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Day 1 of aim training

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#1
Just_some_loser

I was watching some random david goggin videos, and ngl they really hyped me up for no fkn reason. I have a break in uni now, and have finally decided to stop being a loser! Time to get consistent! At least 1 to 2 hours of focused aim practice a day. Stay hard

#2
Tempest24
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nah im used to staying soft 😪

#3
Keustion
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i dont like aim training cause it hurts

#4
Just_some_loser
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i've already done some research on that, more often that not, it's because of bad aiming techniques and unnecessary tension in your wrists

you have to learn to grip your mouse lighter, let it flow like water across your pad

#5
emptybackis
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mmm

#12
rsset02
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i heard the aim training is gay

#6
RealBallKnower
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Aim training is overrated tbh. Cracked aimer like Primmie doesn't even aim train. All you need to do is understand the concept of crosshair placement and aim with movement then you will be better in no time with no aim training needed.

#7
Just_some_loser
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not overrated, just misunderstood

ive watched a few educated videos on it by now, aim training is like the gym for sports player, it won't be as effective for players that are already in peak shape, but SUPER effective for anyone that isn't

the best approach seems to be including a mix of both which im gonna do

#9
RealBallKnower
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If you have a good aim with movement you don't even need a good raw aim to be effective. However, if you have the best raw aim in the world but don't know the crosshair placement and aim movement, you will die instantly because you will get 1 tap and can't just rely on flick aim all the time.

#11
Just_some_loser
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i mean, isn't that obvious?

that's why u do both, like i wrote in my last line. For example, ronaldo doesn't just play football on the field, he spends countless hours conditioning his body alongside it

#13
RealBallKnower
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What I'm saying is you focus on the wrong aspect. Sure, raw aim is cool and all for flicking purpose but you don't need to put up 1-2 hours on "raw aim" when you can focus on other things that could actually be more useful when you actually play. 95% of the time you don't need "raw aim" to win gun fight unless you approach the game wrong.

#15
serot
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primmie still has insane raw aim to begin with, that is why he doesn't need to aim train

if you lack raw aim, even if you master movement and passive aim, you will still hit a skill ceiling
with good crosshair placement you will still need to microadjust and track targets

aim training is probably the best way to improve raw aim quickly

#14
serot
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even top players still aim train
i.g. zekken, sato, chichoo, demon1, etc

another good analogy would be sports: you can be naturally good at sports if you just play enough and stay in shape, but drilling specific skills will always make you better

#8
JonahPork
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Aim training is underrated, too many people go into it not understanding how to improve properly. Objectively, aim training is the most efficient way to improve your raw aim.

#10
RealBallKnower
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Hear me out on this. If you have a good crosshair placement and aim with movement, you rarely need raw aim because most of the time you just only need a micro adjustment as your crosshair will be close to enemy's head all the time you don't even need much raw aim to help you click heads.

#16
JonahPork
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While you aren’t wrong with this statement, that’s a very theoretical way of looking at Valorant aim and isn’t based in practicality. The best we’ve ever seen anyone look doing that is probably prime yay and it didn’t translate well for him as someone who wanted to switch back to entry duelist.

Micro-correction and target switching are both very crucial parts of aim on top of crosshair placement

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