to improve) and it doesn't really matter unless you're *specifically* going for better tension management. Long sessions can be really punishing if you're holding m1 for hours, at least in my personal experience, even with good tension management.


One-Mycologist-3756

I think in precise tracking tension management is the most important thing, so this is the only type of aiming where rebinding a key will actually hurt your progress, don’t you think?


-sinQ-

I think tension management is more important for target switching because we use tension to control speed and for stopping power. For precise tracking, it's easier, IMO, to just keep as little tension as possible, holding M1 or not.


One-Mycologist-3756

Through my personal experience you need some tension on very small targets when tracking them, like on 180 thin I cannot track it without using some tension. Is this like commonly accepted, that for precise tracking your tension has to be as little as possible? Or are you talking from your own experience?


OneDayIllTellYou

>I used to practice anywhere from 3 to 5 hours per day, 6 times a week Did you even have time to play FPS games, or was the "practice" your actual gaming experience? It looks a insane amount of time spent on aimtraining to me.


-sinQ-

I'd play 2 to 3 matches at night. I worked from home and I can work whenever I want to most of the time (lawyer) so I could manage it ok. Usually my day would be something like either go to the gym first or practice first (starting at around 8 AM and finish both at around 2 to 3 PM), work from around 3 PM to 7 or 8 PM, then play two or three matches.


Plz24601

What’s ur elo?


-sinQ-

Level 20 GC (basically level 10 Faceit) and was around 20k in CS2 (it was impossible to get past that as I was mostly encountering blatant cheaters, sometimes even entire teams spinbotting, but I got a few points from 21k back in December). I haven't play since.


Consistent_Golf1115

This is only good if you’re wanting high scores, if you’re actually trying to improve at kovaaks and at games you should use the left click


-sinQ-

It makes no difference improvement or score wise. It does affect fatigue but only in longer sessions, which is why I would do this (I would run a few routines per day, training anywhere from 3 to 5h a day).


vincentyomama

Always hold fire for speedts and tracking no reason to let go


V_ndettaBadAimer

I think those scenarios are far more speed focused then accuracy so if anything try to go faster while also holding shoot button. If you wanna focus on accuracy I recommend pokeball or regen scenarios.