A Practical Guide to Drawing a Better Perfect Circle
The perfect circle score improves when you stop chasing the number and start controlling speed, size, and finish.
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Precision practice
Draw bigger than feels natural
Tiny circles magnify every wobble. A larger circle gives your hand more room to settle into a rhythm and gives the scoring system more shape to evaluate.
Start with a circle that uses most of the game area, then reduce the size only after your line feels steady.
Keep one continuous motion
Most low scores come from hesitation. The line flattens when you pause, and the join becomes messy when you restart.
- Look at the center of the circle, not the cursor.
- Move at one steady speed.
- Finish by meeting the start point instead of correcting the whole shape.
Use the score as a replay note
The number is most useful after the attempt. If the score drops, ask what changed: speed, size, start angle, or finish. Fix one variable at a time.