If you point your crosshair at the floor or at your waist, your hands will have to make a complex last-second change while you take damage.


 What b07 bot lobby looks like


 As you sprint, your crosshair drifts towards the ground.


 


 The enemy will only appear when you confirm visually that it is there.


 


 Why it is that gunfights end in failure


mmoset Players of high level aren’t necessarily faster; they’re just more ready. Poor crosshair positioning can make a gunfight a panic-inducing situation: Big correction + Panic = Overflick.


 


 When you have a good placement, it's: Micro-adjustment plus ADS + Shoot.


 

 


 


 Your enemies will feel the same way when you have your crosshair up.


 


 Treat your crosshair as you would treat your eyes


 We are not aiming at the place where the threat was last, but the place where it will be next.


 

 


 


 The Height Rule


 


 Indoors, or at tight angles: keep the crosshairs slightly higher than normal (head level). Here, engagements occur quickly.


 


 Outdoors/Midrange: Aim the upper chest. It's more forgiving when they crouch, or slide.


 


 As you move your crosshair, it should be positioned on the corner of the next cover or corner.


 


 Reviewers' insights: Crosshair placement is often more effective at improving Time to Kill than changing sensitivity settings.


 

 


 The ability to predict movement (being an easy target)


 You will become a common target if, in each fight, you continue to strafe or worse stand still. Predictability is like a present to your enemy; they will open it up with bullets.


 


 What it looks like


 Using the sprint-in timing or the same angle of peeking repeatedly.


 Standing perfectly still while ADSing.


 Always use the same panic action (e.g. jumping or sliding).


 


 Why gunfights lose


 Predictable movements allows opponents to:


 


 1. Your exact height and timing should be pre-aimed.


 2. They will be able to track you easily without needing any adjustments.


 3. It is possible to win even if your opponent's crosshair is more accurate than yours.


 


 The Two-Option Rule


 We do not need to be randomly aiming; this leads to poor aim. We need to be unreadable.


 

 


 


 This is a practical guideline:


 


 Close Range: Strafe + Occasional JUMP (do not always jump).


 Mid-to long range: You can use the crouching-peek or drop shot.


 Re-peeks. Never peek exactly the same angle at the same level twice in a single row.

 


 


 You may find that you have a tendency to only use one button.


 


 Fight B: Jump.


 Fight B: Just punishes.


 Repeat.

 


 


 The enemy will not be able to read your movements if you use this simple switch.


 


 This 30-Minute Upgrade Routine is Easy to Put Together


 When we want rapid improvement without working all day, this is what we use. This technique works because the variables are isolated.


 


 FAQ


 Q1 - Isn't cover playing just camping?


 


 Not at all. Camping is not taking up space. Playing cover involves taking space *intelligently* without donating kills. You can still move fast if you have a wall, a doorframe, or an object line nearby.


 

 


 


 Q2: Will this work if I have an insane aim?


 


 No. In reality, these fixes lower the raw aim necessary to win. When you start your crosshair in the proper place, but aren't completely exposed, your accuracy requirement drops and fights become consistent.


 

 


 


 Q3: How can I tell if I'm going too fast without covering?


 


 When you die often and think "Where even was he?" it is most likely an exposure problem. You entered a lane where you had to check multiple angles at the same time.


 

 


 


 Q4 - I've tried to keep my crosshair up, but it feels strange. How long before it becomes natural?


 


 It usually requires a few sessions. It usually takes several sessions before players stop defaulting to the floor while sprinting.


 


 Summary


 This trio of habits can be stacked upon one another: rapid movement without cover allows opponents to control you, low-crosshair placement delays your shots, and predictable movements allow you to easily pre-aim. Fixing just one habit makes fights more clean; fixing all three habits together makes our deaths look less unlucky.


 

 


 


 Use the same movement loop in every match. Anchor – Scan – Slide. Maintain your crosshair before corners. You will immediately feel the difference between confidence and consistency.