(Part 3) Top products from r/Competitiveoverwatch
We found 24 product mentions on r/Competitiveoverwatch. We ranked the 117 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.
41. Zalman Zm-Mic1 High Sensitivity Headphone Microphone
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
It has attractive & compact designLocalization - EnglishHigh Sensitivity Headphone Mic3 Mini Clips for Tidy ArrangementProduct Type - Headphone MicrophoneLocalization - EnglishSystem Components - N/ASystem Components - N/ASystem Components - N/A
43. Inside the E-Sports Industry (E-Sports: Game On!)
Sentiment score: 2
Number of reviews: 1
44. Microsoft SideWinder Gaming Mouse
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
5 Programmable Main Buttons - Customize your main gaming buttons to your preferenceQuick Launch Button - One-touch takes you to Games Ex in Windows VistaLCD Display on a Mouse - DPI settings and macro recording icons are displayed on the mouse to reduce on-screen interferenceOn-the-Fly DPI Switching...
45. SteelSeries QcK Gaming Surface - Small Cloth - Best Selling Mouse Pad of All Time - Optimized For Gaming Sensors
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
The top choice of esports pros for nearly 20 yearsExclusive QcK micro woven cloth optimized for low and high DPI tracking movementsNon slip rubber base eliminates unwanted movementIdeal mouse pad for small desks, limited spaces, or high DPI users250 x 210 x 2/ 9.84 inches x 8.27 inches
46. Fellowes Professional Series Back Support, Black (8037601)
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Mid spinal support with memory foam promotes neutral postureLower lumbar support with three memory foam sections conforms comfortably to your lower backTri-Tachment system eliminates the need for readjustmentMemory foam responds to back weight and warmth for custom support
47. How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big: Kind of the Story of My Life
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big Kind of the Story of My Life
48. BUBBLE YUM Bubble Gum, Cotton Candy, 5 Pieces (Pack of 36)
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Perfect for bubble blowing funLong lasting, cotton candy flavored gumAlso available in original and sugar free varietiesIndividually wrapped for maximum freshnessIncludes 36 packs of 5 piece of BUBBLE YUM Bubble Gum (Cotton Candy)
49. Logitech G13 Programmable Gameboard with LCD Display
Sentiment score: 2
Number of reviews: 1
Naturally contoured design follows the natural shape of your hand and fingers for increased comfort during long sessionsOnboard memory lets you program up to 5 ready-to-play profiles, so you can take your personal preferences with youCustomizable backlighting lets you choose your colors and easily l...
50. Orion 5756 DualBeam LED Astronomy Flashlight
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Two flashlights for the price of one! Multipurpose astronomy flashlight lets you choose red light or white light with the flip of a switchRed light preserves dark-adapted night vision while providing helpful illumination; white light aids while packing up your equipment when brighter light is needed...
51. Mueller Green Fitted Wrist Brace, Black, Right Hand, Small/Medium
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
black colorSmall/Medium sizeSold in each
52. Tyke Supply Dual LCD Monitor Stand Desk clamp Holds up to 24" LCD Monitors
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Tyke Supply is the only seller of Tyke Supply ProductsFully adjustableEasy to install Desk clampVesa compatibleHolds up to 24 inch lcd wide screen monitors
53. Rocketfish DVI-to-HDMI Adapter - Silver/Gold
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
Fully enclosed metal shell: Resists interference for a clear signal.24K gold-plated contacts: Delivers maximum signal transfer.Compatible with single-link DVI signals: For a great connection.Adapts a DVI output to an HDMI input: For cutting-edge performance.
54. PhotoSEL 1.5mx2m Reversible Collapsible Background Screen - Green/Blue Chroma Key
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
Tab along the top edge for hanging | Can easily be placed against a wallCollapses to 1/3 of its open sizeSpot washableUse horizontally or verticallySnaps open and folds down with minimal effort
56. Can't Hurt Me: Master Your Mind and Defy the Odds
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
57. Razer Naga Epic Rechargable Wireless MMO PC Gaming Mouse
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
17 MMO-optimized Buttons - Access more abilities and macros with 17 mouse buttons including the Razer Naga thumb gridFully remap and assign macros to all 17 buttons. In-game addons or integrated in-game support for the most popular MMO gamesTrue gaming-grade wireless connectivity allows greater vari...
