I’ve played around 30,000 hours of FPS games — always chasing that perfect feeling — the flawless aim.
Even 20 years ago, I was experimenting with everything I could get my hands on:
different liquids on mousepads ( fav pad : ICEMAT from 2003 ish), swapping mouse feet, using mouse bungees ( because wireless mouse was useless back in the day ), arm sleeves, testing hundreds of mousepads, and perfecting posture and glide — all to find that extra edge.
Over time, it became more than just a hobby — it turned into an obsession with precision itself.
That’s why I created DryGlide Gaming Elixir Pro — built from two decades of testing, tweaking, and pure passion for aim.
FASTER FLICKS. SOFTER START. MORE PRECISE.
Because I’ve lived it — from the first mousepad to the last pixel.
I always used 400 DPI, no acceleration, and even overclocked my mouse to 500 Hz back when the market standard was 125 Hz.
I studied every micro-movement, every crosshair placement, and every flick.
My visual tracking and eye coordination were sharp — proven by my world record score of 688 in Stack by Ketchapp.
In my younger days, I couldn’t focus on anything else at school — all I thought about was getting home to play CS.
I was an arm aimer (low sensitivity), and I washed my hands every time I got sweaty.
I even used anti-sweat cream, because I could instantly feel when the mouse feet or pad were dirty — part of my OCD-level attention to detail.
My philosophy was simple:
Never change sensitivity.
Master your setup.
Build muscle memory until it becomes instinct.
I even made my own mouse bungee using a flower pin — mounted above my mousepad so the cord went straight down.
Creative gamer solutions, before they even existed.
I kept my desk spotless — using mini vacuums, microfiber cloths, and a rubber lint roller to clean my pad.
I was early to everything: back in 2002, I was already playing at 160 Hz on a CRT monitor, obsessed with aim and perfection.
And if there’s one truth I’ve learned from all this:
The trick to getting better isn’t tweaking your system — it’s practice and knowting the smal secrets for the perfection in the art of aiming.
Pure, focused, daily practice. Aim trainers help, but the game itself teaches the best.