an FPS computer club with zero distractions.

A shooter-first
PC gaming club
built for aim

NOSCOPE is a computer club tuned for one thing: putting the crosshair where you mean to. Rows of stations, XL mousepads, high-refresh monitors, and a hall that stays quiet so your ears are free for footsteps.

FOCUS 100 HOURS NOISE 0 LANES 24
01 / STATIONS

The lanes

Three kinds of station, one philosophy: nothing on the desk you did not choose. Pick a lane by how you play, then bring your own mouse or run the house gear at a clean, neutral setup.

Long station desk with XL cloth mousepads and low monitors in a low-sensitivity lane

Low-sens lane

  • Mousepad XL cloth, 900 × 400
  • Chair firm seat, no recline
  • Default 800 DPI · low eDPI

Wide desks so your whole arm has room for a 40 cm/360 swing without hitting the edge.

Free today · 86%
Player at a high-refresh monitor in a dark high-refresh lane at NOSCOPE

High-refresh lane

  • Monitor 360 Hz flat panel
  • Input wired, low-latency
  • Frames capped, no tearing

For players who feel the difference between 240 and 360 — and want it every session, not just on a good day.

Free today · 64%

Duo lane

  • Seats two, side by side
  • Comms shared bench, split headset
  • Booking one slot, two names

Paired stations for a fixed duo: same desk height, mirrored layout, one lane number for both of you.

Free today · 42%
02 / TRAINING

Aim corner

Twenty minutes before a match, not during it. The aim corner is a small block of stations running open trainer scenarios: tracking, flick grids, a target-switch drill, and a reset-your-hand routine for the days your wrist is cold.

Staff can set a card for you and write down three numbers each week — average reaction, tracking hold, and clicks that land. You watch them move over a month. No badges, no ceremony, just the same reps done a little cleaner than last time.

03 / SILENCE POLICY

Why the hall is quiet

A shooter is an audio game. If the room is loud you lose the one edge you came here for — hearing exactly where the other player is.

No speakers in the room

Nothing plays through the hall — no lobby playlist, no highlight reels on a wall screen. The only sound is keys, chairs, and the hum of the rigs.

Voice stays in the headset

Comms run through your headset, not out loud across the desk. Call your rotates to your team, not to the whole room.

The silence ticket

If a neighbour runs hot, you slide them a silence ticket instead of trading words. It is a nudge, not a fine — and it works.

04 / RATES

Rates

Pay by the hour for the lane you sit at. Add a warm-up pass if you want the aim corner tracked. No membership wall between you and a station.

Low-sens hour

6/ hour

  • XL mousepad station
  • Firm chair, wide desk
  • Bring-your-own gear ready
Most booked

High-refresh hour

8/ hour

  • 360 Hz monitor lane
  • Low-latency wired input
  • Frame-capped, tear-free

Warm-up pass

3/ visit

  • +20 min at the aim corner
  • Weekly number logged
  • Printed routine card

Rates are in local currency, per station, taxes included. Duo lanes are billed as one seat plus a second name.

05 / RANGE DIARY

From the range

Three short notes from the club floor — the kind we jot down when something on a station log actually moves.

Started the warm-up pass in March cold and slow. Four weeks of the tracking drill and my average reaction dropped by two tenths of a second — small on paper, huge on the first duel of a round.
guest > low-sens lane > lane 03
The XL pads went in last month and the low-sens row filled up the same week. Turns out plenty of people wanted a 40 cm swing and never had the desk space for it at home.
staff > floor note > row 01
Tuesday night the top score on the flick grid changed hands three times. No prize, no fuss — just a name written on the board and a lot of quiet, focused reps until closing.
guest > aim corner > lane 11
07 / CROSSHAIR FAQ

Before you sit down

Can I bring my own mouse and mousepad?

Yes, and most regulars do. Bring your mouse, mousepad and headset if you play on your own gear. Stations have USB-C and USB-A ports up front, and staff will unplug the house peripherals so nothing fights your settings or your muscle memory.

What sensitivity do the stations run by default?

House mice sit at 800 DPI with a neutral in-app sensitivity, which lands most players in a low eDPI band. Your own config loads from a USB drive or your account, and we never overwrite a profile you bring in.

Is there a coach at the aim corner?

Not a paid coach. The aim corner runs open trainer scenarios and a printed warm-up card. Staff can set up a routine and write down your weekly numbers, but the progress is yours — it comes from the reps, not from someone standing behind you.

Is the hall really quiet, or just quieter?

Genuinely quiet. No speakers play in the room, voice stays in your headset, and there is no lobby music anywhere on the floor. If a neighbour gets loud you hand them a silence ticket, and the room settles itself.

Are you open at night?

Doors open at noon and the hall runs late every day, with the longest sessions on Friday and Saturday. Night lanes cost the same as day lanes, and the room stays just as quiet after midnight as it is at noon.

08 / BOOKING

Lock a lane

Tell us who is coming and which lane you want. We hold it for the hour — crosshair placement is on you.