does it still colide with orbs/buff placers? I know I couldnt use frost arrows or similar autocasts with mkb true strike "turned on" back in the days. now I dont even know if it still can be toggled off or if they fixed it, let alone how it works in dota 2, i almost never mkb, so Im curious.
in 7.64 tooltip still says it doesnt work with headshot and frost arrows
also it doesnt work if you bought mkb after buriza/crystalis (not sure how it works with skills but most likely the same) but if you drop crit and pick it up should work again (mkb wont tho)
dont quote me on that ;p
and in dota 2
probably all problems are fixed as (similar interaction) luna is able to use all orb effects or you can crit while using phase boots
I need some advice, what's the best *easiest* heroes to teach friends to play?
They just don't understand when to run away, and when to fight, or what their allies or enemies abilities do.
One of them is terrible at LoL, and is only okay at Niax in DotA2. I just need to get him to play some other heroes, but I'm not sure who, any advice?
The other is slightly better, but still doesn't understand when to initiate or when to run away.
Just any advice would be appreciated! I've shown them videos, I've played games and games with them, they just need new heroes.
We stopped searching for monsters under our beds when we realized that they were inside us.
Tell me something, my friend. You ever dance with the devil in the pale moonlight?
There are few heroes who are difficult to play at a passable level, especially at lower levels of play. Frankly, I'd tell them to start playing all random. They might get awful games every once in a while, but at least everyone is relatively new at that point in MMR, so people getting heroes they're not comfortable with will not be holding them back much. If you still want a couple of easy heroes to start out with: Venomancer, Skeleton King, Tidehunter, Warlock, Pugna, Dazzle.
http://steamcommunity.com/market/search?q=appid%3A753
lol at the price
I didnt even realize you could sell it... but that is pretty funny
Playing All Random is by far the best way to learn.
But if they don't have any clue what they're doing, the most brainless heroes would probably be Drow Ranger (carry), Viper (... technically a carry), Skeleton King (carry), Lion (support), Crystal Maiden (support), and maybe Juggernaut (carry.) All of those heroes either have very few buttons to push or very simplistic playstyles.
Sidenote: Carry Lion with Ethereal Blade and Shadowblade is hilarious. Who says you need to be Morphling to shotgun people?
I said it before, but at that level (actually on pretty much any level) you should just ignore any flamers, both mentally and using the in-game button. They're players who've probably played a lot more than you, take games more seriously than you and yet they're still in your level of matchmaking. You shouldn't feel bad because of them, but it's not unnatural to feel bad for them.
Last edited by Hermanni; 2013-01-30 at 08:05 AM.
Manni | paragon.fi!
People are just douchebags. Anonymity means they can act like pricks and have zero consequence for doing so, except maybe a brief stay in low priority pool.
You do fine in the games I've watched, hell some of the games you say they were flaming you in, you were doing better than everyone else in the entire game. Like Hermanni says, just ignore em and then report em for flaming. Got notice that at least one of those pricks that was flaming you got sent to low priority hell, so I guess Valve does care if they get reported frequently enough.
Feels like the conversation goes back to MMR every dozen pages or so. I'm still pretty sure it's just a rating-based system that accounts for wins, though Longview and others might again disagree. I haven't seen you play so I can't really tell if you're out of your place or not, I imagine there is a possibility that if you've played in the top end of MMR with Lysah and won some games it could have inflated your MMR, but I'm pretty sure playing in games well out of your range doesn't even affect your rating regardless of outcome.
Then there's the possibility that you just feel out of your league when the non-evolving players around you have a lot of misguided confidence. I saw it a lot in HoN when playing with friends on alt accounts, loads of bad players with thousands of games in middle of the MMR range who would get really angry at anyone for any reason, be it "wrong" item build or a tiny mistake, and seemed to really think they were amazing players who somehow after thousands of games would still always land with the most terrible teammates so they never got higher rating.
Manni | paragon.fi!
Win ratio alone is pretty meaningless, I mean my win ratio dropped below 50% for a while when I played a lot in 5-stacks with friends of varying skill level and we'd usually have to play against other 5-stacks who would pick a nice lineup and we'd just random 5 heroes and lose horribly 3 games out of 4, but when I queued alone I'd still get in page 1-2 games most of the time. Then I made an alt account for playing that kind of playing.
I can't really give much advice in here about how to magically improve other than play the game, and when you die or queue for a game instead of tabbing out to read reddit look at the "what killed me" screen and read the tooltips of the abilities that killed you, and while queuing go to the learn tab and read up on the hero that confused you most in the previous game.
Manni | paragon.fi!
Do you really take that rating seriously?
I always support playing AP at the very very beginning. I think it's like learning a foreign language. If you don't know fundamentals, even if you visit country using that language you won't learn a thing because you are missing the tool to learn. Without sticking a hero too much, I suggest AP for learning and not ranged heroes. Tho, it's my opinion. I learned better with this way.
Last edited by Kuntantee; 2013-01-30 at 10:49 AM.
Yeah, but I assumed anyone can look up guides or Dotacinema spotlights if they wanted to. Sure, reading guides and watching videos and pro replays is an alright way to learn, but it's not for everyone and I don't like telling anyone that you absolutely must read this and watch that to "get good." Just playing and being somewhat attentive is often enough. I haven't read any guides in a long time, but this friend I taught to play who got pretty good really fast uses those alt tab guides a lot, and I'm not if he said some of them are a bit outdated or not very good because I do sometimes find myself rolling on the carpet after I looked what he built. But for the most part, I imagine those guides are fine as long as you don't start thinking they dictate how everyone should play every game.
---------- Post added 2013-01-30 at 10:51 AM ----------
The thing that opens up to left side of your screen when you die, you know, showing the hero that killed you. You can expand it to show what damaged you for how much and read the tooltips. Well, at least it seems like I did manage to say something useful.
---------- Post added 2013-01-30 at 10:54 AM ----------
It seemed fairly accurate to me, though I don't think it should be given much value regardless.
Last edited by Hermanni; 2013-01-30 at 10:54 AM.
Manni | paragon.fi!
Manni | paragon.fi!