Mariusghost84 wrote: »AlanTheDragonLord wrote: »It's just pixels on the screen. There are other, more important things that are worth getting upset about. But not pixels.
I just dont comprehend this type of thinking. This makes absolutely no sense to me. Real life is just atoms. Your point being that as long as something happens on a PC/digitally it has no emotional value? For me its all equally strong emotions, doesn't matter if they are onscreen, irl, face to face with someone - its all experiences.
@Mariusghost84
It’s a perspective to take that actually helps you in pvp. I agree with Alan big time on this one.
Think about why the person’s sending the message in the first place. They are angry and venting, or they are doing it to get you off your game. The way to do well in pvp is like sports, stay loose but focused. I bet you’re playing tight and stressed where your play is being effected by your emotions.
I used to see this a lot in pve and pvp. Sub 10% wipes where everything goes off the rails when you’re about to beat a hard encounter, in pvp people lose focus and are all over the place when fighting hard engagements. It’s one of the reasons why the spazzy raid leaders are always in good guilds but never great guilds.
It’s where the expression choking comes from. Focus more on having fun and stay loose and your play will improve.
Mariusghost84 wrote: »Mariusghost84 wrote: »AlanTheDragonLord wrote: »It's just pixels on the screen. There are other, more important things that are worth getting upset about. But not pixels.
I just dont comprehend this type of thinking. This makes absolutely no sense to me. Real life is just atoms. Your point being that as long as something happens on a PC/digitally it has no emotional value? For me its all equally strong emotions, doesn't matter if they are onscreen, irl, face to face with someone - its all experiences.
@Mariusghost84
It’s a perspective to take that actually helps you in pvp. I agree with Alan big time on this one.
Think about why the person’s sending the message in the first place. They are angry and venting, or they are doing it to get you off your game. The way to do well in pvp is like sports, stay loose but focused. I bet you’re playing tight and stressed where your play is being effected by your emotions.
I used to see this a lot in pve and pvp. Sub 10% wipes where everything goes off the rails when you’re about to beat a hard encounter, in pvp people lose focus and are all over the place when fighting hard engagements. It’s one of the reasons why the spazzy raid leaders are always in good guilds but never great guilds.
It’s where the expression choking comes from. Focus more on having fun and stay loose and your play will improve.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I will definitely focus more on... staying focused and sharp. As you said, after me getting pissed about that comment i preformed even worse!
Mariusghost84 wrote: »Mariusghost84 wrote: »AlanTheDragonLord wrote: »It's just pixels on the screen. There are other, more important things that are worth getting upset about. But not pixels.
I just dont comprehend this type of thinking. This makes absolutely no sense to me. Real life is just atoms. Your point being that as long as something happens on a PC/digitally it has no emotional value? For me its all equally strong emotions, doesn't matter if they are onscreen, irl, face to face with someone - its all experiences.
@Mariusghost84
It’s a perspective to take that actually helps you in pvp. I agree with Alan big time on this one.
Think about why the person’s sending the message in the first place. They are angry and venting, or they are doing it to get you off your game. The way to do well in pvp is like sports, stay loose but focused. I bet you’re playing tight and stressed where your play is being effected by your emotions.
I used to see this a lot in pve and pvp. Sub 10% wipes where everything goes off the rails when you’re about to beat a hard encounter, in pvp people lose focus and are all over the place when fighting hard engagements. It’s one of the reasons why the spazzy raid leaders are always in good guilds but never great guilds.
It’s where the expression choking comes from. Focus more on having fun and stay loose and your play will improve.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I will definitely focus more on... staying focused and sharp. As you said, after me getting pissed about that comment i preformed even worse!
The Uninvited wrote: »Mariusghost84 wrote: »Mariusghost84 wrote: »AlanTheDragonLord wrote: »It's just pixels on the screen. There are other, more important things that are worth getting upset about. But not pixels.
I just dont comprehend this type of thinking. This makes absolutely no sense to me. Real life is just atoms. Your point being that as long as something happens on a PC/digitally it has no emotional value? For me its all equally strong emotions, doesn't matter if they are onscreen, irl, face to face with someone - its all experiences.
@Mariusghost84
It’s a perspective to take that actually helps you in pvp. I agree with Alan big time on this one.
Think about why the person’s sending the message in the first place. They are angry and venting, or they are doing it to get you off your game. The way to do well in pvp is like sports, stay loose but focused. I bet you’re playing tight and stressed where your play is being effected by your emotions.
I used to see this a lot in pve and pvp. Sub 10% wipes where everything goes off the rails when you’re about to beat a hard encounter, in pvp people lose focus and are all over the place when fighting hard engagements. It’s one of the reasons why the spazzy raid leaders are always in good guilds but never great guilds.
It’s where the expression choking comes from. Focus more on having fun and stay loose and your play will improve.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I will definitely focus more on... staying focused and sharp. As you said, after me getting pissed about that comment i preformed even worse!
Also, don't let the "bloodthirst" get you too much. What I mean by that is, don't storm back into battle after you just have been killed thinking "I am going to kill that son of a...!!!" You will not be focused and die again.
I see some players just rushing out of a keep main gate after just being killed and expecting a different outcome, just to die over and over again.
I keep a silky handkerchief (treasure item) in my bag and when someone sends me a snarky message I usually send them a link to the hanky and tell them to dry their tears. I get awful comments back almost every time but I can laugh about those because I caused them. Twice I got an unexpected good response after sending the handkerchief. For the most part though lots of swearing.
xxthir13enxx wrote: »Meh... deaths in this game are more
Player vs Server than PvP
Mariusghost84 wrote: »My journey to become good in PVP is a struggle. I have leveled all classes both stam and mag to get an overview over their capabilities, with the endgame goal to know them all enough to know how to react in PVP. I am now at the point where i started to get some good kills against new and moderate players in BGs. Against good players, i have no chance.
Controlling my emotions in PVP is at times hard. Snarky comments from others can really *** me off. This one dude in my team today went "A stamplar should be getting more kills and do more dmg than this , change your spec". I JUST made my spec , spent a LOT of time and gold on it - theorycrafting and testing the skills i wanted - and when i finally get in the action this guy come along. (snip).
This made me think, how do YOU control your emotions ingame while PVPing? Do you get mad when a snipe spammer kills you or you lose to someone you consider playing cheap? Do you just laugh it off when you die?
(edited for profanity and inappropriate content)
Mariusghost84 wrote: »AlanTheDragonLord wrote: »It's just pixels on the screen. There are other, more important things that are worth getting upset about. But not pixels.
I just dont comprehend this type of thinking. This makes absolutely no sense to me. Real life is just atoms. Your point being that as long as something happens on a PC/digitally it has no emotional value? For me its all equally strong emotions, doesn't matter if they are onscreen, irl, face to face with someone - its all experiences.