

Call it cheating if you want, but it’s useful. This way you always know exactly where you’ll be aiming when you stop sprinting for example. Usually Diagonal one works well since it can fill the gaps of built-in crosshairs and can function as a guideline for example when character in game is sprinting and games usually disable crosshair. Sometimes games just have rubbish in-game crosshairs or you like to complement existing ones with custom one. And can also be useful for single player games because it’s just so simple to enable and will work with any game. Main benefit is that you don’t need to create a rendered overlay or inject anything into games, making it friendly for online games as it’s entirely undetectable to anticheat systems. Some time ago I’ve bought myself Gigabyte G27Q monitor and it has a neat feature to create custom virtual crosshairs that act like an overlay.
