I always ask people about settings and sens because i just cant seem to find one that comfortable. Love Hollow because he talks about the game and theory.
It's mostly consistency. Changing your settings too often hurts yourself. You got to build the muscle memory and build up the synapses in your brain related to the mechanical movements with your hands or fingers. If you're changing too often, then you're not building that foundation. Back on console I slowly built up to max sens on controller (back in the cod mw) days and now on roller I can't play on anything less than 9 sens with standard settings on everything else because it feels too sluggish and plain awful.
@@TheLastRasputin actually believe it or not, "muscle memory" is considered a bit of a meme in the aim community. Aiming is less about muscle memory and is more like hand-eye coordination, where it's a continuous adjustment which requires muscle *control*, not *memory* I've recently started my aim journey, and very regularly change my sens. Why? Because of two reasons: - Aim training can often benefit from adjusting your sens to highlight different weak points and work to get better - Different games require different things, like how in apex you can benefit from being able to do 180's or 360's, while in say valo you only really need to be able to see in front of you. Tldr don't be scared to try different things, and know that sens is far from the be-all end all :)
@@GalacticYuna Yes. Most of the best aim trainers ENCOURAGE you to change your sens because the lower or higher your sens is, you use different parts of your arm to move it. If you're struggling with using your arm in close range fights where the enemy is moving fast and your wrist's range of motion doesnt allow you to go further, decrease your sens and learn how to play with your arm more. If you're struggling with long range fights where you have to make lots of microadjustments with your fingertips and wrist, increase your sens and learn how to play with your wrist and fingers more. Muscle memory DOES NOT EXIST in terms of aim! It is inherently impossible for you to memorize EVERY SINGLE MOVEMENT on your mouse and mouse pad and correlate them to what you're seeing on screen. This is easily proven by a lot of good aim trainer players who use very different sensitivities on different games and still perform very well.
my goat hollow 🙌 edit: 8:25 thats so me, i started kovaaks few months ago and started to get better score on tracking and smoothness scenarios but having hard time to translate it to apex ;-; also my aim always been very inconsistent sometimes its frustrating😫
2:53 game works on my pc very bad, and I'm still loving it, 1,600 hours with 50/80 max fps XD, I would love to buy new pc to be unstopapple, my peak was 21k Masters in s18.
I had a very mid PC and peaked about as high as Hollow. Will better gear and internet help you? Without a doubt. I'd say as long as you can run competitive shooters at 144fps consistently with a decent enough 1080p 144hz monitor you can get very far.
How to achieve it is simple, have 10 thousand hours of play and have no social life, focus all your time and life on this game, you will definitely be a pro player. In the future you will see that it wasn't worth it
If you don't enjoy playing games then sure lmao. But gaining mastery over something is fulfilling in its own right. Also you really don't need 10k hours. 4-5k and you're well on you're way to becoming great
Not really. Being a pro in a game is kind of a short term investment if you think about it. The chances of succeeding is SUPER, super low, but in the chance that you make it as a streamer/pro, you'll make more than enough money to guarantee a decent future.
This doesn't even make sense, roller is better for tracking, but it's harder to controll the recoil, for mnk it's the opposite, so you have scripts for something mnk is better at and roller is worse at
Hollow aim is some of the best in game, hearing his story and the simplicity is wild! What do you think? :)
I always ask people about settings and sens because i just cant seem to find one that comfortable. Love Hollow because he talks about the game and theory.
It's mostly consistency. Changing your settings too often hurts yourself. You got to build the muscle memory and build up the synapses in your brain related to the mechanical movements with your hands or fingers. If you're changing too often, then you're not building that foundation. Back on console I slowly built up to max sens on controller (back in the cod mw) days and now on roller I can't play on anything less than 9 sens with standard settings on everything else because it feels too sluggish and plain awful.
