Serious question.
In particular, 180-220bpm streams over 16 notes long.
In particular, 180-220bpm streams over 16 notes long.
Blame genesN0thingSpecial wrote:
I honestly wonder how people can play more to be consistent, have such great rhythm sense, finger control and stamina to perform OD 10 long stream.
It’s like they practised for it or something but it’s not something I can 100% pin point if that’s the way to gain said skillset
yeah "or", because good genetics means you dont have to play at all and bam u r cookieziArbusion wrote:
play more
or just have good genetics
Rayne wrote:
The short answer would be: Play more
personally i feel like od9 at my comfort bpm of around 170-190 isn't too hard to acc but od10 suddenly is a nightmare of nonstop 100's. They seem close on paper but it doesn't feel that way. Might just be me or my setupShizuku- wrote:
at least get 99% consistently on OD>9
Rayne wrote:
The short answer would be: Play more
Long answer:
First of all, stop looking at OD/Accuracy like it's its own kind of skill. It's not.
Higher OD punishes your mistakes more than lower ODs, and Accuracy is just a product of all your actual skills (Finger control, speed, reading etc).
For example, I'm fairly sure that a good majority of people in the range of 1-10000 rank would actually be able to get 99%+ Accuracy on a map like Shiawase with an OD10.3 value, because the map and rhythm is very simple. It's a bunch of 1/2 notes that are all scattered around your most comfortable area (all near center, none at the edges of the playfield).
On the other hand, https://osu.ppy.sh/b/1430354&m=0 best nomod acc for some AR7,6 128BPM fingercontrol map is 93%. If you could get good an OD, you would get 99% regardless of map.
You spend the majority of your osu playtime singletapping 1/2 notes around 170-200BPM and AR9+. Over time you get better, and that's why these 1/2 >174BPM maps are so easy to acc even with an OD of ~10. You can see the current pp meta reflect that. Fairly simple maps and patterns and an OD of 9,4+ because everyone can singletap and read these maps.
So in itself you can't really pinpoint things that are harder on OD10, but looking at the average player, playing OD10 is "harder" on maps with blue tick rhythms, low BPM, low AR, awkward patterns, even numbered bursts and are hard to read in general.
Lower AR means the note is active for a longer time, so the hitwindow on percentage is way smaller than an OD10, making it harder.
Lower BPM has more time between each beat, which makes it harder to gauge the right timing, since there are "more timings" compared to something like 240BPM where the timewindows for streams are closer together, and also each beat is way closer, so it's much easier to stay on beat. These are the only values I'd say make it universally harder for every player, while other things like finger control might appear hard to one player, but not the other.
OD10 on x-encounter is infinitely "harder" than playing Shiawase HR. Not because OD10 is hard, but because your skillset is probably not sufficient enough to read the map and have the fingercontrol and rhythm to play the patterns on it. Again, OD only makes stuff more punishing and reveals your flaws more the higher it gets.
Also, higher OD gets easier the higher the BPM gets, as long as you have the speed for the specific BPM since there are shorter breaks between each beat which makes staying on beat more natural, opposed to playing something like (real) 70BPM where your inner metronome needs to be really good.
Streaming on OD10 isn't actually as hard as you'd think. Streaming ultimately is just a bunch of 1/4, just like jumps/singletapping is just a bunch of 1/2. Both are extremely simple rhythms.
The reason why OD10 streaming appears to be so hard to you is probably because you can't stream. Maybe because you lack the fingercontrol or stamina for it. To be honest in that case it doesn't matter if a stream is OD10 or OD8, you will get lots of 100s and 50s regardless since you'll fall behind or fingerlock at a certain point.
Just forget about OD as a value or some kind of magical skill. There are certain things that can make it easier like higher ARs and high BPM, but overall you just gotta play XYZ more to get better at XYZ. You don't practice OD, you practice the things that are in an OD10 map to be able to SS it.
In your case, just learn to stream at those BPM ranges, do it often enough until you internalize the BPM better and better and ultimately it will just feel natural to you and you won't notice the high OD at all.
To give you the same example again. Look at your best skill, which is probably singletapping medium to high BPM, then edit some 190-220 BPM AR9,5 singletap map to OD10 and you'll see that you suddenly can "play" OD10.
It's because singletapping probably makes up 85% of your playtime, while streaming is a skill that only really is required on certain 4* maps and that really starts to appear more and more on 5* or higher, so on average you have way less playtime on streams and that's why you can't acc them yet on higher ODs, or maybe can't play them at all.
People like Idke or Cookiezi can play OD10 streams because they have like 300+ tries on each stream map there is, up to 900 for a guy like Idke.
They just dedicated lots of playtime on stream maps and ultimately improved at those. Do the same and in a year or two OD10 streams will be a non-issue for you aswell, but a guy like idke would probably still get bad acc on Mikazuki because the required skillset is different.
