Hey folks! If you're aiming to level up in Free Fire and drop opponents with quick one tap headshots, this guide has your back. We'll cover the usual slip-ups beginners make and simple ways to correct them, turning you into a headshot expert. These tricks work on phones with 2GB RAM up to 6GB, helping sharpen your Free Fire aim, smooth out your moves, and make those shots land more often. Let's break it down.

Choose the Right Gun: The Power of Shotguns

The top piece of advice that often gets overlooked is grabbing the best weapon for the job. Sticking with single-bullet options like the Woodpecker, Desert Eagle, or SKS means dealing with heavy recoil and slim odds for nailing headshots.

Even when you drag the White Aim and hold the fire button to lock on, a single shot seldom connects perfectly, leaving the enemy standing. Switch to the M1887 Shotgun (Two-Shotter) instead—its multiple pellets fly out together, making it simpler to lock aim and boost your headshot success rate.

For instance, even if your White Aim isn't spot-on, the shotgun's spread can still clip 1–2 head hits. Wider spread equals better chances of connecting! That's why picking a multi-pellet gun is a smart move for anyone hunting the best shotgun for headshots in Free Fire.

Train the Right Way: Don’t Practice Wrong

A ton of players jump straight into training mode with a shotgun and blast at stationary targets. That's a huge error—it won't build real skills.

Kick off with single-shot guns like the Woodpecker or Desert Eagle. Hitting heads with them forces you to position your crosshair right near the target's noggin, honing your precision. Once you swap to a shotgun, spraying for headshots feels way more natural.

Key point: Stick to moving targets in training. In actual games, foes are always on the go, never frozen in place. Skip those static dummies to truly improve aim in Free Fire.

How to Drag on White Aim

Getting the hang of dragging on White Aim is crucial for consistent shots. Just rest your thumb on the White Aim and slide it gently. If it shifts to red, a headshot could go wide, but shotgun pellets might still tag the target.

Drill this with the Desert Eagle: Stay on White Aim and go for headshots. It'll refine your crosshair control. After sessions with the Woodpecker or Desert Eagle using drags, jumping to a shotgun will have headshots dropping like clockwork.

Sensitivity Settings

The wrong sensitivity will keep you from pulling off those elite headshots in Free Fire. I've got solid recommendations for 2GB, 3GB, and beefier RAM setups—stick near these for best results.

Pro tip: If I suggest 100, tweak it by +5 or -5 and hit training mode. Drag on White Aim until it clicks for you. Chasing those pro-level Free Fire headshot hacks? Drop your phone model and RAM in the comments, and I'll hook you up with a custom setup.

Free Fire Settings

These tweaks seem basic, but they pack a punch for better play:

  • Graphics: Skip Ultra and go Smooth for less strain.
  • FPS: Crank it to High over Normal to cut lag and keep things fluid.
  • Gyroscope Effect: Disable the lobby motion to ease up on your device.
  • Controls: Enable Quick Weapon Switch—it speeds up headshot follow-ups.
  • Left Fire Button: Set away from “Always” to dodge accidental triggers.
  • Glue Wall Smart Throw: Flip it ON for quicker wall drops post-headshot.

Pair these with tuned sensitivity, and watch your game transform. You'll wipe out rivals effortlessly and claim your spot as the headshot boss!