Valorant — Kovaaks

If you rely on Kovaak’s flicks, you are playing "Whack-a-Mole." The best Valorant players don't flick—they move their mouse 2 millimeters because their crosshair was already there. If you want to see your Ranked RR go up, stop grinding "Tile Frenzy" for high scores. You need Valorant-specific scenarios.

Why?

Kovaak’s teaches you to react to floating blue spheres in a void. Valorant teaches you to pre-aim at head level while clearing 50/50 angles. kovaaks valorant

Let’s be real. You’ve spent hours in the Range. You’ve watched TenZ’s crosshair placement guide three times. You warm up with two DMs before every ranked session. Yet, you still lose those wide-peek duels on Ascent. Your rifle swings wide, you panic, and you spray at a ghost.

If you are , skip Kovaak’s. Your issue isn't your arm; it's your crosshair placement and peeking technique. The Range is better for you. If you rely on Kovaak’s flicks, you are

For every pro who swears by The Range , there is another (like Hiko, Asuna, and TSM ImperialHal) who swear that is the reason their micro-adjustments look like aimbot.

Here is the hard truth about using Kovaak’s for Valorant. In a Valorant match, you might take 30-40 gunfights in 40 minutes. In Kovaak’s, you can take 200 gunfights in 10 minutes. Let’s be real

But does raw aim actually translate to Valorant? Or is it just a fancy scoreboard for your ego?

Enter the world of .

If you are , Kovaak’s is a cheat code. You already understand where to aim; you just need the mechanical speed to execute those micro-adjustments faster than the other guy.

Valorant is not an aim trainer. It is a . If you grind Kovaak’s for 2 hours and then play ranked for 30 minutes, you will lose.