Utilizing aim trainers is key if you want to have a god-like aim. You finally dedicate 15-60 minutes each day to an aim trainer and you start doing Gridshot on Aimlab. Of course, you see many, many pro players doing Gridshot on stream. But are you improving? Is this really the best aim routine for you?
This guide is based on the Kovaaks aim trainer. It is 100% worth it to invest in a good, high quality and responsive aim trainer. (Kovaaks vs Aimlab). By using Aimlab, you won’t be able to use this guide. But, I tell you, it is 100% worth it. So make sure you get Kovaaks if you don’t have it installed.
Who Is Aimer7
Aimer7 is a very well known aim coach in the community. Here are some of his achievements (taken from Twtich bio):
- 4350+ peak in S13 and S14, playing Tracer and Soldier only in the disgusting goats meta. SR is trash, but I think it’s quite an achievement.
- according to bozott ranking, I’m currently #1 at KovaaK’s FPS aim trainer weekly competitions ranking, which is not surprising, considering I played a lot of them while nick was afk.
- reached elite rank in QC duel (peak 2660+ SR, aka top 10 world ladder, MDR NICE YOKE) in less than 50 hours in ladder while I’ve never dueled in Quake before,
- #1 Agario player (osu is in comparison unskilled),
- top soldier; top tracer, #1 Torbjorn world when I played Overwatch seriously (from S1 to S6, 4k6 peak),
Disclaimer: I do not know Aimer7 personally and I am not a “fanboy”, I just really appreciate him and his efforts and especially his Kovaaks aim training guide. I think its one of the best aim routines out there and I just give you the credentials to back it up and increase its trust worthiness.
So he wrote a training routine guide, which was revised by Tammas. And this is the best aim training routine for you.
Link: Tammas’ Aim Training Routine Addendum
This routine has it all. It starts with benchmarks so you start at your own level. Some players are more experienced and some are new to aim training. This guide covers every skill level. You do some benchmark testing and then you go to your skill level. Don’t worry if your skill level is lower than you think. If you think you are a pro and you you get Intermediate Beginner. That’s okay. Just stay consistent and keep improving. No ego here. (Especially when literally no one knows what skill bracket you are in).
You are done with the benchmarks and you are ready to hop into practice. There are 3 routines for each level. This, depends on your game. Some games are more click-timing heavy. Some are more tracking-heavy. Some require you to be an expert in both of these aiming skills. How to choose?
- Click-Timing – Suited for tactical shooters like CS:GO, Valorant and Siege.
- Tracking – Suited for Battle royals or games with high TTK like Apex Legends.
- Balanced – If you are not sure what is the perfect routine for your game, or, your game requires you to rule in both of these aiming skills. Go with this routine. I am playing Warzone and I am doing Balanced Routines only.
So, you’ve got your skill bracket in check. You picked your routine based on your game. You are ready to practice. Create a local playlist and add the scenarios so it would be easily accessible. Now, keep training. Stay consistent. You will improve in no time. Make sure you know how much time you need to practice at your current skill bracket. Some skill brackets require you to play for only a week or two until advancing to the next skill bracket, while some need more time. So make sure you remember that.
This guide tells you to practice for about a hour each day. If that sounds a lot for you. That’s okay. Start with 15-20 minutes each day. And see how it feels. This should not be a second job and you should 100% do what is comfortable for you. The most important thing is so stay consistent. So take the length of each task with a grain of salt.
Quick Tips
- Sleep – get at least 8 hours of sleep. Your muscles repair and grow bigger when you rest. Same principle here. Without adaqeute sleep, you won’t improve.
- Focus – Keep yourself focused. Don’t zone out and make sure you are 100% focused on the training. Improve Focus While Gaming.
- Consistency – Above all, stay consistent. It is better to play 15 minutes each day, than 2 hours on the weekend. Stay consistent and keep improving.
There Is No Best Routine
This is by no means the perfect routine. There is no perfect routine and many routines may work. But, I chose this as the ultimate training routine because of how simple it is. This guide, is very beginner friendly, very easy to understand, and by having benchmarks, you are motivated to progress and get into higher skill brackets. It was written by a very well known aim coach, so it is very trust-worthy and many people have achieved great results from it. I, myself use this training routine.
Conclusion
The best aim training routine is Tammas’ Aim Training Routine Addendum. Its simplicity, benchmark system the division to skill brackets and the quality of the scenarios, make it the best all around aim training routine out there.