
Aeon Amadi
Maverick Conflict Solutions
1003
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Posted - 2012.08.17 06:23:00 -
[1] - Quote
Rasatsu wrote:Learn to move your mouse slower perhaps?
The speed you move the mouse has nothing to do with it. The issue lies in that the sensitivity for the mouse, even at 100%, is so low that you can only turn about 20 degrees in any direction by the time the mouse is already off the desk.
Sensitivity and turn speed are two very different things and honestly using the mouse as a focal point where the camera has to catch up would probably be the best thing here. Otherwise you'd have to lift the mouse, re-position it, and keep swinging it in the direction you want to go.
However, as it being the focal point, it shouldn't be made so that the camera will continue moving in the direction the mouse moved until it lands at the assumed destination - it should be interrupted so that when the mouse moves right and the camera follows, if the mouse moves left the camera should halt and change direction.
Currently, the KBM setup is bad. I am absolutely ashamed that it's not even being recognized as a legitimate issue, instead being looked at as a "haha, you finally got what you want and it's not good enough for you" sort of thing.
KBM is not an advantage - it's a playstyle. The Move/Sharpshooter can no more be considered an advantage than it is a playstyle either as it's a different format that works well for certain people.
Not everyone is good with a controller because some of us have simply not owned a PS3 for the past five years. We've been playing the same games as you (BF3/CoD) with a Keyboard and Mouse because it's our chosen playstyle. It's arrogant to believe that a player should be FORCED to use a certain control scheme simply because the game is on that platform.
You can disagree as much as you please but I can guarantee that anyone here who has never owned an Xbox 360 would not be happy if the DS3/Six-Axis controller didn't work as intended - let alone expected - on an Xbox 360. Most of you would be complaining, whining, moaning and groaning until you got a workable control mechanic that fit, not only your preference, but what you've used for the past few years. |