- Joined
- Mar 14, 2011
- Messages
- 5,493
The matchup I play the most as Peach is indeed Falco. I find it slightly more aggravating to deal with his shenanigans when he's slowing the match down, not me.
Welcome to Smashboards, the world's largest Super Smash Brothers community! Over 250,000 Smash Bros. fans from around the world have come to discuss these great games in over 19 million posts!
You are currently viewing our boards as a visitor. Click here to sign up right now and start on your path in the Smash community!
Wow, that's brilliant!Learning to space in Melee is like learning to type. When you first start out, being able to combine all the different options is insane, especially when you are trying to take into consideration the correct spelling and punctuation. Then you move on to grammar, and before you know it you're typing essays where you are more concerned with the subject you are discussing than with your ability to actually perform the typing necessary to create it in the first place. But no matter how adept you get at the writing, you'll always still have that fear of making small typos which can distract you from the bigger picture.
Or maybe I just love making random analogies that are so vague they could apply to anything. I can't quite tell.
Sooooo... Anyone want to hop on this?Stuff from last weeks tourney:
vs Forward:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWl67TXAMBA&feature=feedu
vs Nicknyte:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leGAfo4Tn88&feature=feedu
chokesies vs forward.
You can't outcamp Marth (though you shouldn't feel bad about lasering any more than Marth should feel bad when his grab reaches an entire platform length or he dthrow gimps you at 0). It usually seems like a good idea because they'll get hit by 4-5 lasers in a row, but then once he finally makes his way through them and touches you, you get comboed to no end. You'll actually want to spend the majority of the matchup approaching, or at least close enough that it feels like you are on top of him all game. The less room Marth has to work with, the more he has to commit to individual moves. If you are trying to stay outside his fsmash range, it gives Marth plenty of space to use fairs to keep you out while still leaving opportunities for him to rush in with a fair when he feels it's safe or rush in for a grab if he gets close enough and you shield. If you're constantly inside his tipper range, he can't throw out random fairs because you can shield grab them, or hit him out of lag while he's still in the air.how do u buffer a roll? i keep getting laser -> grabbed and shine grabbed in falco dittos or nair shined by fox
idk how to approach marth. idk if i should? i usually approach just cause i feel bad laserring all day. when i do approach its usually with an early nair or laser -> something. the guy i play against likes to cc my early nair and then grab me. he will also shield it and depending on the on how i time/space my nair either shield grab or wd -> fsmash after i shine. im not sure what i can do about marths wd oos -> fsmash? i tried laserring after i shined a few times and got tipped. also i have a problem with getting hit by marths dash attack. i usually try to laser or out run it. i think i do that cause i dont c it coming. whenever i try to predict it it doesnt go so well . i think my biggest problem in this mu is that early nair and for whatever reason i feel like i have to approach marth!
what should i do when i get a grab on falcon?
also i tried running through my opponent when he had invincibility frames. i worked most to the time =) so thanks again for the advice.
Being mad has its advantages. For example, if you're mad, you're activating your flight or fight CNS responses more than you are if you're just calm, which means our have a heightened adrenaline flow which can be really important.what do you think about getting mad, or salty, when you lose a match/set?
especially vs. someone who you think you could have beat, or when you lose due to something you could have prevented, or picked up on and should have been punishing or something
i know some people get really mad vs. some others who don't get mad, much at all.
but do you think that w/ the proper mindset getting mad is almost a staple to losing a match?
Ya but you also get tunnel vision when you are mad so that's not very good. To me if you stay calm and just do what you need to do, it's a lot better.Being mad has its advantages. For example, if you're mad, you're activating your flight or fight CNS responses more than you are if you're just calm, which means our have a heightened adrenaline flow which can be really important.
like DF said, its not black and white.
It's not secret...trust me.Maybe I'm secretly a woman.
LMFAO yo good stuff LOOOL
I'll do it tonight or tomorrow, sorry!Sooooo... Anyone want to hop on this?
shine grab you usually have to buffer a spotdodge against(c stick down), and c stick left or right gets you a buffered roll.how do u buffer a roll? i keep getting laser -> grabbed and shine grabbed in falco dittos or nair shined by fox
idk how to approach marth. idk if i should? i usually approach just cause i feel bad laserring all day. when i do approach its usually with an early nair or laser -> something. the guy i play against likes to cc my early nair and then grab me. he will also shield it and depending on the on how i time/space my nair either shield grab or wd -> fsmash after i shine. im not sure what i can do about marths wd oos -> fsmash? i tried laserring after i shined a few times and got tipped. also i have a problem with getting hit by marths dash attack. i usually try to laser or out run it. i think i do that cause i dont c it coming. whenever i try to predict it it doesnt go so well . i think my biggest problem in this mu is that early nair and for whatever reason i feel like i have to approach marth!
what should i do when i get a grab on falcon?
also i tried running through my opponent when he had invincibility frames. i worked most to the time =) so thanks again for the advice.
