All I am trying to say is the only reason you should ever get an A or B rank is because you missed in the song with the B rank meaning you missed multiple times as the song was above your skill level and so missing alot tanked your Accuracy. Getting a Full Combo A or B rank means that your not really following the music but your reflexs are simply fast enough to hit the objects on the screen. While you can just get an A rank with high ACC from getting a few too many 50's pushing you over the 1% for S rank, generally speaking if you see an A rank below ~91.7% or a B rank below ~83.3% the only way that is possible is by getting 0 misses on the play.
This is simply due to the whole for an A rank 90% of notes as 300's and only 10% of notes as 50's or 100's or B requirements but with 0 misses. So if you get an A rank that is below 91.7% it means that it had to have been an FC because 90% 300's and 10% 50's & 100's (with all of them being 50's) would get you 91.7% ACC. Same logic applies for getting a B rank on a song.
I really am not trying to be a dick or anything, I've just seen people who try to push too far ahead of what they can play rythmically and just hit a wall when their reaction speed can't keep up with the increasing difficulty. At the same time not pushing yourself outside your comfort zone is also bad. If you are getting SS's then it's really not hard enough for you. It's best to strike a balance somewhere in-between.
This being said as this is getting off-topic, the entire question about streaming with rubber domes. I did play with rubber domes for quite a long time before switching to mechanical so my experience is a bit backwards but still might be useful (also I use reds not blues so this might be different). There were two things I noticed when switching.
1. I had been over-compensating for my rubber-dome keyboard delay and was now hitting everything early. I had to learn to slow down slightly as now my keyboard was responding faster to my inputs.
2. I found that I didn't need to press are hard and in-fact pressing as hard as I did with rubber dome would cause a double hit at times.
Just apply this information but in reverse. You probably will need to adjust your hit timing (or smarter global offset) to stream properly and also you need to press a bit harder for the rubber dome keyboards to register the input.
This is simply due to the whole for an A rank 90% of notes as 300's and only 10% of notes as 50's or 100's or B requirements but with 0 misses. So if you get an A rank that is below 91.7% it means that it had to have been an FC because 90% 300's and 10% 50's & 100's (with all of them being 50's) would get you 91.7% ACC. Same logic applies for getting a B rank on a song.
I really am not trying to be a dick or anything, I've just seen people who try to push too far ahead of what they can play rythmically and just hit a wall when their reaction speed can't keep up with the increasing difficulty. At the same time not pushing yourself outside your comfort zone is also bad. If you are getting SS's then it's really not hard enough for you. It's best to strike a balance somewhere in-between.
This being said as this is getting off-topic, the entire question about streaming with rubber domes. I did play with rubber domes for quite a long time before switching to mechanical so my experience is a bit backwards but still might be useful (also I use reds not blues so this might be different). There were two things I noticed when switching.
1. I had been over-compensating for my rubber-dome keyboard delay and was now hitting everything early. I had to learn to slow down slightly as now my keyboard was responding faster to my inputs.
2. I found that I didn't need to press are hard and in-fact pressing as hard as I did with rubber dome would cause a double hit at times.
Just apply this information but in reverse. You probably will need to adjust your hit timing (or smarter global offset) to stream properly and also you need to press a bit harder for the rubber dome keyboards to register the input.