There’s plenty of room for gripes from players who are disconsolate over relentless strings of bad pulls.
But I think it is also important to understand the level at which those kinds of gripes arise. Complaints from players who have max rank incredible champs at an early stage ring hollow to me.
I’ve completed over 10K quests with around 80K quest fights won. My PVP fights won is over 90K. My first 5* CG pull was late last year, and I got super lucky with a Warlock 5* out of one featured crystal. Until just recently, both of those champs were in my top 5 (only CG is now). My point is this: I played a lot of MCoC before I ever got to a point where I was lucky enough to own a R5 Corvus or Warlock.
I’m not going to point out anyone else’s game stats, but I see a lot of people lamenting champ pulls and rosters who have only played a fraction of the fights I’ve played—and I’m by no means the most experienced Summoner. At a basic level, this line of argument tends to crowd out the veteran players who have legitimately found themselves walled off from content because of bad pRNG luck.
Dr. Zola
I think that was a jab at me But I usually don't go into the trouble of looking into the stats. But, I dont even have the first 2 champs that this guy has and I have 100 5 stars.So, it was a little jarring to see the post. When you get a good 6 star every 3rd pull, I would be happy. I know people who have about 20 6 stars that are unusable in act 6
There’s plenty of room for gripes from players who are disconsolate over relentless strings of bad pulls.
But I think it is also important to understand the level at which those kinds of gripes arise. Complaints from players who have max rank incredible champs at an early stage ring hollow to me.
I’ve completed over 10K quests with around 80K quest fights won. My PVP fights won is over 90K. My first 5* CG pull was late last year, and I got super lucky with a Warlock 5* out of one featured crystal. Until just recently, both of those champs were in my top 5 (only CG is now). My point is this: I played a lot of MCoC before I ever got to a point where I was lucky enough to own a R5 Corvus or Warlock.
I’m not going to point out anyone else’s game stats, but I see a lot of people lamenting champ pulls and rosters who have only played a fraction of the fights I’ve played—and I’m by no means the most experienced Summoner. At a basic level, this line of argument tends to crowd out the veteran players who have legitimately found themselves walled off from content because of bad pRNG luck.
There’s plenty of room for gripes from players who are disconsolate over relentless strings of bad pulls.
But I think it is also important to understand the level at which those kinds of gripes arise. Complaints from players who have max rank incredible champs at an early stage ring hollow to me.
I’ve completed over 10K quests with around 80K quest fights won. My PVP fights won is over 90K. My first 5* CG pull was late last year, and I got super lucky with a Warlock 5* out of one featured crystal. Until just recently, both of those champs were in my top 5 (only CG is now). My point is this: I played a lot of MCoC before I ever got to a point where I was lucky enough to own a R5 Corvus or Warlock.
I’m not going to point out anyone else’s game stats, but I see a lot of people lamenting champ pulls and rosters who have only played a fraction of the fights I’ve played—and I’m by no means the most experienced Summoner. At a basic level, this line of argument tends to crowd out the veteran players who have legitimately found themselves walled off from content because of bad pRNG luck.
Dr. Zola
I think that was a jab at me But I usually don't go into the trouble of looking into the stats. But, I dont even have the first 2 champs that this guy has and I have 100 5 stars.So, it was a little jarring to see the post. When you get a good 6 star every 3rd pull, I would be happy. I know people who have about 20 6 stars that are unusable in act 6
Haha...no, not a jab at you. I was referring to the OP at the top who posted this. At his stage, I think I was rocking a 4/40 YJ, unduped Doc and SW and some other random assortment of 4*’s. I may have had a 5* SL, who I wouldn’t dupe until 3 years later.
That slashed tires, poison and whatever else Juggs in 5.3 would have been easier with a pair of 6*’s.
Your account is not ready to complete act 6 and that’s normal it takes time to build an account for certain content. But you have lots of content you haven’t done that your roster can do that can help build your account for the harder stuff.
There’s plenty of room for gripes from players who are disconsolate over relentless strings of bad pulls.
But I think it is also important to understand the level at which those kinds of gripes arise. Complaints from players who have max rank incredible champs at an early stage ring hollow to me.
