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Question for the alternators

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Topic Starter
pandaBee
Have you guys ever tried perhaps switching your starting finger for songs just to make you less reliant on a certain finger?

i usually start with z but i've been contemplating playing songs that I've beaten before but with x to begin with instead.
koromo
I switch my starting finger on songs randomly (can still alternate perfectly). I used to start with z when it was still my main finger.
Raniemi
I'm an alternator and I have trouble perfectly alternating too. At first, it felt a little awkward for me but I got used to it and now it feels natural.
I don't think that it's a bad habit so just keep playing and it shouldn't bother you anymore.
woqx
The only tip I can give is force yourself to alternate. I think singletapping with your other finger to bring it up to the same level is not very useful because you could spend the same time learning to properly alternate. I started playing more slowish (about 140-170 bpm) songs so I could focus on the alternating and actually stopped playing fast stuff until I had learned how to do it "correctly".

Also I have no "starting finger" and in my opinion you shouldn't think about what finger you use at the beginning, just play and try to switch it up. The finger I use to start doesn't affect my performance at all and I think if you can only play a song if you begin with a certain finger you're doing something wrong.
vincaslt
I used to alternate until I was around 20k rank, then slowly my fingers couldn't keep up with the harder rhythms and I started to singletap more, however neither finger was dominant, then slowly index finger started to take over, and now I'm just a regular index-finger-singletapper :/

I find singletapping a lot more comfortable, since I can now reach high accuracy on jumps, and miss a lot less.
Topic Starter
pandaBee

woqx wrote:

The only tip I can give is force yourself to alternate. I think singletapping with your other finger to bring it up to the same level is not very useful because you could spend the same time learning to properly alternate. I started playing more slowish (about 140-170 bpm) songs so I could focus on the alternating and actually stopped playing fast stuff until I had learned how to do it "correctly".

Also I have no "starting finger" and in my opinion you shouldn't think about what finger you use at the beginning, just play and try to switch it up. The finger I use to start doesn't affect my performance at all and I think if you can only play a song if you begin with a certain finger you're doing something wrong.
Were you playing maps where you were sure you would make 0 mistakes in alternating, or did you just play at a bpm where you could notice yourself making mistakes if you were to make them? Or perhaps something else entirely?
woqx

pandaBee wrote:

Were you playing maps where you were sure you would make 0 mistakes in alternating, or did you just play at a bpm where you could notice yourself making mistakes if you were to make them? Or perhaps something else entirely?
I think it's pointless to play a map if you can't notice and understand the mistakes you're making. Mistakes are good, as long as you understand them and learn from them so you can do better next time. Personally I had this singletapping problem at over 180bpm if I remember correctly so I just played a lot of different, slower maps to get used to alternating properly.

Maps like these https://osu.ppy.sh/s/53547 & https://osu.ppy.sh/s/43166 were useful for me, but any streamy map is good.
I also found drum&bass songs very nice because they usually contain a lot of triplets and 5 1/4 notes (quintuplet i guess?). At the moment I really like this map https://osu.ppy.sh/s/212387 (the Extra) for example, I know it's not d&b but it's the mapping style i'm talking about (If this one is too difficult, obviously don't play it and find something easier, like Frey's Another diff, i think it's great too).
What also helped me is playing maps that have 1/4 notes right after sliders, forcing you start with the "wrong" finger and clicking only 2 out of 3 (or 4 out of 5, etc) notes because the sliderend is the first note.
Anything that is slow enough for you to be able to focus on the alternating will do, as long as it contains a good amount of 1/4 notes. Do not play things that force you to resort to zxz zxz because they are too fast if you want to learn full alternating, it won't help.
bigfeh

koromo wrote:

I switch my starting finger on songs randomly (can still alternate perfectly). I used to start with z when it was still my main finger.
Just quoting this because I think it deserves a bit of extra attention. This is solid advice and should be tried by OP (helps with your second finger. Once it's as goos as the first, you won't have any trouble alternating)
ithgyu
yeah i do this all the time, i always start triples and streams on my middle finger, i dont think there is any issue with it because you basically just single tap for a sec, so no i dont think its a bad habbit at all, certainly not one worth fixing or worrying about, in fact i would think its probably better because you are going to get more used to being able to do it on the one finger, so it will be all around more natural to do.
darkmiz
play scarlet rose
GhostFrog
I do this too. Always have, probably always will. It's not a big deal if you continue doing it, but if the two options are equally natural to you except at high bpm, I'd suggest trying to learn to full alternate. It gives you a tiny bit more stamina by evening out the burden on your fingers, it makes you less likely to get tripped up by an unexpected triple/stream that lands on the "wrong finger" (can be annoying on high AR), and it makes tricky rhythms a tiny bit easier on you. Really though, no big deal if you can't get used to it; it limits you a little bit but not much.
B1rd
I'm not sure really. Maybe it would;d be a good idea to practice on slow songs to perfect 'proper' full alternating.
Topic Starter
pandaBee
Out of curiosity, is there a easier way to tell if i'm alternating perfectly other than checking the entire replay?

Consider the following:

zxxz
zxzx

both give 4 ticks and both will show two hits for K1 and K2, however obviously the first sequence is not a case of perfect alternation, whereas the second sequence is.

So in order to tell if you're doing things correctly you can't just rely on the numbers counted under K1/K2 at the end of a map, you have to watch the replay and see for yourself whether you are hitting the keys properly throughout the entire duration of the song. I don't think I have to mention how difficult this would be in general.

