Ahoy competitors.
As any serious gamer knows, it's very little about skill, talent, and/or badass-ness. It comes down to putting the work in. A guy that has a 3 on the talent scale can beat a guy with an 8 on the talent scale if he simply outworks the talented guy. The only advantage talent bring is that one might be able to make a milestone with less work, however one still has to put in the effort.
I'm looking to start motivating shooters to practice more! Post your photos, and videos of your dry and live fire practice here to inspire your fellow shooters to work towards becoming more competitive. Hopefully it will even spawn some rivalries!
I'll get things started with a video I took today during my dry fire practice session. My goal was to perform 5, 1 second reloads in a row on camera. After a couple stutters I got a good string together with only a little hiccup on reload #4.
If you can do better, lets see it!
As any serious gamer knows, it's very little about skill, talent, and/or badass-ness. It comes down to putting the work in. A guy that has a 3 on the talent scale can beat a guy with an 8 on the talent scale if he simply outworks the talented guy. The only advantage talent bring is that one might be able to make a milestone with less work, however one still has to put in the effort.
I'm looking to start motivating shooters to practice more! Post your photos, and videos of your dry and live fire practice here to inspire your fellow shooters to work towards becoming more competitive. Hopefully it will even spawn some rivalries!
I'll get things started with a video I took today during my dry fire practice session. My goal was to perform 5, 1 second reloads in a row on camera. After a couple stutters I got a good string together with only a little hiccup on reload #4.
If you can do better, lets see it!