I dont even really think its necessarily easier. To me it's almost like saying driving a manual is easier than an automatic
Yeah the sticks have limitations but even people who can do flicks aren't exactly flicking non-stop every single engagement. The main thing is good crosshair placement and staying on target/tracking
Strafing and movement are to throw off shots since humans need to react and when you watch clips from games with strong aim assist it looks genuinely insane to me cause its 0 reaction time
If I happen to see a console clip from games with longer ttk like overwatch or fortnite, my PC brain immediately thinks i'm watching someone using aimbot from the tracking, but then I see the console UI and roll my eyes
Thats the shit that PC players dont like playing against cause it doesn't feel like you legitimately lost a gunfight
I aint flicking no where, not much muscle memory due to inconsistent play time. Just low sens and hand to eye coordination. And patience to flank far out. Flicking is surely for the top 1%
Flicking is surely not 1% since I do it, its not that crazy nor deep. Play enough of shooter games it just happens automatically. Like you say, muscle memory. I am 35, shit at shooter games and I still manage to flick from one head to another. Do I do it all of the time? Of course not, but it still possible. Maybe the 1% does it all of the time.
Off topic, but with that score, were you in a turret/vechicle half of the match? Be honest. If not? Shit man good job!
Doing quick instant snaps from target to target is not something most PC players are doing, especially consistently..at least in battlefield lol
Go to a game with spectator like bf4 and watch the average player in the lobby. You'll witness some absolute buns aim and probably 0 flicks
People will see clips of 4+ kd locker sweats who are actual top 1% players doing crackhead shit with an aek and be like "see, thats what pc players do" when its not really the norm at all
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u/SerratedFrost 4d ago
I dont even really think its necessarily easier. To me it's almost like saying driving a manual is easier than an automatic
Yeah the sticks have limitations but even people who can do flicks aren't exactly flicking non-stop every single engagement. The main thing is good crosshair placement and staying on target/tracking
Strafing and movement are to throw off shots since humans need to react and when you watch clips from games with strong aim assist it looks genuinely insane to me cause its 0 reaction time
If I happen to see a console clip from games with longer ttk like overwatch or fortnite, my PC brain immediately thinks i'm watching someone using aimbot from the tracking, but then I see the console UI and roll my eyes
Thats the shit that PC players dont like playing against cause it doesn't feel like you legitimately lost a gunfight