58. Sigg Primeval Glow Water Bottle (Black, 0.4-Litre)
Sentiment score: 1
Number of reviews: 1
0.4L Water BottleKids CollectionBPA & Phthalate Free Ingredients
59. FUTURO Deluxe Wrist Stabilizer, Helps Support Symptoms of Carpel Tunnel Syndrome, Weak or Injured Wrists, Small/Medium
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Provides firm support to injured wristsHelps provide relief from symptoms associated with Carpel Tunnel Syndrome and other wrist injuriesDorsal stabilizers enhance supportAdjustable straps for custom comfortAllows your fingers to move freelyFoam pad in palm for comfortBreathable materials for all-da...
Sounds like you have this well planned out. Your best route to success is definitely the support of your parents and their support and understanding. Having a firm commitment to return to school should this not be viable after one year is smart and a good compromise for their support of you vs you getting a chance to chase a dream. It's easy to just say 'go for it' but of course there are many factors that will have a huge influence on whether you reach you goal (e.g, your location will greatly affect your chances; it will be much harder in some regions (e.g., South America or Australia) than in others (e.g, NA, Korea, EU)).
A simple google search (especially in the 'news' section) will yield you a lot of articles that will be helpful for your parents understanding the viability of this career choice. Keywords such as Overwatch league, Overwatch league salaries, Esports growth, etc. will yield you many options to show your parents. Choose articles from reputable sources they would recognize such as Wall Street Journal https://www.wsj.com/articles/professional-videogamers-get-their-own-stadiums-1529512135 or ESPN http://www.espn.com/esports/story/_/id/20163254/overwatch-league-owl-announces-details-player-contracts-team-buy-in.
As well, there is a reference book series aimed at middle grade students who want a career in esports that presents the information in a very easy-to-digest manner for parents:
https://www.amazon.com/Gaming-Professional-Sports-Teams-sports/dp/1599539659/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1549235737&sr=8-1&keywords=Gaming+and+Professional+Sports+Teams+Douglas+Hustad
https://www.amazon.com/Inside-Sports-Industry-Game/dp/1599538911/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1549235806&sr=8-1&keywords=Inside+the+E-Sports+Industry+by+Carla+Mooney
Most important, however, is understanding the commitmentrequired in the next year. For Tier 3, where you will start, expect to scrim 4 hours a night (which includes some nights doing vod reviews instead of playing), with two days off. This is combined with also playing extra hours of ranked games several days of the week, ideally while streaming to build an audience who will root for you/give you exposure. These are time commitments which will preclude girlfriends, nights out with your friends, birthday parties, even holidays etc since scrim times for Tier 3 tend to be from 18-24 (6:00 to midnight) and break rarely.. For Tier 2, expect to scrim four hours a day, six days a week. Above those hours, you will also have to spend time streaming/playing ranked and reviewing vods of your performance and analyzing your mistakes. In all, it is a full time 'job' for which it is unlikely you will receive any compensation. T2 hours are harsher: usually 16:00 to 24:00 (between 4:00 pm to midnight), six days a week. WIth only one day off, it can be daunting.
For your parents, you need them to understand you are becoming an entrepreneur - a business owner. And like most business owners, you build up a reputation and create a service/product for free, with the goal of eventually someone paying you for it. This is the same as training to become an architect, being a software designer, starting a photography business or even a vocation such as electrician or plumber. The plus side is you don't have to rack up a lot of student loans for a school - you're learning for free but have to be motivated enough to do it on your own. The down side is that you have to have discipline and work hard - you're on your own. This is the price that most entrepreneurs pay. Along the way, your personality and playstyle will turn into a brand - how well you create and market that brand may be the difference between a career and failure. Unless you are a prodigy, there is much more to a professional career than just clicking heads.
