Aidan Crenshaw, on 08 July 2020 - 03:29 AM, said:
What's this going to tell us? 12-man op under all circumstances?
Teamwork OP.
Aidan Crenshaw, on 08 July 2020 - 04:35 AM, said:
Horseman usually is not such a guy, so I'd like to read his thoughts why he posted that screenshot in this discussion.
Because the main basis for the complaint here is a premise that the side dropping more metal is automatically at an advantage, a claim which I find
extremely suspect.
The value of any given mech on the field is a function of three main variables: the
build it's running, the pilot's
skill and their capacity for
teamwork. The
chassis is a fourth variable, but largely you can boil it down as acting as a multiplier to the
build's performance.
Two different chassis (sometimes even
variants of the same chassis) that weigh the same are rarely - if ever - going to be equal in performance.
In competent hands and working with a team, 50-55 ton mediums can easily make scrap metal of assaults twice their tonnage, a single light mech can carry harder than any of the team's half dozen assault mechs. Putting a random potato in an assault will not make them suddenly more capable than if they dropped in a medium or heavy (
if they have a functional build in the first place... you know what I mean).
For all you know, any given Steiner Scout Lance is comprised of proto-potatoes who will die two minutes into the fight without breaking double-digit damage.
For all you know, the high-performing player in a meta build will not coordinate with the team in any way, costing you a mech on the frontlines.
For all you know, the otherwise capable and well-armed team will disperse and get wrecked one by one simple because they didn't bother to focus their fire,
stay together or control
positions which would give them an advantage.
So no,
tonnage doesn't automatically make a mech more or less valuable to their team. It's proper
utilization (first through the build, then through application of the mech on the battlefield) and the
pilot responsible for it do.
And unfortunately, what I usually see is that a LOT of bad pilots gravitate towards assault mechs in mistaken belief that all that armor would make them survive longer - and then they die to the same elementary mistakes they were committing in lighter mechs before.
Edited by Horseman, 08 July 2020 - 11:17 AM.