Fighting games are too hard
50 matches in and 4 wins
I buy every new fighting game only to day1 refund it. I just cant find the right one
Fighting games are too hard
You would’ve exceeded the refund period 50 matches in.
Steam refund isnt 2hours into a game
Hasnt been for a while
You are never going to find the right one if you drop it 50 matches in.
Two hours is the auto-refund. You can still refund after that and most of the time, as long as you dont type like a retard, theyll let it through even ten hours in.
You need to sit down and play one game for 100+ hours before you will have fun as you are clearly sped
Holy crapioly...
Cool blog
There's some guy on youtube that does step-by-step tutorials with showcases of how he climbs through SFV ranks with small modifications to his gameplay as he goes along. If you do this and don't have any fun, then fighting games just aren't your cup of tea.
yeah that's the type of stuff you want to avoid brother
You have to learn a fighting game well. You can't just learn a combo and your moves then head into online. There are concepts you need to learn. The good news is most of these concepts roll over to other games and will have you learning new games faster. Find something active that you find appealing and put in the work. Once you have actually put in effort into learning you will have an easier time learning games in the future
Your playing a fighting game like its a beatem up. But still aint no way you should go 4/50 even if your button mashing
Bros
Maybe spend time in practice mode and vs the computer before going online. If you can't handle the computer on the hardest difficulty then you won't stand a chance vs a human.
Bait thread that will reach bump limit and keep going for 50 posts.
They're only as hard as your opponent. So play one with working matchmaking.
I don't think that's particularly helpful, and it certainly isn't fun. It's better to play against real people at your skill level, even if you're both mashing buttons.
That's a post for each match. Maybe he can get some more wins!
Of course he should actually work his way up to that difficulty first. And training mode helps you build muscle memory and timing. Sure playing people will help too but you need to actually learn what you are doing in the first place instead of just mashing buttons against a button masher.
I recently got into fighting games after a lifetime of not enjoying them at all. What changed was I got a few pieces of advice which really helped me figure out how to actually learn and enjoy the game. First bit is to pick one character and stick with them. Second bit is that training mode is a reference mode, it isn't practice. It's extremely useful for figuring out combos or situations but it's not good practice because it can't give you context for when to do stuff which is the hard part. So the best practice is just playing actual games against people. The third thing was to just play matches against people immediately in the context of some kind of matchmaking. The loop is play match, win or lose you see something new, then you take that new thing into training mode and add it to the repertoire, and then try it out in another match. The CPU didn't factor into this at all, because playing fighting games against the computer doesn't even begin to feel like fighting another player.
git gud
i might be a casual but I'm glad I'm not that much of a shitter