Finally, appreciate that you will need social skills - the greatest opportunities happen to those who are well connected or network. It's come to the point now that there is big money involved with Overwatch due to OWL - and few teams are willing to pay big money on someone with a bad reputation unless they are a complete prodigy. And players are starting to not want to recommend other players who are difficult, unreliable, or toxic - because it makes them look bad when someone doesn't live up to the 'favor' of the recommendation. You can have friends in Overwatch but you have to remember that this is a business - and you can't let friends destroy your busines through their own faults or shortcomings.
So factor in a complete plan with goals and objectives - how to gain a fan following through .e.g, streaming, gaining expertise and networking in ranked games, being reliable and putting yourself out there and being bold (it's difficult to ever get 'discovered' if you are shy), being ready to spend long hours reviewing metas in other regions and your own games to fix issues, and remembering that coaches and fellow players are your best avenues to improvement. Work with them and listen to them since being a pro often comes down to much more than just clicking heads.
For breaking into T3, you can check series of articles: https://www.reddit.com/r/Competitiveoverwatch/comments/90aw1l/the_path_to_pro_beginnings_breaking_into_tier_3/
More specific advice would likely have to come from knowing your world location (which Overwatch region you reside in), your hero pool, and your personal circumstances. Just remember that there are thousands of top 500s around the world - but only a few ever become pros in OWL. There is a LOT more to being a pro then being good at the game.
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Oh, sure. First reddit comment of the day just after waking up. I knew I shoulda had a bit of caffeine first.
Scott Adams' is the guy who wrote Dilbert, a near-genius, and a serial entrepreneur. He's a self described 1%er and likes talking a lot about the psychology of winning. His latest book (How to fail at almost everything and still win big) talks a lot about his story of success. Early on, he references a lot of 'winners'. Invariably, most winners attribute their success to luck, circumstances, or some other uncontrollable variable. Why? Because the people asking them are almost universally less successful then they are.
Unfortunately, the secret to losing weight is eating less. Going out on more dates happens when you ask more people. Successful business owners keep going in debt for a new idea and convincing other people to finance it. Obama got his job because he's incredibly charismatic, he made a ton of friends in the Democrat Party, and he was at the perfect nexus of Progress & Diversity that often propels people in that party forward. He worked his ass off to get that nomination and eventually the presidency.
Success is based on working hard in the right way, not in getting lucky. At least according to Scott Adams.
Quick edit: And don't take this as an endorsement of Obama, his policies, or anything of the sort. I detest the man and everything he stands for. But I don't think he made it because he was lucky.
So this is a good question. For my movement and abilities, I use this:
Logitech G13
My mouse is a Razer Naga Epic.
Both were basically intended to play WoW.
I'm left handed. I used to use my left hand for mouse and right hand for movement (using the numpad). I've been a console guy for the last 10 years or so, but when my son started playing PC games, I switched to right hand so we didn't have to mess with the bindings as often. It was WoW, so it wasn't a big deal. It's been a little more tricky in OW, but not so much that I've considered switching back to lefty.
Anyway, you are correct that I'm using a stick for my movement, but I'm using a mouse for aiming. It's set at 1600 dpi and 3.1 in-game sensitivity. There's no acceleration enabled and the windows setting is at 6. It gets me a 360 in about 25.5 cm which is about the width of my mousepad. I actually lowered the sensitivity in the last week to try and increase my overall accuracy. I think you are probably correct that I don't have much "snap" but part of that is that I have been consciously trying to avoid the sporadic, jerky movements I was getting at higher sensitivities.
My intent was to work on accuracy with the lower sensitivity and then increase it as time passed to allow more rapid target acquisition. Think I should try something else?
Memes aside that's a pretty good foundation to believe in philosophically.
A once heard some advice that I'll share with you: to truly succeed at something you need two things, obsession and work ethic.
I highly recommend this book. I wish I could have read it at your age.
