Aiming in Counter-Strike 2 is unique compared to some other FPS games. Games like Overwatch and Call Of Duty place a lot of emphasis on tracking and flinch aim. These things are present in CS2 as well, but to a lesser extent. You may find yourself relying something called Crosshair Placement a healthy amount during gameplay. In this blog post, we’ll be discussing what crosshair placement is, and why aim in CS2 relies so heavily on it.
Key Takeaways
- Having good crosshair placement is crucial for good aim in Counter-Strike 2
- Crosshair placement is being able to predict where an enemy will be and aiming accordingly
- There are multiple ways to improve your crosshair placement, both with free workshop maps and with Refrag’s Prefire and Xfire modes.
What is Crosshair Placement?
Crosshair Placement is anticipating where an enemy player will appear on your screen, and placing your crosshair on that position.
Crosshair placement can also be thought of as “pre-aim,” and the two terms are often used interchangeably.
Why is Crosshair Placement so important in CS2?
The reason why Counter-Strike leans so heavily upon crosshair placement is because of the extremely fast time to kill combined with the relatively low vertical movement offered to players. The majority of aim duels in CS take place on a strictly horizontal plane, meaning you can reliably predict exactly where your enemy will be when they peek out, attempting to shoot you.
The same principle applies when you’re the aggressor. Placing your crosshair over where the enemy will be before you make your peek is crucial to being able to win your fight. Crosshair placement can look a bit different depending on weapon selection as well. For instance, you’re not going to be aiming head level with the AWP, as a torso impact is just as effective as a headshot.
How to improve your crosshair placement in CS2
Improving your crosshair placement is a fairly simple affair. Prefire maps and gamemodes allow you to practice the offensive side of your pre-aim. Aiming into empty space as you peek, so that when you see the enemy, your crosshair is already in the correct spot to land an easy headshot. There are some free training options in the form of custom maps on the Steam Workshop that provide what you need to hone your crosshair placement. Refrag offers its own Prefire mode, complete with custom bot positions and leaderboards so you know exactly how you stack up against others.
For the defensive side of crosshair placement, where you’re on the receiving end of a peek from an opponent, the best way to practice is with Refrag’s Xfire mode. Xfire combines the peeking bots from Crossfire and the routes and bot positions from Prefire, making it the perfect way to hone your anticipation of peeks from common angles.