# Pinball Tips - How to Aim

**Source:** Tim Sexton  
**Type:** video  
**Published:** 2017-09-17  
**Duration:** 4m 48s  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bCxgUPfVsjc

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## Analysis

Tim Sexton provides a comprehensive aiming tutorial for pinball, emphasizing keeping eyes on the flipper rather than the target until after the ball is flipped. He explains the mental mechanics of lining up shots, describes common aiming mistakes, and demonstrates a two-stage aiming process for situations requiring target lock-in before shooting.

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] Keeping your eye on the flipper throughout the entire flip allows you to know exactly where you shot the ball and adjust more precisely on subsequent attempts — _Core instructional claim demonstrated with examples; fundamental to the tutorial's methodology_
- [HIGH] Looking at your target before the ball is flipped causes aiming inaccuracy because you take your eye off the flipper at the start or end of the shot — _Identified as incorrect aiming technique with visual demonstration_
- [MEDIUM] The human eye cannot track a moving ball mid-flip and will only hold a picture of the target location — _Physiological explanation for why looking after the flip is effective_
- [HIGH] There are situations (like locking in on drop targets for specific modes) where a two-stage aiming process is necessary: wait for target confirmation, move eyes to ball, then flip when ball is at rest — _Demonstrated with Bloodbath example showing practical application_
- [MEDIUM] Knowing exactly where you flipped is more important than knowing where the ball hit for improving future accuracy — _Instructional principle: 'if you know where the ball hit but you don't know where you flipped you're not gonna be able to fix your flip'_

### Notable Quotes

> "keep your eyes on the flipper this means that through the entire duration of the flip you'll be watching the flipper so that you know exactly where you did shoot the ball"
> — **Tim Sexton**, early in tutorial
> _Core instructional principle of the entire tutorial_

> "if you want to aim precisely you should not look up that your target at any point until after the ball has already left the flipper"
> — **Tim Sexton**, mid-tutorial
> _Primary directive that separates correct from incorrect aiming_

> "your eye cannot track the ball while it's moving it's going to hold a picture while you look at your target"
> — **Tim Sexton**, explanation section
> _Physiological rationale for the methodology_

> "if you know where the ball hit but you don't know where you flipped you're not gonna be able to fix your flip for the next time you flip"
> — **Tim Sexton**, reinforcement section
> _Explains why feedback loop must focus on flipper position, not ball outcome_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Tim Sexton | person | Pinball content creator and tutorial instructor; presents aiming methodology based on flipper focus |
| Bloodbath | game | Referenced as example game requiring drop target lock-in; used to demonstrate two-stage aiming process |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Flipper aiming technique, Eye tracking and visual focus in pinball, Shot accuracy and precision
- **Secondary:** Two-stage aiming for mode setup, Common aiming mistakes

### Sentiment

**Neutral** (0) — Educational and instructional in tone; factual presentation without emotional valence; encouraging toward viewers but not promotional

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## Transcript

hey guys I'm Tim ball so today I'm gonna be doing a comprehensive overview on how to aim correctly in pinball there's a lot of tutorials about how to aim but they pretty much only cover the basics you shoot the ball earlier on the flipper you'll shoot the shot earlier or a backhand to shoot later on the flipper you'll shoot later or a forehand but I'm going to use some key concepts here to help you improve your aim the number one tip I would say to anyone playing pinball if they want to improve their aim is to keep your eye on the ball you've heard this phrase very many times in different sports well what does it mean typically in golf when you're staring at the ball the golf instructor will tell you to keep your eye on the ball what happens is when you move your head early you move your body which means that you don't hit the shot exactly where you want it to go by keeping your eye on the ball you're actually looking through the shot and it becomes part of your follow-through to keep your head down as your arms move past your head until your body naturally turns itself back up in pin ball you can use the exact same concept keep your eyes on the flipper this means that through the entire duration of the flip you'll be watching the flipper so that you know exactly where you did shoot the ball in case it missed then you can adjust more precisely and more correctly to better hit the ball next time this may seem difficult at first but once you get the hang of it you'll be shooting your shots a lot better in pinball and you'll become much more accurate if John Youssi a player aiming like this they're not aiming correctly if John Youssi a player aiming like this they are aiming correctly what's the difference there in the first instance the incorrect aiming the player is trying to line up their shot by looking at where they want the ball to go this means that they're taking their eye off the flipper for the start of the shot and possibly for the end of the shot the other mistake players will make is looking up too early for trying to track the ball before they play if you want to aim precisely you should not look up that your target at any point until after the ball has already left the flipper your stroke should start here you're looking at the ball on the flipper you're lining up mentally where you want to hook the ball on that flipper I've drawn a point in my head where I want to hook the ball to hit the right target I know where the targets are and they won't be moving on this game I'm going to try to shoot them now once I shot the ball I was able to look up and find the ball the reason you don't want to look up until the ball is flipped is because your eye cannot track the ball while it's moving it's going to hold a picture while you look at your target so you will be able to find the ball after it's gonna move slow enough that you'll be able to figure it out before it comes straight down the important thing is knowing exactly where you flipped so you can adjust for next time if you know where the ball hit but you don't know where you flipped you're not gonna be able to fix your flip for the next time you flip if you were off there are some games where it is important to look at your target in this case I want to lock in on the first aid target in order to play bloodbath what I do in this situation is I change my flipper stroke to a two-stage process in the first stage I wait until flood food is flashing after food is flashing I move my eyes to the ball once my eyes are on the ball and I see the ball is at rest I dropped the flip my goal is to shoot it at the point where I know that I will hit the drop targets to lock in the correct one let's do this process who drop eyes look and fire I've walked it on first name not in my next shot it's easier I don't have to look at the targets again because I already have memorized that only the top target remains keeping my eyes down area unless I shoot to track it here I know that the top targets the only one I need so I'm going to shoot where I think I will hit the top target there we go thanks for checking out my tutorial on aiming if you dislike any of these techniques or disagree with any of them please let me know in the comments or on my facebook page hopefully these tips can help you aim better in the future be sure to subscribe to my YouTube and Facebook pages for more pinball content

_(Acquisition: youtube_auto_sub, Enrichment: v1)_

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: 1f783a9b-c20a-4e4b-92bb-b7fbbc25b2a4*
