Garth Erlam, on 09 August 2013 - 08:05 AM, said:
You mean when the k2 'gausscat' was 'all you saw in 8v8' - you're right, that was a far better non long-range, high-alpha 'meta.'
PS. This is your only warning about insulting people. Do it again and you can sit in the corner and think about what you've done.
Let's get real here. Garth, please do stay around and let's talk about this. I'd say that, looking back, the biggest problem with the K2 Gaussapult was its flexibility at close range due to its absurd torso twist coupled with its long-range capability. This made flanking it particularly difficult, and kept it competitive at short ranges. It was not the only viable short range build, but was often employed as a midrange build because of the fact it was very hard to get behind it since it could act like an owl and turn its head to face a rear attacker. Indeed, the Gaussapult worked very well as a brawler.
As a sniper, the K2 also had a very large head (and still does) which meant that it had to be very careful since other gauss, large lasers, etc could headcap it. It also could not jump (and still can't) and was competing against fast-Awesomes packing medium lasers or SRMs, Swaybacks (designs that have been outdated by punitive mechanics changes), and tackling Dragons (removed October 25) that could shove over a pair of K2 Gausscats.
You cannot compare the K2 with the less ammo-dependant, more heavily armored, jump-capable, small-headed sniper builds of today and come out honestly believing the K2 Gauss fits were anywhere near as prolific or capable. Especially when the main non-sniper competition (even among Catapults, like twin AC/20, StreakCat, or SRM-Cat) simply is not allowed to exist anymore.
At that time, the matchmaker also disregarded force composition --
because of this, a far, far more effective "cheese build" was to simply stand an eight-Atlas force in your base. Pop just a single curious/overextended enemy mech, and you could camp with impunity, knowing the enemy had to come down in there or lose after the clock ran out -- you would win, 1:0.
PS How should I more politely call people out for telling blatant lies? What's the official method here? I provided dates to disprove his nonsense, if he didn't want to be called a liar
he ought not to have lied. If you mean I insulted him by calling him closed-minded, well, he ought to stop claiming he's never seen any suggestions provided
while replying to people providing suggestions.