Is there a easier way of doing this? Maybe some kind of program or whatnot?
woqx

pandaBee wrote:

So in order to tell if you're doing things correctly you can't just rely on the numbers counted under K1/K2 at the end of a map, you have to watch the replay and see for yourself whether you are hitting the keys properly throughout the entire duration of the song. I don't think I have to mention how difficult this would be in general.

Is there a easier way of doing this? Maybe some kind of program or whatnot?
Why would you need a replay or any other data when you can clearly tell if you're alternating or not while you are playing? All you need to do is pay attention and analyze how you play and what you do with your fingers, it's not hard and you certainly don't need a program for it. If you're focusing on full alternating, it should be obvious when you make a 'mistake' anyway.

I actually think it's very useful to throw in some singletaps once in a while, because it will usually make you start the upcoming patterns with your other finger, kind of like changing the finger you start songs with. But those singletaps should always be intentional and maybe this should only be done once you've learned to alternate without ever having to resort to zxz zxz (unless ofc you are fine with playing like this, but since you made a thread about it I assume you want to get rid of this habit)
FrzR

Mofu kun wrote:

I do start triples with the same key

it ends up pretty k
winber1

pandaBee wrote:

Out of curiosity, is there a easier way to tell if i'm alternating perfectly other than checking the entire replay?

Consider the following:

zxxz
zxzx

both give 4 ticks and both will show two hits for K1 and K2, however obviously the first sequence is not a case of perfect alternation, whereas the second sequence is.
why does it even matter. if it works it works. it'll be more of a problem if you are over-alternating and hitting extra keys that you shouldn't hit in the first place. if you ever watch me play maps with a lot of kick sliders, and/or 3/4 sliders, you'll probably see my keys being hit pretty randomly, but i couldn't care less.
nooblet
I've always alternated everything for triples and fives, just zxz xzx zxz or zxzxz xzxzx zxzxz etc. I feel like zxz zxz zxz would just kill one of my fingers because I can't single tap with either of my fingers lololol. It also just feels faster than zxz zxz zxz.

However, for long streams (>16 notes) I like to start on my middle finger if possible, just because I hit the key a bit harder with my middle than my index. In other words, I'll lead the stream with my middle and keep track of every 4 notes making sure the 5th 9th 13th etc. notes are hit with my middle finger.

Don't worry about it too much, you don't have to really "analyze your play" or anything just do what feels easier. If it's working for you, then let it be.

Edit: Here's something to practice on https://osu.ppy.sh/s/89799
Arnold0
You don't need any program to know when you mess up your alternating.
As a full alternating player (Doing zdz dzd zdz all the time) I instantly know when I mess up alternating and end up hitting two times in a row the same key which sometimes happen on hard maps I have some issues reading. But maybe I'm just not good enouth to play maps where I would mess up and not recognize it.

Also I think how you alternate is just a matter of preference. Some players are full alternating like me, others do alternate but not always like zdz zdz, even some single tap notes and alternate at every sliders... Most of the time it's not an issue if it doesn't throw your rhythm off.

I wonder why people says to single tap to fix alternating... I know that I myself can't single tap, I tryed it once for fun and I ended up trying to single tap every thing including streams so fail, or if I managed to go from single tap to alternating in a stream I couldn't go back to single tap after it. I think really trying to single tap as a full alternating player is asking for trouble.
Mvsk
I could do this perfectly with my left hand however i recently switched over to tablet and have been using my right hand for hitting notes and left hand to guide the cursor.

At the moment i am hitting triplets and fast double with one finger... double time normals and some "hard" songs (3-4 stars) still can't full combo a 4 yet but that's usually from missing jumps or poor accuracy on fast sliders. using both throws off my accuracy or like you said get confused and mixed up after some confusing combo strings. IF your accuracy does get off nothing is wrong just means you need to train a little more and get use to it.

I play other games and what is used most with the right hand aside from the mouse? the arrow keys. :)
Instead of z,x use v , <- if you are using your right hand. This also helps by having roughly the same spacing before transition. It has improved my scores in one night, getting 50-150 more hits on my personal high score with some 3-4 star maps that i completed before on mouse but still no full combo there is progress.
Topic Starter
pandaBee

nooblet wrote:

Edit: Here's something to practice on https://osu.ppy.sh/s/89799
But i haven't played more enough to do that map. I'm still a lowly scrub. Pls be gentle senpai.

In any case I actually have analyzed my play and it turns out that I always mess up my alternate during streams, particularly fast one. I'll end up clicking something like this zxzxzxzxz zxzxzx. This happens on almost every fast stream that I do. I wonder if this is normal or not? For now I'm just staying away from fast stuff and working on everything else (accuracy, reading, control, aim, etc.)
Ichi
i myself, singletap and start streams or triples with the same finger. I used to think that would slow my speed sometimes, and maybe still concerned. But if its comfortable just do that, focus more on playing and less on how you play. That will give you faster improvement.
woqx

nooblet wrote:

you don't have to really "analyze your play" or anything just do what feels easier.
He will not 'fix' his habit if he keeps doing what feels easier. I'm not saying it's necessary to alternate everything, but if he wants to learn it, he actually will have to at least notice when he does something wrong and understand why.
7ambda
I don't know about you, but I find it easier to do doubles with one finger.
ZenithPhantasm

woqx wrote:

nooblet wrote:

you don't have to really "analyze your play" or anything just do what feels easier.
He will not 'fix' his habit if he keeps doing what feels easier. I'm not saying it's necessary to alternate everything, but if he wants to learn it, he actually will have to at least notice when he does something wrong and understand why.
If other people were as insighful as this guy G&R would be a better place.
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