I have been playing big black a few times now and then, and i have been focusing on playing faster maps because i find it boring to play a map that is slow. I play mostly with no mods or find beatmaps that has low enough bpm to use DT. My accuracy sucks and varies from day to day, sometimes i get almost only 100 and on good days i get accuracy of 97 and above but only on the first half of a map. So i guess, keep playing is my only answer. Thanks and i will follow your opinion. Norway4lyfeCXu wrote:
Well, your stats in general don't really matter when it comes to progressing to get better in the game. You can still pp farm (though not as easy as it was to farm scores back in the day), which would give you a sense of improvement while it might not actually be. Instead, try setting yourself some long-term and short-term goals for yourself, and work towards them. Don't make your long-term goals too far away (like FCing big black or whatever) as you'd probably get demotivated before you even get close, but something that's out of your reach right now, but not too much. For example, you can pick a song you like, and having FCing that map as your long-term goal. Short-term goals can be stuff like "get an A on this from B" or "have less than 10 misses instead of 15" or things like that. Also, try to not get discouraged when you can't do something, while still being happy when you actually manage something. If you, say, never finished this map with 10 misses or less, it's to be expected that you won't be getting below 10 misses every time you play that map, even if you manage it once or twice.
While working on your short-term goals, go and try your long-term goal now and then, and again, be happy if you do better than before, but don't get discouraged if you didn't do better as well. Your skills will always fluctuate from day to day anyway.
Oh and make sure you're playing maps of songs you like listening to, or maps you think are fun to play. Sooner or later you'll start to see small progress in your gameplay, rather than looking at some number increasing.
Also, if there is anything you can't do well, try to be aware of how you play when you mess up that particular thing. Let's say you can't do doubles well. Try to do the motion of your fingers taht you would need to do for doubles slowly, so that your brain is actually aware of what you need to do. That helped for me at least.
Anyhow, good luck, and in the end it's mostly up to you to find your own weaknesses and fixing them.
Gee I actually wrote a serious post for this. Good thing you're Norwegian.