Antero wrote:
So i got a serious question about what should i focus on right now. Short story first, i started playing about 4 or 5 months ago and i drilled the craziest maps until i racked up 20k playcounts. Now my aim with the tablet is pretty good and i can read AR10 with absolutely no problem but my problem is with my left hand. I drilled the freedom dive practice map like crazy but i cannot play slow maps at all and my accuracy sucks. Did i hit a point of no return and completely screwed up my chances of being good or can i still learn everything if i go back to slower maps and actually fix my left hand?
Make yourself play Nyancat like 100 times. I am still playing this map daily, and the better that I get at it, the better I get at everything else. I make a point to play it every single day while warming up. You will feel muscles you didn't know you used to play in your forearm because of how slow and deliberate the stream speed is. It was hard to aim and follow the streams at first as well. I, too, have this problem where I can read AR10 better than any AR. Nyancat is AR8 and that approach rate is highly uncomfortable for me, because I can't just play with reflexes. I have to actually READ the map, and follow it. And I can't just wiggle my fingers really fast and get the streams right, either. The streams are slow enough to where I could probably single tap, but that would obviously get really tiring really fast. The song is VERY consistent, and once the melody gets drilled into your head, you will be able to start following with your left hand a little bit better. I made a post a page or two back about starting slow, and this is an example that I think would help you specifically. Here is the map:
http://osu.ppy.sh/s/31419 if you are unfamiliar with it. If you are, then I highly recommend that you use it to train. Spend like a whole playing session on it one day, and then keep playing it at least once a day all the way through for a good two weeks. Turn on nofail if you have to (you probably will need it at first). Hope this helps!