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Unshift wrote

SkillAuraOnly wrote...

how did you get that high rated then? Diamond is right next to soup in terms of pure melee

idk
bow combos probably
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Um play pot a lot like I did to get good at melee then play build and sometimes I don't even rod lol and combo them, melee first then learn rod next
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@Hivlik
Ur turn to show them the Universal Skill like you have stated in ur vids. Teach them the aspects of pvp. Link them ur vid plz.
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SkillAuraOnly wrote

DJPano wrote...

honestly I only rod, nothing else, and I've improved from a 1200 when I first started to 2200 now. It's all about aim IMO

bow*
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ty_rex222 wrote

SkillAuraOnly wrote...


bow*

tru
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I guess I'm late to the show, but here are some things I've noticed in trying to improve at Arena as a gamemode:

First of all, you must understand that the best way to develop any playstyle is to invent it from scratch. Don't take anybody else's playstyle, because each player has specific restrictions and priveledges with his own equipment and situation and to ignore that is to put yourself at an immediate disadvantage. Don't take anybody else's hotbar setup, don't take anybody else's playstyle until you've come to fully understand it, and don't be alarmed when a playstyle that is not your own isn't working.

It must also be recognized that the best practice for you or for anybody is in ranked. The obvious reason is that people in ranked are simply better, but besides that, there's a demand by a system of risk and reward to each player that cares about his rank that he must play his best and he must play desperately, at times. You'll learn far more in these situations than in any unranked fight.

And this was mentioned before by Unwise, but I implore you, if you want to improve at anything in Minecraft, push yourself to improve at everything. I mean beyond each ladder on the global board; I mean skills you might think entirely useless for what you plan to get good at. I mean delving into cannons, water mechanics, redstone basics. It might not help you directly, but I'm certain it will help you in other ways - if not by teaching you basic things on how Minecraft works, then by teaching you how to learn these things. How to treat them all as formulaic and to then move on to recreate them. This mindset and mentality will push you much farther than a basic grind of any one specific skill.

At some level, you need a basic skill set that you can't avoid needing to be a good player. Crosshair placement, movement control, depth perception, reaction speed, level-headedness; these are all things that you can't get around being bad at. But you can develop these skills as you move along in a more subconscious grind, and that's the one to fix your mentality. It will help more than you know.
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HIVLIK wrote

I guess I'm late to the show, but here are some things I've noticed in trying to improve at Arena as a gamemode:

First of all, you must understand that the best way to develop any playstyle is to invent it from scratch. Don't take anybody else's playstyle, because each player has specific restrictions and priveledges with his own equipment and situation and to ignore that is to put yourself at an immediate disadvantage. Don't take anybody else's hotbar setup, don't take anybody else's playstyle until you've come to fully understand it, and don't be alarmed when a playstyle that is not your own isn't working.

It must also be recognized that the best practice for you or for anybody is in ranked. The obvious reason is that people in ranked are simply better, but besides that, there's a demand by a system of risk and reward to each player that cares about his rank that he must play his best and he must play desperately, at times. You'll learn far more in these situations than in any unranked fight.

And this was mentioned before by Unwise, but I implore you, if you want to improve at anything in Minecraft, push yourself to improve at everything. I mean beyond each ladder on the global board; I mean skills you might think entirely useless for what you plan to get good at. I mean delving into cannons, water mechanics, redstone basics. It might not help you directly, but I'm certain it will help you in other ways - if not by teaching you basic things on how Minecraft works, then by teaching you how to learn these things. How to treat them all as formulaic and to then move on to recreate them. This mindset and mentality will push you much farther than a basic grind of any one specific skill.

At some level, you need a basic skill set that you can't avoid needing to be a good player. Crosshair placement, movement control, depth perception, reaction speed, level-headedness; these are all things that you can't get around being bad at. But you can develop these skills as you move along in a more subconscious grind, and that's the one to fix your mentality. It will help more than you know.

Well said, sir. I redstoned for a couple years, have done a ton of building, lots of survival, everything. Hardest part is ping rip
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