Agreed. First time seeing you cast, Bren, but it was a nice smooth job and if this is your first time, well done. One thing I will ask: this is fairly cheap and can be bought from amazon uk: https://www.amazon.co.uk/PhotoGeeks-Black-White-Reversible-Backdrop/dp/B00GUGROLG/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1492962433&sr=8-9&keywords=collapsible+backdrop or https://www.amazon.co.uk/PhotoSEL-1-5mx2m-Reversible-Collapsible-Background/dp/B002VT1CQE/ref=sr_1_15?ie=UTF8&qid=1492962433&sr=8-15&keywords=collapsible+backdrop And it folds up into a flat disk. :) We don't need to see all that clutter in the background.
Using what is a probably decade old Microsoft Sidewinder. Still the best mouse I have ever played with. I bought a couple additional when I learned it was going to be discontinued. It's this model https://www.amazon.com/Microsoft-HKA-00001-SideWinder-Gaming-Mouse/dp/B000TTQFIS.
You can still find it new on eBay for like $60 I bet.
my sister got me a dinosaur flask for christmas and it was a case of the ol' "look around the room for channel name inspiration". that very same flask has sat unwashed by my sink for well over 6 months now, i should probably clean it...
it's this one, if anyone is that interested:
https://uedata.amazon.com/Sigg-Primeval-Water-Bottle-0-4-Litre/dp/B004LQA3S8
something like this: https://www.amazon.com/Mueller-Fitted-Wrist-Brace-Number/dp/B002NLGNW8/ref=sr_1_3_a_it?ie=UTF8&qid=1493940468&sr=8-3&keywords=wrist%2Bsupport%2Bbrace&th=1
where it wraps around the thumb and uses velco to make sure your wrist is straight
For anyone interested in more detail I recommend this book
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1455509124/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1472747141&sr=8-1&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&keywords=so+good+they+cant+ignore+you
I'm using a DVI-D cable, my monitor only had VGA and HDMI options so I bought a converter. It might just be the website isn't very accurate, the program I listed flashes your screen repetedly and it gave me a value of 75hz. I tried OW and CS and it seems to be a lot smoother, just hoping it isn't placebo, lol.
Bro you don't even need a gaming chair. Just ikea office chair + back support cushion + and a memory butt cushion for back alignment = voila, gaming chair for a 100$
here's the solution: https://www.amazon.com/Zalman-Zm-Mic1-Sensitivity-Headphone-Microphone/dp/B00029MTMQ
This is the exact one I use: (https://www.amazon.com/Futuro-Deluxe-Wrist-Stabilizer-Medium/dp/B0057D7YWM/ref=sr_1_5_a_it?ie=UTF8&qid=1494018518&sr=8-5&keywords=futuro%2Bwrist%2Bbrace&th=1)
https://www.amazon.com/Bubble-Yum-Cotton-Candy-Pieces/dp/B001IZJVJM
Left monitor: Dell P2416D (1440p IPS panel)
Right monitor: Dell S2417DG (1440p 144hz Gsync TN panel)
Stand: Tyke Supply B002R9HQLI Dual LCD Monitor Stand desk clamp holds up to 24-Inch lcd monitors
https://www.amazon.com/Idiot-Fyodor-Dostoyevsky/dp/1549868950/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=#customerReviews
I disagree. You need to relearn how you aim with a mouse. Get a larger mousepad (https://www.amazon.com/SteelSeries-Mini-Gaming-Mouse-Black/dp/B000UEZ37G/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1467126573&sr=8- costs literally $7 and is great), set your sensitivity to something reasonable, and just fucking play. You will be forced to aim with your arm, not your wrist, and you will get better.
That's not correct, I'm afraid. I'll leave the value of google searches up to your interperetation, but the consensus on visibility I saw was in the green-yellow spectrum, due to being the inverse colours to that of human corneas.
As to eye strain - higher wavelength colours put more strain (not damage, pedantically speaking) on your eyes, which is why people wishing to preserve their night vision use red lights