LordHypnos wrote:Not to sound too much like OP, but how do you guys possibly find enough time to practice shooting games!? It takes me like a billion tries in any given day of any given part to even stand a chance to beat them in an actual game. If I don't have enough time to practice earlier stages, because I'm too busy practicing later stages, I fuck up on the earlier stages, and vice versa.
You should segment your shmup play into two clear portions:
1) Practice. This is like rehearsing for the big performance. You're not going to do it all in one go because that's inefficient - you're going to try and map out as much of the game as possible, through familiarization, noticing and crafting routes, identifying weaknesses and grinding them to correct them, etc.
2) Attempts. Save these for when you have plenty of time and a portion of the day that lies between 10 am and 5 pm, because this is when you are at your most alert and your reflexes are the most consistent. Practice later stages beforehand - if your practice was efficient then this will be like route retrieval from your memory. Don't practice early stages, your full game attempts will 'practice' them enough as is. Consider doing no reset (credit feed) runs if you are grinding early game too much and it starts to get boring.
In particular, be aware of some things:
1) Sometimes you will play terribly. This doesn't mean your skill is eroding or that you need to do something about it. It probably just means you are tired, out of energy, in a poor mental/physical state or it is simply the wrong time of day/month. Identify when you're playing badly just because your physiology isn't at its peak and use this time valuably to do more mental instead of physically demanding things (like routing instead of throwing yourself at a wall of 'do all these reflex things perfectly because I want to prove I can do them!' when they're going to be better just by waiting until tomorrow ANYWAY regardless of what you do.)
2) If you do controlled practice and feedback loops - that is, whenever you do something wrong, identify what went wrong, say out loud what it was (use a video recording if you need to to analyze) and figure out how to correct it for the next run through - this is how your BRAIN learns the fastest and solidifies new neural paths the best. If you are doing this, you are basically conditioning your mind to know how to do these things right and how to learn when and how you are doing them wrong. If you do this right then sleep on it, your brain actually gets
better at it overnight. This is very cool and doesn't just apply to games! If you have savestates, savestates are AWESOME for this. If you have videos and recordings, use them too.
Full Extent of the Jam:
http://goo.gl/Fi2zE
Circadian Rhythm/Biological Clock:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circadian_ ... _human.svg
Using Neuroscience to Practice Optimally:
https://forum.speeddemosarchive.com/pos ... mally.html