“One shot, one kill. Never waste a bullet.”
You possess a rare combination: blazing reflexes with rock-solid composure. You're not the one charging in — you're the one who lands the decisive shot when it matters. Your hand-eye coordination makes you unbeatable in precision games. Your weakness is creativity — when a game demands unconventional thinking, you feel out of your element.
Your crosshair is always at head level. Not because you're aiming — because it lives there, as natural as breathing. You don't need flick shots because your cursor never lands in the wrong place. Others train their aim by hitting targets a thousand times. You rely on instinct: an invisible line between your hand and your eyes that never breaks. In games where precision is everything, you're the one who makes opponents scream 'they're cheating.'
You once got five headshots with six bullets in a single FPS round. In osu!, your cursor path looks smoother than everyone else's — because you never need to correct. In racing games, your racing line is so perfect even the AI tutorial couldn't demonstrate it better. You'll spend twenty minutes adjusting mouse DPI and sensitivity because you can feel a 0.01 difference in your hand. Your skill isn't explosive — it's surgical, consistent, and terrifyingly stable. You're probably quiet in voice chat too, because precise people tend to be quiet people.
Teammates describe you as 'so reliable it's boring.' They know if they give you an angle, you'll hold it. If they give you the AWP, you'll hit the shot. You're not the teammate who gets people hyped — you're too consistent for surprises. But when the game goes to overtime and everyone's hands are shaking, you're the only one still performing like it's a warm-up round. They won't scream for you, but they know: if there's one person to take the match-deciding shot, it's you. Always you.
The scene: you're stuck in a round that demands 'creative play.' The opponent has figured out your pattern — same angle every time, same timing every peek. Your aim hasn't changed, but they've stopped appearing where you're aiming. Anxiety creeps in: 'I'm not missing — so why can't I hit anyone?' Because you're too predictable. Your precision is a straight line, but the game needs a curve. Growth path: every three rounds, force yourself to switch to a different angle. It doesn't need to be better — it just needs to be 'different.' Your accuracy won't drop from changing positions, but the opponent's predictions will break. Precision plus unpredictability equals the Duelist.
4x Major champion — the most consistent AWPer to ever play
Brazil's star — headshot rate that defies logic
King of rifles — pure aim talent unmatched by anyone
Hand-Eye Coordination
You rely too much on precision. When rules change suddenly, you need time to adapt.
Duelist
Raise Pattern Recognition to B rank to evolve into the Duelist — add insight to your precision.