![]() Mental toughness is the most important aspect of “StarCraft II,” said Kang Dong-hoon, coach of team Incredible Miracle, home to world champ MVP. Some of the fidgety exercises he practices are “+a1a2a3a4a5a6a7a8a9a0” and “ASDF ASDF.”Ģ. Like a piano player practicing scales, pro “StarCraft II” player MarineKing does keyboard runs when he’s warming up for a big match. ![]() Test them out and let us know what you think in the comments section below.ġ. Here are five such tips, compiled from interviews with three of South Korea’s best “StarCraft II” players, including MVP, MarineKing and SuperNoVa, as well as their coaches. And there are plenty of other tips the pros have to offer in addition to making your fingers move like those of Thing, the hand that runs all over the place in “The Addams Family.” is becoming less important in the competitive “StarCraft” world, particularly as more people jump to the sequel version of the game, from Blizzard Entertainment. “I don’t think there is a particular way to make your hands move faster,” he said.īut don’t fret. The best players tend to average about 200 to 400 actions per minute, said Park Sang-ik, a “StarCraft II” coach in South Korea, which long has been home to the world’s best players, who train professionally and can earn six figures. It stands for Actions Per Minute, and it refers to the number of keyboard and mouse clicks a person can make during 60 seconds of time. If you know much about the real-time strategy game “StarCraft II,” you may have heard a term that will sound completely bizarre to people outside the video game world: A.P.M.
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