Clicking playstyle in this context is defined as:
1. What do you use to input hits (keyboard, mouse, tablet pen, touchscreen, llama),
2. What is your style (single tap, alternate, click + singletap, click + alternate)
3. What fingers do you use, and
4. Where do you put them, if you use a keyboard?
I use a keyboard with Cherry Red switches. I'd like to move to black switches because I feel as though they would give me more tactile feedback in my fingers, reds seem too light and the actuation feels imprecise and sloppy because there is no resistance to my fingers. I also put o-rings under the keys I use to shorten the switch travel to the point of actuation, to reduce unnecessary travel (and therefore wasted energy and recovery time, and clarify the actuation point by matching the physical sensation of bottoming out to the point of actuation). I put a hard o-ring on bottom and a soft o-ring on top, to give firmness so the key isn't mushy while providing some springiness to aid recovery.
I alternate with my index as dominant/leading finger (but not always, it can vary on the map and my fatigue level, triples seem very easy to do "backwards" for me for some reason) and my ring finger as my following finger (I find that it gives me more stamina and avoids finger locks/"tripping" as opposed to index/middle)
I put my fingers on the left Ctrl and Alt keys on my board because the keys are larger than normal keys and don't have any keys to accidentally press on the outer edges (nothing being left of Ctrl, and the spacebar being right of Alt) and the spacing with the Windows key makes it very comfortable considering my finger choice.
1. What do you use to input hits (keyboard, mouse, tablet pen, touchscreen, llama),
2. What is your style (single tap, alternate, click + singletap, click + alternate)
3. What fingers do you use, and
4. Where do you put them, if you use a keyboard?
I use a keyboard with Cherry Red switches. I'd like to move to black switches because I feel as though they would give me more tactile feedback in my fingers, reds seem too light and the actuation feels imprecise and sloppy because there is no resistance to my fingers. I also put o-rings under the keys I use to shorten the switch travel to the point of actuation, to reduce unnecessary travel (and therefore wasted energy and recovery time, and clarify the actuation point by matching the physical sensation of bottoming out to the point of actuation). I put a hard o-ring on bottom and a soft o-ring on top, to give firmness so the key isn't mushy while providing some springiness to aid recovery.
I alternate with my index as dominant/leading finger (but not always, it can vary on the map and my fatigue level, triples seem very easy to do "backwards" for me for some reason) and my ring finger as my following finger (I find that it gives me more stamina and avoids finger locks/"tripping" as opposed to index/middle)
I put my fingers on the left Ctrl and Alt keys on my board because the keys are larger than normal keys and don't have any keys to accidentally press on the outer edges (nothing being left of Ctrl, and the spacebar being right of Alt) and the spacing with the Windows key makes it very comfortable considering my finger choice.