Crosshair placement matters before the swing
Strong players do not search wildly for the opponent after every micro-movement. They keep the crosshair in useful space, near where the target will be, so the adjustment is small when the trade begins.
If your cursor keeps drifting into empty space, you force yourself to flick back into every exchange. That usually makes your first hit late and your follow-up shaky.
Tracking gets easier when your feet stay readable
Aim and movement are linked. If you strafe harder than you can read, your own camera has to compensate for your movement and the opponent's movement at the same time.
Calmer feet often create cleaner aim. This is why pairing this page with PvP Movement and Strafing usually fixes more than aim drills alone.
Train for stable cursor discipline
- Lower your training goal from “win more” to “keep the crosshair near center mass in every engage.”
- Review whether you miss most often at the first hit or during follow-up hits.
- Do not force extra clicking or harder strafes to hide a camera-control issue.
Once your cursor is calmer, branch into W-Tapping so good hits also create better knockback value.