@@TheLastRasputin actually believe it or not, "muscle memory" is considered a bit of a meme in the aim community. Aiming is less about muscle memory and is more like hand-eye coordination, where it's a continuous adjustment which requires muscle *control*, not *memory*
I've recently started my aim journey, and very regularly change my sens. Why? Because of two reasons:
- Aim training can often benefit from adjusting your sens to highlight different weak points and work to get better
- Different games require different things, like how in apex you can benefit from being able to do 180's or 360's, while in say valo you only really need to be able to see in front of you.
Tldr don't be scared to try different things, and know that sens is far from the be-all end all :)
@@GalacticYuna Yes. Most of the best aim trainers ENCOURAGE you to change your sens because the lower or higher your sens is, you use different parts of your arm to move it. If you're struggling with using your arm in close range fights where the enemy is moving fast and your wrist's range of motion doesnt allow you to go further, decrease your sens and learn how to play with your arm more. If you're struggling with long range fights where you have to make lots of microadjustments with your fingertips and wrist, increase your sens and learn how to play with your wrist and fingers more.
Muscle memory DOES NOT EXIST in terms of aim! It is inherently impossible for you to memorize EVERY SINGLE MOVEMENT on your mouse and mouse pad and correlate them to what you're seeing on screen. This is easily proven by a lot of good aim trainer players who use very different sensitivities on different games and still perform very well.
Step 1: Play 5k hours of very high level Overwatch on an aim character like Tracer/Soldier/McCree.
Step 2: The end.
10:00 that right there is why roller will forever be OP
Then pick up a controller or shut up
my goat hollow 🙌
edit: 8:25 thats so me, i started kovaaks few months ago and started to get better score on tracking and smoothness scenarios but having hard time to translate it to apex ;-; also my aim always been very inconsistent sometimes its frustrating😫
2:53 game works on my pc very bad, and I'm still loving it, 1,600 hours with 50/80 max fps XD, I would love to buy new pc to be unstopapple, my peak was 21k Masters in s18.
Is that Dazs? interviewing Hallow? Voice is so familiar.
same thought
I really wish i played the game at the start
Grind voltaic benchmarks -> get top leaderboard rank in r5 games -> play
Nice video guys!
What’s his sens
😵💫
1.2 , 800 DPI
Just say he has a lot of playtime. Thats the video.
You have a good pc and a good internet connection.
I had a very mid PC and peaked about as high as Hollow. Will better gear and internet help you? Without a doubt. I'd say as long as you can run competitive shooters at 144fps consistently with a decent enough 1080p 144hz monitor you can get very far.
There is no simple way to have good aim. It's just the fact you play all day, every day and have no lige outsode of video games...
kovaaks
shortcut: buy a controller 😅😂💀
Sounds like something a streamer nut hugger would say. You guys have no thoughts of your own and just cry the same bs they do
How to achieve it is simple, have 10 thousand hours of play and have no social life, focus all your time and life on this game, you will definitely be a pro player. In the future you will see that it wasn't worth it
Def don’t need that much time lol. Hard stuck gold crys
@@nixjay7008 😂
If it is a prodigy much less
Mamba mentality
If you don't enjoy playing games then sure lmao. But gaining mastery over something is fulfilling in its own right.
Also you really don't need 10k hours. 4-5k and you're well on you're way to becoming great
Not really. Being a pro in a game is kind of a short term investment if you think about it. The chances of succeeding is SUPER, super low, but in the chance that you make it as a streamer/pro, you'll make more than enough money to guarantee a decent future.
Play the game... and use your 🧠 🧠
🎂 eater
I just got a zero recoil script and i will only stop using it when they nerf roller
This doesn't even make sense, roller is better for tracking, but it's harder to controll the recoil, for mnk it's the opposite, so you have scripts for something mnk is better at and roller is worse at
Just say your bad at the game😂
easy...aimbot
People and basement dwellers relax it's just a Video game it's not that serious just play the game for fun.
What if someone enjoys the process of getting better and playing at a high level
@@Phos7x you can get better to be a pro you need Talent so if have talent you can take the game seriously.
@@Decki777 You can take it serious and have fun. Crazy concept I know.