Another tip for becoming a good player is to acknowledge when you mess up. Sometimes you need to read outside of your emotions to hammer correctly, and if you hammer wrong, realize that in the end it is on you and not the person you hammered on.
but I never acknowledge that I mess up and I'm the best player ever to grace this site?
is that devante?
deletedalmost 10 years
Abc. Just wondering. What would happen if you were banned again? Back to your old ways?
Another tip for becoming a good player is to acknowledge when you mess up. Sometimes you need to read outside of your emotions to hammer correctly, and if you hammer wrong, realize that in the end it is on you and not the person you hammered on.
but I never acknowledge that I mess up and I'm the best player ever to grace this site?
deletedalmost 10 years
Your trolling is getting weak ^
@abc
Implying I was ever trolling after becoming reformed
deletedalmost 10 years
Except it wasn't because of my emotions. If you check the last game on my profile you'd see how lazy she was throughout the whole game. I had nothing to work with. The one time I wanted her to actually be useful, she was worse.
You townread her. You changed your read on her. You were wrong - you F'd up.
deletedalmost 10 years
Good freaking game, boys.
deletedalmost 10 years
I hate this sense of entitlement that comp players have right now with no real reason for having it.
Except it wasn't because of my emotions. If you check the last game on my profile you'd see how lazy she was throughout the whole game. I had nothing to work with. The one time I wanted her to actually be useful, she was worse.
deletedalmost 10 years
Another tip for becoming a good player is to acknowledge when you mess up. Sometimes you need to read outside of your emotions to hammer correctly, and if you hammer wrong, realize that in the end it is on you and not the person you hammered on.
but I never acknowledge that I mess up and I'm the best player ever to grace this site?
Another tip for becoming a good player is to acknowledge when you mess up. Sometimes you need to read outside of your emotions to hammer correctly, and if you hammer wrong, realize that in the end it is on you and not the person you hammered on.
edit: blaming the person you hammer is an incredibly shìtty trait that doesn't make much sense in any reality.
I stated about 100 reasons why keke was mafia. Yes I agree it is a bad excuse but in this case, no. The day got to kicks and Megami was towntelling throughout except towards the end when she started using stupid excuses as to why i shouldn't lynch her. One of them being that she wouldn't self vote as hooker d1 which was my initial reason as to why i townread her, but she never used that excuse once except when kicks were on, which made me think she just wanted to rush this knowing i would "mishammer". I wont blame myself. She was lazy and incompetent.
Or, you know, we could actually let new players merge into comp and decide on their own if they are ready to deal with it or not? I know for a fact that I didn't just magically know how to play comp setups without joining some rounds and messing up.
deletedalmost 10 years
Deal with it Shamzy people need to learn and the competition needs to grow
deletedalmost 10 years
Shutup shamzy ur horrible player everyone knows it
I'll say this once. You scrubs that continuously play FP. Stay there. At least until you play better setups and understand how to actually play, stay in FP. Stop randomly joining comp games. Please, you're not ready for comp. You'll receive less flame if you just stick to your usual games.
Actually this is wrong. You learn from experience. You need to jump into the competition when you can so you can learn. Everyone starts from somewhere, and the change from FP to Comp is huge. There are many different setups and strategies that are outside of FP. They won't be exposed to it anywhere else besides the competition.
That's not true. I see a lot of other red heart games that aren't FP. They could join those games and actually understand how to scumhunt rather than jumping from FP to comp which like you said is a huge step.
I'll say this once. You scrubs that continuously play FP. Stay there. At least until you play better setups and understand how to actually play, stay in FP. Stop randomly joining comp games. Please, you're not ready for comp. You'll receive less flame if you just stick to your usual games.
Actually this is wrong. You learn from experience. You need to jump into the competition when you can so you can learn. Everyone starts from somewhere, and the change from FP to Comp is huge. There are many different setups and strategies that are outside of FP. They won't be exposed to it anywhere else besides the competition.