Leimrey, on 28 December 2012 - 10:54 AM, said:
Although I support your proposition for tonnage limits and the ability to drop with less than 8 men, I think that literally no one would ever drop undermanned, since having more skilled guys is WAY better than having bigger guns, IMO.
Actually, I know I would.
If I have 6-7 guys together, I refuse to sync drop. And I would rather drop undermanned, but maybe a little heavier, than PUG/4 Man, tbh. It does stack things against you some, potentially, but then, some of my favorite matches have been overcoming multiDisco drops where somehow our 5 man beat a cocky 8 man.
Also, the old TT Nerd in me would find it interesting to see how 4 Atlas fair agianst 8 Hunchie/Cents. Or 5-6 Heavy?Assualt dropping vs 8 Light/Mediums. Would find it even more interesting if NetCode was stable so that Lights weren't given a Superman Cape (One on One, the only time a Light should beat a heavy or assault is if the pilot is just that much better. Multi-Lights should certainly be able to wolfpack, but the current lack of collision, lagshield gives lights way more effectiveness than they should. I think the ranks of Squirrels will thin precipitously should PGI ever fix this. And hopefully we see more people leaning toward Medium to get that mix of speed with better armor and firepower.
Of course, all that is wishful thinking, predicated on IGP getting their fingers off the controls and PGI actually getting the Core Mechanics, Physics and Build/Weapon Balancing sorted.
DV McKenna, on 28 December 2012 - 10:59 AM, said:
Yea they would, it was a staple thing to do in leagues past and can work played correctly.
But i think the biggest bonus about it, is for those smaller units who don't have 8 on all the time, or have 8 and 1 has to go AFK an hour.
They can continue to play.
Also another thing that would encourage undermanned groups, is if rewards weren't individual based, but given from a rewards pools, with individual bonuses. That way the same amount of C-Bills or XP would be doled out, but smaller groups each get a bigger slice of the pie, recognizing they had to contribute more to achieve a win.