White Tiger parried and stunned while using a heavy attack in BGs.
Terminatrix
Member Posts: 2,950 ★★★★★
I was using White Tiger against Serpent.
I threw a heavy attack, he blocked and parried it, stunned WT, then countered with a combo. It wasn't a punishing heavy counter ...he simply somehow blocked/parried her heavy.
Has this happened to anybody else before? I can see if it was a basic hit that was blocked and parried, but a heavy?? That one perplexes me.
I threw a heavy attack, he blocked and parried it, stunned WT, then countered with a combo. It wasn't a punishing heavy counter ...he simply somehow blocked/parried her heavy.
Has this happened to anybody else before? I can see if it was a basic hit that was blocked and parried, but a heavy?? That one perplexes me.
2
Comments
https://forums.playcontestofchampions.com/en/discussion/363301/parried-on-heavy-resist#latest
https://forums.playcontestofchampions.com/en/discussion/229148/question-what-exactly-is-a-basic-attack
Still doesn't explain the well-timed block part
Just as delusional as ever
Also I did half your job for you!
A heavy is a basic attack - this is well known and consistent - any node that interacts with "Basic Attacks" also applies to heavies.
Stand Your Ground allows you to potentially Resist/Block heavy attacks
If you get the block well-timed then you can parry.
It's been this way ever since the mastery has been in play and has been brought up countless times - how any experienced forum-going player doesn't know this is mind-boggling.
I'm not on the forums 24/7 so maybe I have missed something but as far as I'm aware it has never been officially responded to and the answers in this thread are the only ones that I have ever seen have decent explanations.
Even if it is the intended design you can't argue that a slight change to the description of stand your ground like including this mastery can trigger the parry mastery, which is found in so many champions kits, would not be warranted or even reduce the confusion
*Note to self: don't use heavy attack or any other basic attack, just in case the opponent has Stand Your Ground mastery set up.
Great. 😮💨
- if a block input and basic attack input are within a set time frame then the output is a well-timed block
- if the block input is outside of the set time frame being to late it is not a block at all
- and if it is outside on the too early side of that window it is a normal block
It can't be all of the these at the same time, it can't be two of these at the same time it can only be one. In that sense they are completely different.Also I think you would mean that blocks are a subset of well-timed blocks but well-timed blocks aren't a subset of blocks as well-timed blocks have more interactions that blocks don't have... that is if we are being technical to obtuse degree
Whether you want to accept it or not it is continually getting air time on the forums so maybe it isn't as clear as you want to believe it is
“A subset is a set whose elements are contained within another set. In other words, a set A is a subset of another set B if all elements of the set A are elements of the set B. This means that the set A is contained inside the set B.
For example, if we have a set A = {1, 2, 3} and a set B = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}, then A is a subset of B because all elements of A are also elements of B.”
So while block can be a subset of well-timed block because well-timed block contains all the elements of block, well-timed block can’t be a subset of block because well-timed block contains elements that block does not have I.e. parry
Why we are talking about subsets is still beyond me, I highly doubt that the block interactions are programmed in anyway that relates to subsets
Any time I get parried in BG’s - 9 times out of 10 my defender was nuked and I was losing on time anyway. Right or wrong - I feel like it’s the AI just putting me out of my misery sooner.
All non special attacks are basic attacks, even evade counterattacks