my experience with aim training... (after 483 hours)

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In this video, I want to talk about my experience with aim training, why I enjoy using it to practice, and how it helped me improve at the game. At the end of the video, I want to tell you guys about a conversation I had with a Radiant player where he changed my perspective completely, so be sure to stick around to the end, as what he said is really valuable information for people like us who want to rank up as fast as possible.

If you don't already know me, I'm korey, an ascendant player with crazy dreams of playing collegiate or even semi pressional valorant. I'm in my last year of highschool, in a race against the clock, so if you are interested in my progression, do all the algorithm things please. I really want to take this thing full time and every bit of help I get means the world to me.

Anyways, over the past few weeks, I've been aim training almost non-stop, logging over 70 hours of kovaaks in just 3 weeks. This psychotic amount of playtime has transformed me as a player, however, before getting into my experiences and results, we need to talk about the elephant in the room, because as an aim trainer player, I'm pretty passionate about this topic.

TIME STAMPS:

0:00 intro
0:43 aim training is NOT a waste of time.
1:28 reason 1 - pro players didn't aim train.
1:58 reason 2 - ineffective aim training
2:39 reason 3 - the downplaying of raw aim
3:21 my experience with aim training
4:07 advice from a RADIANT...

FAQ (October 28, 2024):
Peak Rank : Asc 3
Region: NA West
Nationality: Canadian
Goal : Radiant, 95%+ in every class

#valorant #radiant #aimtraining
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we love u korey, please keep up the grind bro

callmespaceghost
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The real aim training was the friends we made along the way!

SneakVal
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Im in a similar situation as you, I have 1000+ hours on valorant and I have only about 100+ in aimlabs but what has helped me improve is shortening my sessions and just playing consistently all the time, for example I only do 30 minute sessions on aimlabs everyday and two comp games thats alone is enough to take you up to immortal possibly rad just keep it consistent and play more when you can

djapplejuice
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I'm really enjoying aim training atm, even more than playing valorant! I play a kovaaks playlist before bed every night, with my blue light filter on, and pop on an audiobook, and its a great chance to chill and wind down.

totallyjerd
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i am currently immortal 2, and that is my peak, but I am diamond on kovaaks and I am struggling on improving. I agree with your statement and I feel like you can easily improve once you focus on the other things, because right now I have no idea what I am doing wrong with my mechanics. I know for a fact that my micro adjustments are lacking but I havent seen much improvement even after training. Your aim on dms are way cleaner than mine so I think your good raw aim wise.

MrEnder-
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Great vid, hope to see more from u! twitch is also going crazy, i hope u make it on all platforms

jakevattamattam
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Something I've learned with these guides and higher rank players is that since I'm in low elo, I should train my fundamentals in raw aim and mouse control, with tracking, clicking and flicking tasks with a little bit of micros. As time goes by, I focus more on micros and less on raw aim

Giuseppe_Cadura
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One tip I really took in after like 300 hours into aim training is aim training in itself is a game you get high score, you pass that high score and go further more. So before I was treating aim training as a means to improve that on a game and now I have fun with it and saw some improvements, explored different scenarios and not just a strict playlist will help you define your aim even more. But with all those aim training applying it in a game is something else that I had to overcome just because i had a high score in tracking doesn't mean I'll be good at valorant learning the steps and improving with both in game and aim training will pay off significantly

Thewlieee
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Keep up the grind bro, never give up, you will win! May God bless you ❤

tommyzex
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earned a sub, u have my full support in your journey

Samtrien
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the most important thing is consistent aim and always remember guys its just a game nothing serious.

prarambhaaryal
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It’s cool to have the burst of motivation, but the one thing I would suggest is to be good to your wrists. If you want to be pro, remember that overtraining in aim trainers can cause injury in the future. Consistency over years is needed.

glaakee
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great video, keep up the good work and good luck on the grind!

savio.nogueira
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First off you are doing great keep believing in yourself and you can achieve whatever you put your mind too. The whole debate coach's saying aim trainers are a waste of time because the players before didn't have is the same argument about athletes not weight training in the 60s times change and we have all these tools to help now. The real competitor takes every advantage to make themselves better at what they are doing..keep up the grind everyone watching and in the comments believe in you ❤

SenorSeems
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yeah anyone saying an aim trainer is a waste of time needs to be mentally checked

suhhhkyle
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YO BRO NICE VID, LOVE FROM FRANCE.
For my part, I play to get better, not rank up, because it's better to rank up by being confident, by having a good sense of the game, by aiming well, by positioning well, rather than being boosted to the wrong elo
(15 years old immo 1 btw; road to radiant)

heyser.
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Were seeing similar breakthroughs in competition shooting and marksmanship. Not necessarily when it comes to using a virtual trainer but the approach to achieving high performance. Right now vision driven speed and precision over bio-mechanics isn ‘the meta’.

I just started doing an experiment with aim trainers to train vision and focus at speed, particularly in tempos much faster than what is required from the most difficult courses of fire.

Ive got less then 7 hours and on aim training and on the grid game (which ive spend 3 on total) I managed to get to 73k, and I have clear path as to how I can reach 120k-140k very soon just by maintaining tempo but increasing accuracy.

I’m not interested in any of the games the trainer is for but it’s interesting watching videos of high performance play and I’m taking every opportunity to analyze how vision is executed at speed with precision.

I’ll see how that translates to ‘irl’ but in my little time spend a lot of drills are starting to feel like im seeing it in slow motion even though I’m hammering speed with a sense of urgency.

Im probably the only person taking this approach in my space so I’m curious as to how this will end up.

yohanzeta
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i got from plat to gm on the voltaic benchmarks and my consistency was one of the things that improved a lot, after aim training it felt like it was impossible for me to go negative by more than 1 death and i mvped like half of my games

randomosugamer
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I have invested my 1st 100h in the past 8 months roughly and my experience is very varied. It has helped me both be consistent but also be able to pull back rounds
However its very easy to train ineffectively or even incorporate really bad aimming habbits that genuiely sent me from d1-> low gold. ( snappiness & high tension) mentally i couldnt understand it as i was hitting large flicks way more consistently. Able to do well in DM against Immortals & radiants but moment in game i would mid frag.

My most recent aim venture has been focus on microing and high accuracy scores, focusing on good fundamentals instead of score farming. And its been very effective in ranking back up. Sat at 912 tracker score across 30+ games (last checked)

dltag
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You missed 1 point on ineffective aim training reasons: Proper technique to play each scenario. Also, i agree with you that raw aim is still important and shouldnt be ignored. Because even if we have good xhair placement our raw aim might be shaky or we have poor accuracy or click timing is bad or microadjusting is bad all of which still result in us losing the gunfight and all of these issues can be fixed with aimtraining only.
One more thing is that if we only rely on passive aim we might get good in tacfps shooter games like CS or valorant but this wouldnt transalate to other competetive games which use completely different set of mechanics. If we wish to be a consistent high level player among all fps games aim training is a must.

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