Logan Sucks at Shooting

450 posts

Logan Sucks at Shooting banner
Logan Sucks at Shooting

Logan Sucks at Shooting

@AtypicalBass

I shoot sometimes, sometimes I do ok Limited Optics GM TY152505

Katılım Şubat 2020
400 Takip Edilen172 Takipçiler
Ben Stoeger
Ben Stoeger@BenStoeger187·
Can anyone explain what the fuck is happening?
English
128
16
811
115K
Logan Sucks at Shooting
Logan Sucks at Shooting@AtypicalBass·
@UnhiddenLamp @BenStoeger187 i never claimed to be cool. vets deserve to be made fun of if they claim to be "instructors" when they themselves actually can't shoot well and don't know what they're doing when shooting a handgun
English
4
0
25
350
Winston Smith
Winston Smith@UnhiddenLamp·
@AtypicalBass @BenStoeger187 Dude the gun community are such fucking homosexuals. It’s insane. Everyone shoots guns man you’re not cool because you do it. And I just didn’t think making fun of vets was part of the new cool thing you guys do over here. Faggots lol
English
2
0
10
885
Logan Sucks at Shooting
Logan Sucks at Shooting@AtypicalBass·
@bmitori i used to think it was pronounced the first way until I came across a video from them about a year ago and found out I was dead wrong
English
0
0
2
27
Logan Sucks at Shooting
Logan Sucks at Shooting@AtypicalBass·
It could have, the left side wall was significantly too far to the left causing a much harder lean than it should have been, but I think it was more so just one of those days. We have 3 GMs, one of them being the LO national champion, and around 14 Ms at our club, so when nobody gets higher than an A something’s off somewhere
English
0
0
1
28
AuxArc
AuxArc@AuxArcStuff·
@AtypicalBass Was the incorrect setup on the classifier a contributing factor to everyone scoring lower? Or just one of those days?
English
1
0
0
22
Logan Sucks at Shooting
Logan Sucks at Shooting@AtypicalBass·
First USPSA match back at Fernan. Bad start for me personally because I was sick the entire week leading up to it and still not feeling super great during the match itself. Because of that I wasn’t able to dry fire pretty much at all during that time. All of that compounded into a less than stellar performance to say the least. The scores are the LO division results. Stage 1. I put a shot in the black on that tux three feet in front of me because I started looking at the next target after the first trigger pull and moved the gun into the black. I did this on a couple stages at this match, just getting ahead of myself and moving too soon lol. I planned on reloading after the seventh paper target, but the trigger freeze threw me off and I engaged the eighth paper then did a standing reload on the poppers. I then did a completely unnecessary make up shot on the ninth paper and turn two alphas into three, then wildly overtransition onto the fourth popper. Stage 2. After engaging the first target stack, I planned on shooting the first popper, going to the next paper, then to the mini popper behind the full size one. I didn’t because brain decided to leave the chat and just went to the next paper target. I should have just put two into the paper and then sent a couple into the full size popper to hammer it down, but brain just reverted to the original plan instead after I fired the first shot. On the second short target with the no shoot underneath it I pushed the gun down into the no shoot like a dummy, hence the numerous make up shots. Nearly forgot the reload before going into the no shoot stack because of that. My movement seems a bit weird, specifically the way I move my legs, I’m going to have to work on that a bit in the future. Stage 3. I should have pushed the port open with my hand instead, pushing it with the gun threw me off on the first target because I smashed my mag in the bottom of the port. On the top target of the stack I focused in on the bottom half of the visible A zone and because of that one shot was in the alpha and the other was just far down enough on to the next to not touch the perf so wound up with alpha mike, I recognized it as I stepped away to the next array, hence my comment in the video. On the next array I just saw red on brown and pulled the trigger and ate two deltas because of it. Also on the last paper of that array I looked away to the popper before I fired the second shot, again just getting ahead of myself and looking away too soon.
Logan Sucks at Shooting tweet media
English
2
0
19
552
Logan Sucks at Shooting
Logan Sucks at Shooting@AtypicalBass·
Last stage from the GPS match, little slow off the start, but the big fumble was that reload, just brain empty and forgor how to hold the mag lol.
English
2
1
21
433
AuxArc
AuxArc@AuxArcStuff·
@AtypicalBass @gunguytv Thanks to the 180 rule in USPSA, I have had rounds definitely in my general direction. Do I get credit for that?
English
1
0
19
832
Joel P ✝️ 🇺🇲 💪
