

If you've found out that your shot was pretty bad, then you can begin practicing your aim and muscle memory. Since you’ve identified the problem, you should start practicing anything that can help improve it. Therefore, the next time you play a game and miss a shot, do a self-assessment and think - why did I miss? Once you’ve identified the main problem, then you can move on. The shot might be fine, the reading of opponent’s movement is the problem. In my opinion, this is the main issue for at least 60% of people who assume they’re bad at tracking in Overwatch. But if you missed the shot because you didn’t expect him to step aside means your shot wasn’t necessarily bad, it’s your brain that can’t clearly read the movements. If the reason why you missed the shot is that you aimed too short or too far, your shot was just bad, and the aiming is what needs practice. So, why did you miss the shot? Did you suddenly expect him to run forward, or did you simply aim wrong? You choose to take the shot but miss it, because the Soldier stepped aside. You’re playing Widowmaker and suddenly a Soldier appears running in a zigzag pattern, so you start tracking him. I believe there are two groups of people: the ones who actually fail to aim and the ones who are not able to use their brain.įor example, imagine a situation. The necessity of identifying the problem first is important so you don’t waste time practicing on something while it wasn’t the problem in the first case. Also, the benefit varies from person to person. It is a no-brainer, but still many people start aiming practice and aiming drills while the gain they actually can get is significant. DO NOT, and I will repeat, DO NOT try and aim practice before you have identified what the problem is.
