Dogstar, on 24 March 2017 - 12:34 AM, said:
I'll admit that I'm one of those people.
It's frustrating as anything to be fighting as hard as you can and then the moment there's a break, to look up at the score and see 5-10, 3-9, or even 1-11 because your team folded like a cheap chair.
So you need to vent, especially when it's your fourth match on a row with the same issue. It's not personal.
Interesting comment. I don't mean this as a criticism but if you are "fighting as hard as you can" and then look up to see such a lopsided score then you haven't been keeping an eye on the HUD and where your team mates are. If you go off and fight someone 1:1 and fight as hard as you can while your team gets blown away ... part of the fault lies with all of the team for not sticking together and focusing fire.
Most folks who wander off on there own often die first or last (depends on whether they prefer brawling or sniping) but can often contribute to their team losing simply by NOT contributing to the efficient elimination of opponents. 1:1 fights aren't efficient ... they waste ammo/heat/resources and you take more damage than you should since the opponent is given more time than needed to fire back.
If a person is off fighting as hard as they can while allowing 8 players on the other team to wipe out a lance on your team due to focus fire and coordination (for them and lack of coordination for your team) then it is not surprising that they end up losing or notice late in the game that their team is trailing.
Also, as has been pointed out many times, doing a lot of damage doesn't necessarily indicate that much about a player's capabilities. Even the toughest 100 ton assault only takes about 180 damage TOTAL to core out through the front CT. Large damage numbers almost always mean a lot of damage spread over a lot of mechs.
Anyway, the bottom line in my opinion is that if a player remains silent on coms, doesn't pay attention to the mini-map and where their team mates are going and adjust their plan accordingly, and doesn't make a contribution to the organization ... then they actually are not "fighting as hard as they can" and are increasing the chances of a loss by a significant factor since coordination, team play and focus fire are a much larger factor toward winning as a team than the contribution of any one player.
.