Right attitude, moderately flawed message, Orion.
That's
absolutely what we want newer players to do, but they don't have to do it in a brawler. If they like LRMs and want to learn to be the
Tech Fire Support Guy, then by all means let them do that. I have a friend, new to the game, who used an Escapist MC code he had sitting around to purchase all four Catapult variants before his first match because he knew from previous MW games that he liked LRMs and being that guy who pounds enemies to dust from a distance. He loaded up his stock CPLT-C4, dove in, and made me proud to fight at his side. Why?
He was a brand new player running a 'Mech armed almost exclusively with LRMs, but he was also moving with the team. He'd use friendlies' targeting locks if they were solid, but if they weren't he'd jockey around trying to find his
own lock so that he could get those launchers into play. Yeah, he stayed well behind the front-line brawlers, but when his sole close-range armament were a pair of small lasers, that was perfectly fine with the front-line brawlers. Staying behind the guys with the large lasers and the autocannons and the SRM-18s was intelligent.
He was
also being aggressive,
forcing himself into positions where he could fire his weapons at their maximum rates and do as much damage to the enemy as possible. He actually ran into heat problems with the stock CPLT-C4 because the default single sinks couldn't vent heat buildup from those oversized LRM launchers fast enough. At one point, and remaining his favorite kill to date, he was mixing it up in the front lines at the end of a match because he'd
shot his launchers dry (and because we had five guys left to the enemy's badly-damaged two anyways), and he ended up small lasering a jumping Spider to death for the match-ending kill.
That's the kind of new guy we want. That's the kind of intelligently aggressive play Void's shooting for. The new guys who'd take a stock C4, move two hundred meters away from their DZ, and park themselves behind a hill before proceeding to kvetch out their teammates for not holding locks long enough - the new guys who'd fire
maybe four LRM salvos a match because "I don't have close-range weapons!" - are not going to learn how to be effective and valuable Fire Support Guys. My buddy up there? When he gets enough experience under him in that tricked-out C4 we put together for him, he's going to be a credit to the team and someone you'd love to have around.
The players who have five hundred matches under them and
still go into battle with an Atlas carrying a virtually identical armament to a
stock CPLT-C4 and do the exact same thing? They're
disgraceful, not tactical. A Dedicated Fire Support Atlas is an Atlas that has a Gauss rifle (two Ultra AC/5 are acceptable if not ideal), large lasers, PPCs, all metric butt-tons of weapons that
aren't LRMs as well as LRMs. A Dedicated Fire Support Atlas can do to you at 600 meters what a Dedicated Face-Punching Brawler Atlas can at 200. If your DFSA
can't do that, you're building your Atlas wrong. If your DFSA
can do that but never does because you're sitting behind a rock somewhere 'conserving your firepower', then you are piloting that Atlas wrong. That's all.
Edited by 1453 R, 16 February 2013 - 08:42 AM.