In Valorant, a well-timed flash can mean the difference between winning a round or getting picked off instantly. Whether it's a generic pop-flash or a curved one from an Initiator, being blinded leaves you helpless.
The average player accepts their fate when flashed. The Elite player dodges it.
To dodge a flash in Valorant, you need to turn your character's view more than 90 degrees away from the flash source before it detonates. This reduces the blind duration significantly, often to a split second, allowing you to flick back and take the fight.
Knowing how is easy. Doing it consistently is the hard part. The window to react is incredibly small—often less than 500ms. In a chaotic match, your brain is processing footsteps, utility usage, and aim simultaneously.
Without specific practice, your muscle memory fails you. You might flinch, but not fast enough. Or you turn, but your crosshair placement is ruined when you turn back.
Do NOT start your competitive games cold.
Just like you warmup your aim in the Range or Deathmatch, you must warmup your reaction time.
Use AntiBlind for just 10 minutes before queuing up.
It isolates the specific mechanic of turning away from flashes, drilling it into your subconscious. When you hop into potential Radiant lobbies, your arm will react before your brain even registers the flash.
Start Training NowBy training with AntiBlind daily, you build the raw speed required. But you also learn to recognize the audio cues and visual windups of flashes faster than your opponents.
Don't let a 200-credit ability ruin your clutch. Train your eyes, train your arm, and dominate the server.
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