A little education for all the keyboard commandos bagging on point shooting: From Grok: The U.S. military still incorporates versions of point shooting (also called instinctive, reflexive, threat-focused, or quick-fire shooting) in close-quarters combat (CQC/CQB) training, though it is typically taught as a complementary skill built on a foundation of sighted marksmanship rather than a primary or standalone method. - Modern U.S. Army Doctrine U.S. Army pistol and rifle marksmanship manuals (such as TC 3-23.35 Pistol from 2017 and TC 3-22.9 Rifle and Carbine) emphasize proper sight alignment and the full shot process for most engagements. However, they recognize that in very close ranges—especially under extreme stress in confined spaces—shooters may not have time to acquire a full sight picture. Older Army manuals (e.g., FM 3-23.35) explicitly described techniques like: - Quick-fire pointing (bringing the weapon up and thrusting it forward while focusing on the target). - Quick-fire sighting for 5–10 yards when time is limited. These concepts align with reflexive fire or modified point shooting, where the shooter points the weapon naturally (often using body alignment or a "combat stance") while keeping eyes on the threat rather than the sights. This remains relevant in CQB room-clearing drills and is practiced in unit-level training. - U.S. Marine Corps and Special Operations Marines and special operations forces have historically integrated point/reflexive shooting into CQB training, with anecdotal reports from combat (e.g., house clearing in Iraq) describing Marines engaging targets at 3–4 feet by pointing rifles over the barrel without using sights. Marine Corps programs, including the Combat Pistol Program and close-quarters tactics courses, include rapid, close-range engagements from the holster or in dynamic movement, often progressing from sighted fundamentals to faster, instinctive techniques under stress. MCMAP (Marine Corps Martial Arts Program) and CQB training also address weapon handling in extreme close quarters, where retention and point-style shooting can apply. Interviews with Marine instructors (from training analyses) have noted that sighted fire builds the muscle memory foundation, after which **point shooting becomes the preferred or natural method for very short distances (contact to ~15–21 feet), where most gunfights occur. This includes using body alignment (e.g., isosceles stance) to "point" the weapon while focusing on the threat. - Current Context and Evolution - Reflexive shooting or similar techniques appear in CQB doctrine (e.g., FM 90-10-1 on close-quarters combat techniques, which discusses reflexive shooting in confined areas). - Modern training stresses stress inoculation and realistic scenarios. Soldiers/Marines learn that under adrenaline, tunnel vision and physiological responses often lead to instinctive pointing rather than deliberate sighting. - Optics (e.g., red dots on rifles) and body armor influence techniques—shooters may use a "modified point" by indexing the threat in the optic window without perfect reticle alignment. - It is not the default for all shooting; doctrine prioritizes accurate, sighted fire when possible. Point shooting is situational, for when speed trumps precision in "bad breath" distances. In practice, elite units (e.g., Rangers, special forces) and advanced CQB courses continue to drill variations of this, often drawing from historical methods like those in Rex Applegate's Kill or Get Killed or WWII-era training, adapted for today's weapons and gear. Anecdotal accounts from veterans confirm its use in real-world CQB. Overall, while not called "classic point shooting" in every manual, some evolved version—emphasizing threat focus, natural pointing, and rapid presentation—is still taught and used for close-quarters scenarios across the U.S. military. Training evolves based on combat lessons from Iraq/Afghanistan and ongoing urban warfare considerations.
English
31
1
28
22.6K
Mischief Machine LLC
Mischief Machine LLC@MischiefMach·
The Ruger RXM Alpha G47 and I have finally made consistent B class uspsa runs this year. Shot my first really High B classifier today. Excited to see the possibility of maybe a A class run this year. Vortex dot is running pretty strong!
Mischief Machine LLC tweet media
English
9
0
57
2.2K
Clay Martin ⚔️
Clay Martin ⚔️@wayofftheres·
@MischiefMach First off all, I showed you this picture in confidence. Second of all, he was probably guilty of something.
English
8
0
105
997
Mischief Machine LLC
Mischief Machine LLC@MischiefMach·
Point shooters at their first uspsa match. “Well this is not realistic, they would have ducked”
Mischief Machine LLC tweet media
English
20
10
201
5.5K
B Mitori
B Mitori@bmitori·
I was looking at the comments for this video Kyle Lamb made critical of point shooting. He was in Delta Force for 15 years & received a Silver Star for his actions in the Battle of Mogadishu (Blackhawk Down). When did point shooting become a religion? youtube.com/watch?v=s3nGbN…
YouTube video
YouTube
B Mitori tweet media
English
12
4
79
17.2K