I would but I don't think I'd have anything very new to offer. I recommend creating a DOPE book of shots with your chosen rifle-reticle combination and noting the proportion of the wind with each shot according to the distance.
I would love to see your book of shots and what do you use to remeber. I saw a video that was using imaginary heads to estimate the wind compensation.....but for me it doesn't work You use landmarks of the scope to remember how far on the left or right to aim?
@@KonstantinosEvgeniou Sometimes, yes. At first, there was a lot of trial & error in using the marks on the reticle itself. But I always start by doing a proportion of the wind indicator. For example, at 100 meters with a Mosin, it's .32 or roughly 1/3 of the distance on the wind indicator. For 200 meters, it's .61 or roughly 3/5. At 300 meters, .92 or roughly 9/10. If this distance aligns with a mark on the reticle, then I make note of that *if* the wind is a conveniently whole number. For me, it's more empirical than theoretical in interpreting the reticle marks, since those will vary from rifle to rifle, and not just with the wind and distance. I recommend going to the firing range, recording your gameplay as you take shots on targets, then, on a PC or whatever, measuring in pixels the distance on the wind indicator versus where your shots land.
@@skarabraen thank you so much man See you make those kind of shots is the only reason i turbed off the aim assist reticle Hopefully i can get half as good as you one day
@@KonstantinosEvgeniou Glad to hear it! Pushing your skills higher is always a good thing. And don't forget that nothing beats tons of practice. Commit the wind and gravity values to memory in, say, 50-meter increments first. That'll let you interpolate the values of intermediate distances when needed (e.g., 75m, 140m, 175m, etc.) Then head on out and jump into Solo Survival. It's only a matter of time until it all clicks. Good luck!
Mosin Nagant. But they should all be just as loud as one another, except the De Lisle, which is suppressed. I'm firing during the sound mask, but in A+ it's hard to tell since the symbol for it is removed from the top of the screen. HTH. Lemme know if you have any other questions.
Your'e very creative, great work on the bridge and of course top snipping!!
Thanks. That bridge wasn't easy, to say the least...
Your rock work continues to astound.
Thanks ;-)
20:56 shot.....jesus man
Could you make a tutorial on how you judge wind and where to aim
I would but I don't think I'd have anything very new to offer. I recommend creating a DOPE book of shots with your chosen rifle-reticle combination and noting the proportion of the wind with each shot according to the distance.
I would love to see your book of shots and what do you use to remeber.
I saw a video that was using imaginary heads to estimate the wind compensation.....but for me it doesn't work
You use landmarks of the scope to remember how far on the left or right to aim?
@@KonstantinosEvgeniou Sometimes, yes. At first, there was a lot of trial & error in using the marks on the reticle itself. But I always start by doing a proportion of the wind indicator. For example, at 100 meters with a Mosin, it's .32 or roughly 1/3 of the distance on the wind indicator. For 200 meters, it's .61 or roughly 3/5. At 300 meters, .92 or roughly 9/10. If this distance aligns with a mark on the reticle, then I make note of that *if* the wind is a conveniently whole number. For me, it's more empirical than theoretical in interpreting the reticle marks, since those will vary from rifle to rifle, and not just with the wind and distance.
I recommend going to the firing range, recording your gameplay as you take shots on targets, then, on a PC or whatever, measuring in pixels the distance on the wind indicator versus where your shots land.
@@skarabraen thank you so much man
See you make those kind of shots is the only reason i turbed off the aim assist reticle
Hopefully i can get half as good as you one day
@@KonstantinosEvgeniou Glad to hear it! Pushing your skills higher is always a good thing. And don't forget that nothing beats tons of practice. Commit the wind and gravity values to memory in, say, 50-meter increments first. That'll let you interpolate the values of intermediate distances when needed (e.g., 75m, 140m, 175m, etc.) Then head on out and jump into Solo Survival. It's only a matter of time until it all clicks. Good luck!
Yo sorry quick question what rifle do u use my ones just to loud??
Mosin Nagant. But they should all be just as loud as one another, except the De Lisle, which is suppressed. I'm firing during the sound mask, but in A+ it's hard to tell since the symbol for it is removed from the top of the screen.
HTH. Lemme know if you have any other questions.