@Guy above me
Getting 99% acc on OD9 is completely useless. It just depends on the type of map. Get 100% on random pp map with HR and you'll still end up with 85% acc on x-encounter and fanzhens Mikazuki. It's getting good at the required skillset for a map that counts. Again, Acc/OD are not a skill in any way and just a product of your skills.
You wouldn't advise someone to just "fc more maps" so they can improve at fcing 9* maps, would you? It's the same thing with acc.
Edit: No, consistency isn't a skill either.
Rayne wrote:
The short answer would be: Play more
Long answer:
First of all, stop looking at OD/Accuracy like it's its own kind of skill. It's not.
Higher OD punishes your mistakes more than lower ODs, and Accuracy is just a product of all your actual skills (Finger control, speed, reading etc).
For example, I'm fairly sure that a good majority of people in the range of 1-10000 rank would actually be able to get 99%+ Accuracy on a map like Shiawase with an OD10.3 value, because the map and rhythm is very simple. It's a bunch of 1/2 notes that are all scattered around your most comfortable area (all near center, none at the edges of the playfield).
On the other hand, https://osu.ppy.sh/b/1430354&m=0 best nomod acc for some AR7,6 128BPM fingercontrol map is 93%. If you could get good an OD, you would get 99% regardless of map.
You spend the majority of your osu playtime singletapping 1/2 notes around 170-200BPM and AR9+. Over time you get better, and that's why these 1/2 >174BPM maps are so easy to acc even with an OD of ~10. You can see the current pp meta reflect that. Fairly simple maps and patterns and an OD of 9,4+ because everyone can singletap and read these maps.
So in itself you can't really pinpoint things that are harder on OD10, but looking at the average player, playing OD10 is "harder" on maps with blue tick rhythms, low BPM, low AR, awkward patterns, even numbered bursts and are hard to read in general.
Lower AR means the note is active for a longer time, so the hitwindow on percentage is way smaller than an OD10, making it harder.
Lower BPM has more time between each beat, which makes it harder to gauge the right timing, since there are "more timings" compared to something like 240BPM where the timewindows for streams are closer together, and also each beat is way closer, so it's much easier to stay on beat. These are the only values I'd say make it universally harder for every player, while other things like finger control might appear hard to one player, but not the other.
OD10 on x-encounter is infinitely "harder" than playing Shiawase HR. Not because OD10 is hard, but because your skillset is probably not sufficient enough to read the map and have the fingercontrol and rhythm to play the patterns on it. Again, OD only makes stuff more punishing and reveals your flaws more the higher it gets.
Also, higher OD gets easier the higher the BPM gets, as long as you have the speed for the specific BPM since there are shorter breaks between each beat which makes staying on beat more natural, opposed to playing something like (real) 70BPM where your inner metronome needs to be really good.
Streaming on OD10 isn't actually as hard as you'd think. Streaming ultimately is just a bunch of 1/4, just like jumps/singletapping is just a bunch of 1/2. Both are extremely simple rhythms.
The reason why OD10 streaming appears to be so hard to you is probably because you can't stream. Maybe because you lack the fingercontrol or stamina for it. To be honest in that case it doesn't matter if a stream is OD10 or OD8, you will get lots of 100s and 50s regardless since you'll fall behind or fingerlock at a certain point.
Just forget about OD as a value or some kind of magical skill. There are certain things that can make it easier like higher ARs and high BPM, but overall you just gotta play XYZ more to get better at XYZ. You don't practice OD, you practice the things that are in an OD10 map to be able to SS it.
In your case, just learn to stream at those BPM ranges, do it often enough until you internalize the BPM better and better and ultimately it will just feel natural to you and you won't notice the high OD at all.
To give you the same example again. Look at your best skill, which is probably singletapping medium to high BPM, then edit some 190-220 BPM AR9,5 singletap map to OD10 and you'll see that you suddenly can "play" OD10.
It's because singletapping probably makes up 85% of your playtime, while streaming is a skill that only really is required on certain 4* maps and that really starts to appear more and more on 5* or higher, so on average you have way less playtime on streams and that's why you can't acc them yet on higher ODs, or maybe can't play them at all.
People like Idke or Cookiezi can play OD10 streams because they have like 300+ tries on each stream map there is, up to 900 for a guy like Idke.
They just dedicated lots of playtime on stream maps and ultimately improved at those. Do the same and in a year or two OD10 streams will be a non-issue for you aswell, but a guy like idke would probably still get bad acc on Mikazuki because the required skillset is different.
@Guy above me
Getting 99% acc on OD9 is completely useless. It just depends on the type of map. Get 100% on random pp map with HR and you'll still end up with 85% acc on x-encounter and fanzhens Mikazuki. It's getting good at the required skillset for a map that counts. Again, Acc/OD are not a skill in any way and just a product of your skills.
You wouldn't advise someone to just "fc more maps" so they can improve at fcing 9* maps, would you? It's the same thing with acc.
Edit: No, consistency isn't a skill either.
loveleft wrote:
^ very very good answer