And I would also get pretty decent kills with Operator when I pick it up from ground to save it for next round. I would get 2-3 headshot kills in every pistol round, I would sometimes get ace and those kills would always feel satisfying to me. I realized that I'm actually pretty f*cking good with pistols. I was sometimes getting satisfying kills but the rest felt the same. I decided to go for DM and tried to understand what the f*ck was going on for real.Ĭhanged how I sit, changed how I hold my mouse, changed the monitor distance, changed where I sit, changed the vibrance, changed the game settings.īut nothing is changed about how things are. Even tho it was just a single kill, I knew that I properly got that kill. Interestingly, some times I would get kills that felt so f*cking satisfying. Learned new things, used them to get more kills but my aim still didn't feel alright.
#Aim lab sensitivity pro
I watched some pro players, watched Shroud, watched tournaments. I'm at the start of my 20s and it felt so f*cking dumb to play this much bad. I didn't understand why the f*ck I can't do better. I started to blame packet loss, my monitor( 60hz), my mouse, my mouse pad, my f*cking headset, my eyes, my hands. My bullets goes missing, I miss clear headshots, my spray acts weird, my enemy misses every bullet but so do I. Even though if my team was bad, even though I could somehow get 28 kills, I still felt the same way like before. But the lower ones felt better so I slowly forced myself to go lower. It would feel incredibly slow but when I switch to 480 eDPI and it would feel alright.Īnyways, I was doing "alright" in every game mode with all of these sensitivities. If I would like to play with 480 eDPI, I would first go with a much lower eDPI like 200 and then try to look around fast.
Yea, "you need a couple of weeks to get used to the new sensitivity" but I felt comfortable with every sensitivity. And I always felt comfortable with them while looking around and while aiming things in the map. In one match, I used 4 of them to see if it's about my sensitivity. So why did I shared these sensitivities? Because even though the range between them is f*cking huge, I constantly went from one another. (560 eDPI) 800 DPI, 0,7 in-game sens | this is the one I use right now and that's only because i can do a perfect 180 degree with it mainly because i reached 203ms with it in Aim Lab (768 eDPI) 800 DPI, 0,96 in-game sens | that's the sens i've used the most. (384 eDPI) 800 DPI, 0,48 in-game sens | i decided to force myself for lower sens for a day (480 eDPI) 800 DPI, 0,6 in-game sens | felt too slow before it clicked (960 eDPI) 800 DPI, 1,2 in-game sens | i was comfortable with it for a few days Here are some of them I tried -(1200 eDPI) 800 DPI, 1.5 in-game sens | yes i played like that for a time I decided that I was rusty and not ready for the real challenge. And it's wasn't because they had all the kills, I also had my chances to get a kill but I always missed them. My friends were shooting people like it's nothing, getting all the frags.
Matches get tougher, tactics were more important, every info counted for something. Ranked came up, we were having a good time. They were always top-fraggers with 30-40 kills. But my friends who didn't stop playing CS GO, were gods in this game. But they dryed up and since I just wait for Cyberpunk 2077 only, I decided to go into Valorant.īeta was alright, everybody was newbie. I enjoyed singleplayer games for 2 years and never went competitive. I've played singleplayer FPS games too and if it means anything, I've always played them in hardest difficulty. I never thought I lost my ability to go competitive.
#Aim lab sensitivity Pc
And then, when I got a new PC I've just stopped playing competitive games and went for triple A single player games.
I've played CS 1.6 and CS GO for a long time. I'm playing video games at least for 12 years. If you want to see the reason quickly, I'm going to highlight it. This'll be like a little story but yours might be the same with me.