There isn't any secret method. Keep playing the stuff that gives you trouble. Eventually you'll get it. Getting impatient doesn't help either, because the learning curve always gets flatter as you get better and progression slows even more.Tjolahop wrote:
It's probably a broad topic with alot of complicated stuff that people don't even bother to explain or not even think about, but i just want to know if there's something, just anything besides pressuring yourself with fast maps (wich is mandatory) that can improve your speed or boost your training the tiniest bit.
Theory only lets you figure out stuff, it doesn't make you better. Example:
The only thing that I can tell you is that most of your skill is mental and has less to do with your actual technique. The crucial part is how fast you can send those nerve-signal decisions to your muscles, and how frequently you can send multiple different signals. This is known as transitioning, a key factor in alternating, as well as determining the max BPM you can properly do jumps. This only comes with training and conditioning, i.e. playing more hard stuff and playing it a lot. Just because you can read the map, does not mean you can play it. There is an in-between process. You need to train your mental affinity to your fingers to get them to respond the way they should. This is also confused with having faster reflexes, but it's only better-trained reflexes, or better trained "fingers" (mentally).
So play those fast maps and get used to reading fast stuff, because that's the only way you're gonna develop it. Saying that there is another way of getting faster, other than actually trying to get faster, sounds like bad reasoning. Never confuse reading with execution. Reading is a very broad topic in itself already, and does have common ground with execution, but for the sake of explaining it... they are different things and your reading will always be faster than what you can play.
So play those fast maps and get used to reading fast stuff, because that's the only way you're gonna develop it. Saying that there is another way of getting faster, other than actually trying to get faster, sounds like bad reasoning. Never confuse reading with execution. Reading is a very broad topic in itself already, and does have common ground with execution, but for the sake of explaining it... they are different things and your reading will always be faster than what you can play.