Contextualizer said:
You don't get it. When these people play with no rules on as they normally do in pubbing (and they say they do so and enjoy doing so), they are the ones who are destroying the other team with grenade launchers from across the map and akimbo shotguns.
It just sounds like you're massively insecure about your own capabilities; not the capabilities of some of the most skilled people in the game.
And why are you calling me a scrub/not pro? What does this have to do with me?
I'm not insecure about anything, I'm just pointing out something... and reading the thread it's attached to... well it gives me an interesting insight into this.
See, from what I gather, Grenade Launchers answer the Riot Shield Problem. Riot Shield answers the Shotgun problem.... seems like the stuff being banned all answer other stuff being banned.
It therefore seems to me that some people have a fundamental misunderstanding of the game, and are butthurt that their leet shooter skillz get defeated by tactics and techniques that have counters the 'leet' are unwilling to use because 'it's noob.'
In other words, arrogance.
Mind you, this is a proffesional gamer, who has made 500 whole dollars playing this game, so I can't really judge.
By the way... if your winning bank roll is 500 dollars, you're not considered a pro in most sports or games.
Just sayin'.
Mind you, I'm keeping an open mind. It could also be a terribly balanced game not intended for any real sport above a casual level, and therefore making it into one is inherently an act of fail.
So, scrub or fail. But I can't really judge.
However, if the game IS balanced around these tactics, then I introduce to you the idea, that a mass banning indicates not that you are skilled, but that you are not playing to win. [http://www.sirlin.net/ptw-book/intermediates-guide.html]
Here's an excerpt that I think applies nicely.
The scrub has still more crutches. He talks a great deal about ?skill? and how he has skill whereas other players?very much including the ones who beat him flat out?do not have skill. The confusion here is what ?skill? actually is. In Street Fighter, scrubs often cling to combos as a measure of skill. A combo is a sequence of moves that is unblockable if the first move hits. Combos can be very elaborate and very difficult to pull off. But single moves can also take ?skill,? according to the scrub. The ?dragon punch? or ?uppercut? in Street Fighter is performed by holding the joystick toward the opponent, then down, then diagonally down and toward as the player presses a punch button. This movement must be completed within a fraction of a second, and though there is leeway, it must be executed fairly accurately. Ask any scrub and they will tell you that a dragon punch is a ?skill move.?
I once played a scrub who was actually quite good. That is, he knew the rules of the game well, he knew the character matchups well, and he knew what to do in most situations. But his web of mental rules kept him from truly playing to win. He cried cheap as I beat him with ?no skill moves? while he performed many difficult dragon punches. He cried cheap when I threw him five times in a row asking, ?Is that all you know how to do? Throw?? I gave him the best advice he could ever hear. I told him, ?Play to win, not to do ?difficult moves.?? This was a big moment in that scrub?s life. He could either ignore his losses and continue living in his mental prison or analyze why he lost, shed his rules, and reach the next level of play.
So... are you 'pros' playing to prove you are good at generic shooter skills, or are you playing to prove you are good at MW2?
If it's the latter, then you should play that game, and get good at it, and learn how to counter the cheap stuff.