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(00:00 – 00:59) Reactive Shooting Defined Focuses on “see the sight, press the trigger” for each shot. The shooter waits to visually register the sight on the target before pulling the trigger again. Ideal for high-accountability shots (small targets, distant targets). (01:00 – 01:55) True Reactive Method vs. Hesitant Press True reactive shooting means pulling the trigger immediately once the sight is confirmed. Hesitating or pressing slowly is not fully “reactive.” Human reaction time limits how fast each shot can be fired accurately. (01:56 – 02:58) When to Use Reactive Shooting Best used for shots demanding precision and accountability (tight partials, head boxes, longer distances). Ensures the shooter sees and confirms the sight for every single trigger press. (02:59 – 03:27) Transition to Predictive Shooting Predictive shooting involves firing a pair (or more) at a pace faster than you can consciously confirm the sight for each shot. Still relies on maintaining good vision focus and a solid grip. (03:28 – 04:58) Predictive Shooting Explained Shooter “predicts” where the second (and subsequent) shots will go based on training and experience. This technique can be practiced at various speeds and is a key skill for competitive shooting (USPSA, IDPA). (04:59 – 06:22) Practical Application & Awareness In competition, shooters switch between reactive and predictive based on target difficulty and distance. Predictive shooting is not blindly firing—it’s rapid, but the shooter is still aware of sight movement and grip feel. (06:23 – 09:03) Training Value & Continuous Improvement Both methods serve as training tools: shoot at the edge of your ability to build grip discipline and visual awareness. Assess your misses or fliers to diagnose grip tension or sight drift. If results are good, push speed, distance, or difficulty to keep learning and improving.