Emotion is a huge channel for people to learn through. Getting salty when you lose a set is absolutely great because it forces your mind to stay on the topic of redeeming yourself or getting that guy back. Losing a match though.....that's trickier. You want to maintain composure throughout a set so you continue making solid reads and control yourself well enough to hold back a little at times, but I can't say that getting mad after losing a match is even that bad either. At Pound 5, I used some of my anger after I lost to Armada in order to change how I played and win the set. I've been playing with emotion and confidence lately and decided that anything that allows you to quit respecting the guy as a player and focus on the character(in addition to hyperfocus on your own game plan) is really good. Whether it's getting mad or realizing you have the ability to beat the guy you're playing, you just need to internalize these feelings so you can play to your full potential, and emotion or some other method of confidence-enhancing are phenomenal ways to do this, as I've seen and felt.what do you think about getting mad, or salty, when you lose a match/set?
especially vs. someone who you think you could have beat, or when you lose due to something you could have prevented, or picked up on and should have been punishing or something
i know some people get really mad vs. some others who don't get mad, much at all.
but do you think that w/ the proper mindset getting mad is almost a staple to losing a match?
**** postI wouldn't put it so black/white; depending on how you get mad at the situation, it's pretty essential that you get mad imo. What kind of player who has a serious drive to be really good could just come off a loss and not feel some sort of emotion along those lines? Getting mad is important, it shows you care and that the match/loss meant something to you.
You shouldn't let the loss negatively affect you, of course. You also shouldn't sit there johning or pretending to yourself that you "should have won" among other things. I totally agree that with the proper mindset, getting mad is a staple to losing a match. You need to be able to keep a cool head, and have overall good control of your emotions...but that doesn't mean you can't be salty about losing >_>
Yeah, taking the emotion out of my play was huge for me a while back because I always always ALWAYS got nervous when I played. I felt like, after a while, I wasn't quite as sharp reactively or able to immerse myself in the match as well if I played like that though, so I feel like human fluctuations in feelings from tourney to tourney may be really good for ensuring continuously solid play.Some of my best sets have been won when I'm in a "I really don't want to play, I just wanna go home, god dam I don't want to play right now" mindset. And that mindset has similarly resulted in hilariously embarrassing losses.
Emotions are a real problem for me when I play.
Maybe I'm secretly a woman.
If you don't set bigger goals for you to stay pushing hard towards, then yeah that'll happen a lot. Playing for your own potential(see how great it is) is what I recommend, in addition to whatever other goals you may have(like beating certain people or doing so well at a certain tournament).interesting...
here in CFL we've been doing swiss style tourneys, into bracket
and it's part of the reason i posed the question
last time we had our weekly, i beat two people who have given me problems in the past, in swiss
and feeling rather good, had to fight them again in bracket
i lost, to both of them.
and it occurred to me that, coming off of a loss, it probably gave them more drive than i had, having already beaten them
so whereas i was pretty comfortable thinking 'okay you beat these guys before, just stick to ur guns and u got this' they had probably been analyzing why i beat them last time and had a plan coming into how to beat me, reminded them selves of some counters they had and ****
made me realize that even when you win, you gotta take a look at how you won, and why you didn't win harder
Why wouldn't it work?Swiss is the bess, except when you only have like 16 people.
Inversely, Swiss doesn't work when you have very large amounts of entrants. like 500+
The higher the number of entrants, the higher chance of variance happening, the higher the chance of someone mediocre as **** sneaking in to top cut, which Swiss is supposed to prevent in the first place.Why wouldn't it work?
You should laser a lot more vs. Luigi. It just makes the matchup 10x easier since he can't approach with WDs on the ground, and he drifts too slowly to approach with aerials unless he is already close. If you take him to YS, remember Luigi is mad floaty so you can double shine him off the top. You only did it on the last stock, but he'll die at 18% / 39% / 61% on the top plat / side plats / stage, so it's almost comparable to gimping.Sooooo... Anyone want to hop on this?
>__> at the use of the word 'variance'The higher the number of entrants, the higher chance of variance happening, the higher the chance of someone mediocre as **** sneaking in to top cut, which Swiss is supposed to prevent in the first place.
I've been playing TCGs competitively for about 11 years now, and I've seen this happen so ****ing many times, it's ridiculous.
Extremes are generally bad things. Too much emotion clouds judgment, but none at all can wear away your mental resolve (it's very taxing for some people to block out everything entirely) and it prevents you from really 'feeling' what's going on. I find sometimes, for me, it's almost like playing with cold hands-- but in a mental way.Yeah, taking the emotion out of my play was huge for me a while back because I always always ALWAYS got nervous when I played. I felt like, after a while, I wasn't quite as sharp reactively or able to immerse myself in the match as well if I played like that though, so I feel like human fluctuations in feelings from tourney to tourney may be really good for ensuring continuously solid play.
or maybe we're all women