Best products from r/SiegeAcademy

We found 31 comments on r/SiegeAcademy discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 40 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

Top comments mentioning products on r/SiegeAcademy:

u/AltRightCyberBully · 1 pointr/SiegeAcademy

I have my operator gadgets on my side buttons, I have two mice, but use a Logitech g502 usually which has all sorts of extra buttons and useless lights on it. Obviously, this is a very advanced gaming accessory that's really not necessary but depending on whatever it is you're using you might have side buttons as well.

To explain sensitivity, your sensitivity is really important in how you play. Generally speaking low is good as it makes your aim more consistent. If you accidentally move your hand a half centimetre it's not a big problem on lower sens, where as on higher that will make you miss a headshot. If you have an extremely steady hand and incredible reflexes its fine, but that's extremely few people. I have a friend who plays on 2600 DPI at 25-25 in game and man, watching him try to hit a headshot is... painful sometimes. Even the slighest adjustment can send him flying past their head, trying to keep on target is basically impossible for him. On the other hand if you play really really low you can't move fast enough to react in time and it becomes very painful to try turn around to get someone to the sides of you.

There's a fantastic graph that shows pro CSGO player sensitivities sorted from highest to lowest. It measures in 360 x Xcm, which means how many centimetres you have to move your mouse to do a 360 turn in game. As you can see the average is around 35cm of movement, which is pretty much ideal for most games.

The difference between CSGO and Rainbow is that you can't ADS (aim down sights) in CSGO meaning you need to have a good all round sensitivity. In rainbow your ADS sensitivity is a percentage of your regular, at 83 you will move exactly the same as fast both scoped and unscoped. At default its 40% of your sensitivity. People who play on high sentivity will usually play at low ADS sens to gain back control and percision, whereas those on lower will turn it up to retain speed. I play at 60 ADS since whereas my high sens friends tend to play on 15-20.

Now this 360 x 35cm number isn't perfect or anything, it very much depends on your playstyle and experience what you use. I play very low at 360 x 45cm since I play slowly and position well while fragging. A good friend of mine who plays highly aggressive plays on 360 x 20cm, although I do play lower sens than your average person. Basically what I'm getting at here is a steady and consistent aim beats a fast flicky one pretty much any day.

DPI is also a bit of a pointless meme, it refers to how many dots (arbitary units) per sqaure inch your mouse's otical sensor can pick up. A mouse at 400dpi will sense 400 "movements" if you move 1 inch, where as at 12,000 DPI like mine can go to 12,000 "movements" per inch. Higher DPI makes your aim smoother and able to be more precise, but also faster. At double your current DPI your mouse will pick up twice as much movement in the same space.

You shouldn't just turn your DPI to max either. My mouse can go to 12,000 dpi but I never go above 2400, and even then I usually leave it on 1200. Almost all of those CSGO pros were on 400dpi for example, which is honestly extremely low.

This guide is less telling you WHAT to do but rather giving you an idea of the kind of things that are good.

u/Warskull · 1 pointr/SiegeAcademy

First off, before you even think about investing in a 144Hz monitor, can your GPU give you the framerate you want in this game?

Beyond that, monitor technology is to the point where everything is pretty good. The more expensive ones support things like HDR or are ultrawides.

You have three panel techs, TN, VA, and IPS. TN is the older tech, it is cheaper to make and tends to have better response times. IPS has superior color and viewing angle, but the response times and refresh rates suffer as a result. VA panels are in the middle. You can still get excellent response times on VA and IPS monitors, but they will be a lot more expensive as a result.

Viewsonic and Acer makes some really good 1080p 144Hz monitors. They offer great budget TN panels. You can get 24 inches 1080p for about $200.

Viewsonic is probably the best budget option.

Samsung has some VA panel for a bit more. You'll get a nicer image.

If you have a good graphics card and are ok with spending a bit more Acer has a good 1440p monitor.