I’ve completed over 10K quests with around 80K quest fights won. My PVP fights won is over 90K. My first 5* CG pull was late last year, and I got super lucky with a Warlock 5* out of one featured crystal. Until just recently, both of those champs were in my top 5 (only CG is now). My point is this: I played a lot of MCoC before I ever got to a point where I was lucky enough to own a R5 Corvus or Warlock.
I’m not going to point out anyone else’s game stats, but I see a lot of people lamenting champ pulls and rosters who have only played a fraction of the fights I’ve played—and I’m by no means the most experienced Summoner. At a basic level, this line of argument tends to crowd out the veteran players who have legitimately found themselves walled off from content because of bad pRNG luck.
Another "I'm not getting the one champ I want so I'll complain about the game and blame it on something I shouldn't even be doing yet" thread. Can we get all these merged?
Another "I'm not getting the one champ I want so I'll complain about the game and blame it on something I shouldn't even be doing yet" thread. Can we get all these merged?
it’s be double the size of the general feedback thread
Act 6 is big. You can't be stuck in Act 6. You have to be stuck somewhere.
Or maybe you aren't stuck anywhere. Maybe you just *think* you can't do 6.2.whatever because you were told it is hard, you tried twice and gave up. If you were putting in the effort the game requires at higher end content, you'd be asking for help with a particular fight, or a particular path, because you would have a clear idea of what specific thing you have tried over and over again, with various roster combinations, and been unable to make progress at.
If so, the problem isn't that you don't have the right answers. It is that you don't know what the questions are yet. You have to play the game to know what the right questions are, to find out what the right answers are.
Every path on every map in Act 6 presents completely different challenges. If all you know is your friend Bob who blasts through everything with Ghost, or all your alliance mates who lie about how great they are with Quake, you're being ill-served by them. Real MCOC gameplay involves looking at the map, seeing all the paths, checking the nodes on each fight, deciding which fights you have the best counters for, picking a path you think you can do, and practicing the skill necessary to run that path with your roster. If you aren't doing that, whatever you are doing won't work in Act 6, and likely beyond, and no one can help you.
There’s plenty of room for gripes from players who are disconsolate over relentless strings of bad pulls.
But I think it is also important to understand the level at which those kinds of gripes arise. Complaints from players who have max rank incredible champs at an early stage ring hollow to me.
I’ve completed over 10K quests with around 80K quest fights won. My PVP fights won is over 90K. My first 5* CG pull was late last year, and I got super lucky with a Warlock 5* out of one featured crystal. Until just recently, both of those champs were in my top 5 (only CG is now). My point is this: I played a lot of MCoC before I ever got to a point where I was lucky enough to own a R5 Corvus or Warlock.
I’m not going to point out anyone else’s game stats, but I see a lot of people lamenting champ pulls and rosters who have only played a fraction of the fights I’ve played—and I’m by no means the most experienced Summoner. At a basic level, this line of argument tends to crowd out the veteran players who have legitimately found themselves walled off from content because of bad pRNG luck.
Dr. Zola
you should be a guardian
Of the galaxy?
Dr. Zola
of the forum
Appreciate the compliment (is it really a compliment?). I’m holding out for the galaxy though. A guy’s got to have some standards.
Comments
Dr. Zola
That slashed tires, poison and whatever else Juggs in 5.3 would have been easier with a pair of 6*’s.
Dr. Zola
Or maybe you aren't stuck anywhere. Maybe you just *think* you can't do 6.2.whatever because you were told it is hard, you tried twice and gave up. If you were putting in the effort the game requires at higher end content, you'd be asking for help with a particular fight, or a particular path, because you would have a clear idea of what specific thing you have tried over and over again, with various roster combinations, and been unable to make progress at.
If so, the problem isn't that you don't have the right answers. It is that you don't know what the questions are yet. You have to play the game to know what the right questions are, to find out what the right answers are.
Every path on every map in Act 6 presents completely different challenges. If all you know is your friend Bob who blasts through everything with Ghost, or all your alliance mates who lie about how great they are with Quake, you're being ill-served by them. Real MCOC gameplay involves looking at the map, seeing all the paths, checking the nodes on each fight, deciding which fights you have the best counters for, picking a path you think you can do, and practicing the skill necessary to run that path with your roster. If you aren't doing that, whatever you are doing won't work in Act 6, and likely beyond, and no one can help you.
Dr. Zola