News - How To Instantly Improve Your Aim Warzone 2 Ranked Play
Basically, once you start getting snappier and you're onto your aim, getting your shots, and you're kind of controlling it, sometimes it really does aim for you and lock onto it, and make sure to have Target aim assist on an assist type default field of view. From what I've seen, a lot of assault rifle players tend to play on 97, and some do play on 5.
And so the best range for field of view is probably from 100 to 105, and you guys can play around with that. I play on 110 just because I'm a crackhead. I like the addiction I used to play on 120 fov, and it's one of the biggest mistakes because this is not a war zone, so.
Input delay (monitor, controller)
One of the first things we're going to enter into is latency. Your equipment latency is everything in gaming because it allows you to react. Often times, when I ask most of my IRL friends and some of my other friends that I played multiplayer online, you'd assume that they probably had a great monitor, a great console.
PC whatever it may be, and a great controller, but then you'd find out later on that this guy's playing on a 60-inch TV and the other guy's playing on a controller that's been out there for 8 years. Do you see what I mean? So, for example, my mom's monitor is a 144 HZ monitor with 1 millisecond. Allowing me to obviously react at the best reaction times possible now with PC gaming, especially in Call of Duty, you can obviously get a better monitor at 280 HZ, so as you guys can see on this website that I use you can see my this is my AC's monitor, right here.
But with gaming, just like everything you really need is upgrading things, this is allowing me to see pictures faster, so when it comes to aiming and Call of Duty, you're snapping on to people, you're flicking on to people, and obviously, playing a Call of Duty reactionary first-person shoot-comp game, you really should not be playing on a 60-inch TV and having a huge, massive 40-millisecond input delay.
For you to be basically dragging at the sensitivity of a one-sensitivity player, especially with your controller right here, as you guys can see, it's wired to have one of the best AIMS in Call of Duty. You're on a PC, and you need to overclock your controller. You're going to make this a PS4 controller that has an average millisecond delay of five and overclock it to 1 millisecond.
On top of that, you can obviously overclock your things on your PC. I would strongly suggest maybe reaching out to BR Paradox or FPS Hub, which can definitely optimize your PC based on your settings and any questions that you guys can have, so you guys obviously get better fps and better latency. And having your PC work at the finest optimal level that you guys can be playing at, so when playing Call of Duty and just any article game itself, often times when you play Valor.
Is your accuracy becoming lazy?
Fortnite, or War Zone That gaming just kind of gets a little bit boring, and what do I mean by that? It's like scrolling on Tik Tok; you continuously scroll, and then you look at the clock, and then it's like 2 hours have just flown by; we get addicted; we get glued to something; and we don't even realize that we're just bored and we're just swiping or just being on autopilot.
Have you ever played ranked, for example, while you were frying? You were literally playing the best games in the world for the first two hours. You would think that playing Call of Duty for like longer and longer 4 hours to 5 hours would get your aim to get the greatest. That's not the case, and that's why you often see many of your favorite streamers on rank or your content creators literally continuously warming up in the firing ridge when they can't, because you never know when that one bad game can happen.
That's why it's very important to keep yourself focused as much as possible. Why do you think you hear all the time players themselves say lock in? It's just that key phrase that basically comes across your brain. Get a configure to basically stay focused, and another thing to add on to that loss of paying attention to playing Call of Duty when it's just been based on your aim or your movement and it just becomes clunky, right, and guess when that happens there's different periods of time for a lot of people, for example, when you first get on your aim's kind of like, eh, until it takes you a couple of four or five games to finally get that aim tuned down to your comfortability.
Things that can help with reaction time in your aim are often times when you come home and you're kind of just off a huge day of work, and it's like you are so tired and exhausted that it takes you a while to finally get generated to basically move around the map like you should be. You're still eating crap loads of garbage sugary food and some of you people don't realize that when you're eating garbage food like that greasy food that obviously you eat it and then you're just sitting there going like man do I feel slow yeah I wonder why and also make sure to drink your water like I said playing games you become an autopilot, mode and you forget what's going on time flows by and you realize I haven't eaten a meal and forly maybe just take a 10-minute break especially when you're losing focus for example when it affects your aim and you start missing all these shots It's not because of your controller, and it's not because of your PC; it's just because you're kind of losing track of what's going on.
Train away!
These are all my aiming rituals and training things that I've done ever since I started playing.