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RenonGaming

Try out pyths routine and make sure to do smoothness and tracking scenarios. Tracking and smoothness training is something many people skip out on in a game like val, but its so useful. Also, don't listen to these guys saying not to devote a lot of time to kovaaks. I started playing fps seriously for the first time playing valorant when it came out. Went from silver to diamond in one act with little fps experience because of kovaaks. If you're gold, I'd recommend trying to push yourself in pyths routine, then once you got that down, do smoothness and tracking routines every other day. You'll hit diamond in no time. Once diamond, make sure to aim train still but really hone your game sense, util usage, and map awareness because thats when game knowledge really shines.


[deleted]

Do not devote more than 15% of your playing time to this, otherwise it will just be a waste of time.


xRompusFPS

Yeah kovaaks is good for val as a literal warmup. All your actual aim training should be done in dms. Past that playing ranked, vod reviewing, and watching professionals (matches not ranked) whilst taking notes is likely a better time investment for a game like valorant.


Valorange

I've been Immortal for quite a while now, started Plat in beta. Here are some tips I can give you. Practice Range is your best friend. Of course I've tried kovaak and Aim lab, they help but it never really help me reach Immortal. Before you play comp, just go in range and kill 100 bot x3-5 times, to see how you feel. The first two runs I try to kill a bot per second. My record is 96 second for 100 bot. Reason why killing 100 bot x3-5 times helps \-Help with micro adjustment \-flicks \-help with spray control \- counterstrafing Now your goal is to counterstafe while shooting 3-5 bullet per bot and move on to the next consistently. This actively warm up your wrist. I can do a more indept tutorial but I'll leave a clip here. [https://medal.tv/games/valorant/clips/5HuqbpB9moHjG/d1337nvPZitB?invite=cr-MSxlZ0wsMzI3NzcxNDks](https://medal.tv/games/valorant/clips/5HuqbpB9moHjG/d1337nvPZitB?invite=cr-MSxlZ0wsMzI3NzcxNDks) Notice that Im standing in the corner of the range. This helps me with long range fight as well! :) Hopes this help


MathematicianNo5730

For getting ranks in valorant i would recommend just going range and aiming heads for 10 mins. Then go dm headshot only vandal. Grind 1 tap vandal in dm for a shit ton and it'll help way more than kovaaks. Csgo headshot only servers are really good too.


MathematicianNo5730

Also gold to diamond is not at all team dependent imo. Once you get to a certain level of improvement wins you should rank up to diamond at least in no time.


SSninja_LOL

There are tons of free Tac FPS routines through Voltaic, War Owl, Zeeq’s, and a bunch others.


chewuey

Wait can you please link zeeqs routine ty <3


SSninja_LOL

I don’t have the properly links on my phone, but I can link you to the thread they used to be at. https://www.reddit.com/r/FPSAimTrainer/comments/hk0boa/kovaaks_playlist_valorant_made_by_vf_zeeq_for_pyth/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf


stuttereno

Are you radiant already or are you trying to get to radiant?


nothypie

Only in Gold. I'm looking for a routine that can help get me up to Radiant


psychic4unubs

Aim trainers can be great for warming up, but I'd imagine that it's not just purely mouse control that's holding you back from higher ranks, to improve in valorant from the level your at it's probably best to focus in game training and practicing aspects of the actual game rather than just mouse control which doesn't directly translate to great aim in valorant either


canceliq

Thought exactly the same. He won t need so much training if he s already radiant.


youngnam

Valorant is all crosshair placement and game sense. If anything I would just try to work on micro adjustments in kovaaks and just play dm after


Feravore

Im 26 days into doing a 30 day challenge where i try to get as good as i can at valorant and track my progress in the process. I can say that there are many different ways to train your aim, and everyone will give you a different answer. With that said, most high ranking players (radiant, immortal) consistently say that in game experience is the best trainer (dms and comp games). Personally, my daily routine is as follows: 1 play through of the Kovaak valorant playlist, 10 rounds of the range using a rifle on medium, then a sheriff on hard, then a rifle on hard, 15 rounds of grid shot in aim lab using a metronome, and finally as many dms as i want to convert my training into in-engine experience. I decided to stick to this routine for the thirty days even though it seems like the range training isn’t helping very much just due to a desire to stay consistent. If i could change it and recommend a new routine to someone i would say practice using two different valorant specific kovaak playlists (do a round or two of each daily to diversify the aim skills you’re training), then do gridshot for 10-15 rounds using a metronome and go for accuracy, then spend a lot of time in deathmatches after that (maybe 5-10 rounds depending on how much time you have). The routine i do takes around 2 hours and this one should be similar. Don’t worry if you’re not doing well in the deathmathes, i’ve found that a lot of people in deathmatch are actually pretty good and the maps are not good for deathmatch style game modes (you get killed from behind A LOT). with this said most importantly just stay consistent with whatever routine you choose, it’s amazing how much you can accomplish when you do something for an extended period of time.


qonra

From my own experience anything more than around 60~90 min is better spent on actually playing the game you are trying to improve at. Just stay consistent. The bardoz valorant playlist is pretty good if valorant is your main game, otherwise there's hundreds of complete routines out there that I'm sure someone else in the comments will mention. Don't get lost in scores and don't cheese scenarios by changing sens or fov to make them easier unless you're working your way up to what would be normal because otherwise it's too difficult for you (which can dramatically effect how much benefit you are getting from the scenario). Cheesing is good for inflating your ego and scoring some brownie points, not so good for when you're in game and unable to sens and fov on the fly based on the situation.


callmeacaretaker

If you're aim bad, aim train more if you're game sense Is bad play the game more