DV McKenna, on 09 September 2014 - 08:37 AM, said:
Mechwarrior thus far has always had an aiming component where those with the best aim would compete at the top.
Now if it was easy as you claim it to be Bishop we would all be walking around with 90%+ accuracy hitting nothing but CT repeatedly.
As it is; the reality is far different than that.
It depends on weather you agree with my viewpoint or not ;-) let's face it if everyone agreed the world would be much more boring and simple.
And we all hate debating equally as stubborn as ourselves.
Well, we will continue to disagree on aiming. I will say, find me the tank that has perfectly stable aiming, or any combat vehicle, at flank speed over rough terrain (and humanoid locomotion naturally sways more than wheeled/tracked (though also absorbs impact better), and I will conceded.
You want perfect aim? You stop, or go very slow for the second you line up. You don't blast 20,000 lbs of thrust out your butt and launch like a titan rocket (ok...well, like really shaky hoversled now), or sprint across broken terrain, and have millimetric precision, a kilometer out. So yeah, sorry if I feel it takes more skill to deal with things like that, and succeed, than pick a pixel.
As for why more people don't do it, it's a matter of reflexes. Some have it, some don't. But super reflexes should only take one so far, and not, IMO (note I say, IMO) negate "reality factors". Also things like the sputtering reticle under high heat load in early CB IMO (again) added a heck of a lot of immersion to the game, and helped make people more circumspect about their heat management.
As for stubborn people debating....here? In an online Stompy Robot Forum?!?!?! Never happen!
Torgun, on 09 September 2014 - 08:51 AM, said:
No one walks around a few days before Christmas and think it's fall anymore, that's the way it is. That you'd need to fall back on an old definition of fall no one lives by to be able to meet deadlines is just sad.
No, you just need to fall back to the definition still used by almost anyone who actually knows what they are talking about.