I struggle a lot with CS:GO.
I struggle a lot with CS:GO.
Occasionally I’m fine, other times I’m not so great, but I’m not terrible. I need to adjust the mouse speed since my dad doesn’t like changes on his computer.
I struggle with CS:GO as well since after 14 years of intense work the forges have left my hands and wrists in terrible condition. Fine mouse adjustments are impossible because my hand movements become uncontrollably shaky.
His dad won't see the slow mouse movement, unless he points the finger at the mouse.
I've had some inconsistency in the game lately, but it's improving. I usually win more often, though it took time to adjust to higher levels. I think playing against stronger players would help me learn and get better.
I've already attempted it, but life felt like Lincoln never came to be.
CS:GO requires time to master. After about 1.7k hours, I’d say I’m a decent player. You’ve got games that are really bad and others that are great—somewhere in between. At the start, try aim training on offline maps or community servers, and watch some tactics videos. Find friends to play with. Keep sensitivity low—1600dpi with 1.125 in-game settings works fine. Once you’re better, just practice more. Mouse acceleration isn’t a big issue, though it might matter at higher levels if you adjust sensitivity. Curious about your location?
I own 900 hours and since the rank reshuffle plus the changes to pistols and rifles (though it's been reverted), I haven't played a solid game in MM anymore. The month-long reduction for most pistols and rifles has really messed with my aim and consistency—especially in arenas. Unless I'm playing faceit, things are still pretty shaky.
P.S. I was on GE with a 12-game win streak but lost two games post-update, dropping twice in rankings. Now it's time to jump into FPL in faceit...