When your hands are cold, neural signals to your finger muscles slow down measurably. When your forearm muscles are fatigued, the micro-adjustments that separate a clean flick from a whiff become unreliable.
When circulation drops after hours of play, dexterity drops with it. This is not a you problem. This is not a practice problem.
This is a hand performance problem and it has a physical solution.
Research shows wearable EMS can cut reaction times by up to 80 milliseconds.
Red light therapy at the cellular level reduces inflammation and speeds recovery in tendons and joints.
Therapeutic heat restores blood flow and dexterity to cold, stiff hands.
Dynamic compression flushes out the metabolic waste that makes your hand feel heavy in hour four.
Sports medicine has had all of this for years.
What didn't exist was a single device that combined all of it, designed specifically around the muscles that control a mouse, packaged for a 15-minute pre-game protocol.
That device now exists. And the early adopters are already pulling ahead.