If you start going into higher end tech like HDR the prices start to go way up.

u/Chaos_Out · 2 pointsr/SiegeAcademy

Audio-Technica ATH-AD700X... https://www.amazon.com/dp/B009S332TQ?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share

Have had these for about 2-3 weeks now. These are probably the best or one of the best for hearing footsteps (open back headsets) and they're about $100 cheaper than the hd 599 or dt 990.

I pretty much bought the 3 suggested items that Amazon recommends, headphones with modmic 5 and the e10k dac and it's great. Headband is weird but it's been fine for me and very comfortable wearing for multiple hours, no issues of falling/sliding for me, but everyone's head is different.. Mic sounds great, and the dac is good for me since I can really crank up the volume and power headphones to fullest potential (I leave the dac around 5 I think), but, depending on your mobo, you might not need it for these. These do lack in bass some, hence why so good for footsteps, but the dac has a bass boost switch on the front that I use when listening to music and its sounds great.

I was using a logitech 930 and wanted a wired (had a lot of disconnects when gaming) quality headset specifically for r6. Super happy with these. A lot of the reviews specifically mention fps or even r6 as their usage too.

u/akira_ikeda · 4 pointsr/SiegeAcademy

I can't say for sure, but I'd guess it'd have minor conflicts like the HUD switching between control types every time you do anything. It'd be clunky, that's for certain.

I was actually in the same boat as you when I switched from console 3 years ago. Played console my whole life, then I built a PC about a week before Siege came out. Never followed the game before but got it free with my graphics card at the time. Ended up buying a Razer Orbweaver keypad because I just really dislike WASD movement. I've been using it every day since then, have put tons of time in the game and honestly it's so good that I've convinced my friend to also switch to it.

The Razer Orbweaver doesn't have an analogue stick so I can't vouch for the support, but I can tell you that the ease-of-setup with a 4-way stick like the Orbweaver is convenient and it still gives that "controller"-y feeling. What helps is that there's a hold-to-walk keybind for Siege, so analogue isn't necessary.

The main benefit for using a keypad in Siege is that you can free up your pointer and ring fingers to use for leaning, so you can lean and move in different directions freely.

It takes about a week or two to get fully used to the keypad but once you get it, there's no going back. I 100% recommend it, and if you do get it, you should let me know so I can recommend my keybinds as a starting point. I'm so used to it that I even use it for most other games, except any MMO or any game where full keyboard is more convenient.

A word of warning though: Razer quality control sucks garbage doodoo, I've burned through at least 3 Orbweavers and like 5 of a different Razer keypad model (but I stopped using those after I realized how badly made they were).

If you want to see some of my gameplay using it, I can link my YouTube, but I won't unless you ask because I'm not a self-promoting dweeb, I just upload for funsies.

Anyway, sorry I couldn't answer your original question but I hope I helped a bit because I had spent a good month or so deciding between the Logitech and the Razer keypad.

u/Hybrid-PC · 2 pointsr/SiegeAcademy

Don't buy any gaming headset, buy the philips shp9500 and a mod mic for the same exact price, and get something that isn't trash. Not to discount any gaming headset, but they are very gimmicky for what they are. A good set of real headphones starts around ~60-70 and the shp9500 is a great option within that range, then you simply pic up some sort of mod mic off of amazon and you got yourself a really solid experience for the same price, that won't fall apart within a year, and don't have gimmicky features like "7.1" when in reality they are more likely to give you false information in the first place. I have used many gaming headsets over the years, the kraken, which is not comfortable, has very poor audio for the price, and has frankly, pretty shitty build quality for the price is not one I'd recommend. The cloud II's are OK, fairly comfortable, pretty ok sound, but you can do better for ~$100. I got my brother what I'm recommending you, and it is by far one of the best options for the money as long as you can deal with open back headphones (which are better for music too!). Here is an example/review

u/thisdckaintFREEEE · 1 pointr/SiegeAcademy

Sure here you go. That's including the CPU and HDD if you decide to go the "everything from Scorptec" route, I'd probably get this and this from Amazon instead unless shipping the HDD on Amazon makes that come out to be more than just including the HDD from Scorptec. I'd do whatever's cheaper on the HDD, the CPU I'd probably go with the 2700X which Scorptec doesn't have, but your call. If you decide you want to bring the price down a little that CPU wouldn't be a bad way to do so.

Another thing you could do to bring the price down if you'd like is go with a non-modular power supply but that makes building and cable management a lot more of a pain, plus generally isn't great for airflow since you'll have a bunch of unused cables jammed in your case. Semi-modular wouldn't be bad either, but at that point it probably is going to be very little price difference from fully modular.

And again I just picked a cheap case with good reviews so if you'd like a different case I'd just look for any ATX(not mini-ATX or micro-ATX) that you like that has good reviews and make sure it's one that you can put two case fans on the front and one in the rear.

Edit: By the way I just googled and put in a random Sydney, Australia postal code to see if it would offer free shipping or anything, the cheapest shipping it offered was $35. So if your actual shipping isn't far off from that then that's not too bad.

u/TheDrGoo · 21 pointsr/SiegeAcademy
  • ARX w/ Acog & Muzzle. K1A w/ Holo Muzzle & Angled.

    I mean, 4 seasons is a lot, perhaps you've reached your MMR heaven; if you're enjoying yourself and your matches are for the most part not a shitshow then you're good to go already in my opinion. What's happening to you is literally what the ranked system was designed for.

    I never set myself off to try and break my last season's record or anything; I just play the game.

    NOW WITH THAT SAID; the game is incredibly complex and there's only one true way to get instantly better and that is to improve your raw aim. This video here will help you HEAPS, just watch it, trust me. And finally, completely shameful plug, I've wrote about this stuff in a book if you're REALLY interested in this sorta thing.
u/DankZXRwoolies · 2 pointsr/SiegeAcademy

Sure!
Amp

The amp is fantastic for gaming but it really shines listening to music with the DT770s. For Siege I rarely put the volume over 36/100 and that's with the gain on low. Basically that means those headphones and amp will blow out your ear drums if you crank it haha. I use the optical link connection on the amp for the most clarity as sometimes transmitting sound through USB can cause interference.


And mic

It's very cheap but don't let that fool you on quality. I was speculative at first but that mic has been traveling around with me for 6 years now and still sounds great. You can clip it to your shirt or do what I did and wrap it around the headphone cord, then clip it on the headphone cord at mouth height to make your own headset.

u/bobel33 · 1 pointr/SiegeAcademy

I personally use a razer deathadder chroma but IMO its personal preference (razer fanboy). My good friend uses this mouse and thinks its really good. this is one of the best and lightest mouse on the market. Sadly its almost always sold out so going for that mouse could take a few months. Hope this helped.

u/Big-Angry-Duck · 2 pointsr/SiegeAcademy

I have heard about the 681, but I know nothing about them really. Do you find sounds are quiet, or just indistinguishable? It seems to be the 681's are reference cans, so perhaps the treble isn't as elevated as it could be?

​

Potentially a DAC / AMP combo could solve that by increasing the sound dramatically? I'm using the SMSL M3 and loving it so far https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B06VSVSCF9/ref=sspa_dk_detail_8?psc=1&pd_rd_i=B06VSVSCF9 . Might be worth reading up on how DAC / AMP combos can help improve your sound!

u/redautumnleaves · 2 pointsr/SiegeAcademy

I recommend giving low-end audiophile-quality headphones a try, with a low-cost separate mic.

Madlustenvy's guide (https://www.head-fi.org/threads/mad-lust-envys-headphone-gaming-guide-5-6-2019-hifiman-ananda-added.534479/) is a great resource for folks getting more interested in gaining a competitive edge in gaming via sound.

u/BlueGalaxy1 · 1 pointr/SiegeAcademy

If you're still looking for a monitor I've been using this monitor for 2+ years and it's good. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B06ZYHZ6R6/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/wewladendmylife · 3 pointsr/SiegeAcademy

I use a pair of DT990 pro headphones and attached one of these magnetic microphones.

I'd pick up a pair of over-ear headphones if you see one in your price range. If you need a mic you can pick up a lapel microphone for pretty cheap. I just find that most gaming headsets are overpriced for the sound quality.