![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() "This is the perfect metaphor for League. I wrote about it in The Meta chapter of my book at page 147. In that line of thinking giving the buff to the teammate is the ideally ideal situation. Meaning if you went through and made the correct choices like a pro what are they. It's about fulfilling your role perfectly in a game. Once thinking it's much better on the jungler than the inter then later realizing the buff isn't the point. It's interesting I've thought both ways on this same issue. Do something that isn't just being an ahole keyboard warrior. Sometimes you get get a smurf fiora into your lilia top. And you know what, sometimes your laners will be outmatched. The assumption should be that people are trying to win. You whats as easy as typing "jg diff"? "Gj!" Everyone wants to be the carry that wins the game or just watch the minimap waiting for their teammates to screw up so they can flame them. Or my favorite is when the 13 kill rengar or draven sees their teammate die and says: "you deserve this loss" and then loses the game on purpose Janna q gets last hit on fleeing champion: "ksing griefer, I'm afk" Some says "just ff, dog mid laner" then tries to ff at 19:30 so mid holds everyone hostage Top laner dies and then gets reganked after tp: "report for inting" Level 3 gank fails top lane: either "gtfo never come to this lane again" or "omfg I'm not ganking for the rest of the game" Support roams and I lose 3 cs: "gg, my support's a bot" I think there are a lot of problems but the major one is a "main character syndrome" of most players. CdawgVA has announced that he was not aware of this, and will be pulling out of the Creator League.The problem os the community itself. Update - 3 September 2pm BST:Īfter the announcement it was revealed that the creator passes are actually NFTs. No doubt the Creator League will bring in a lot of viewers purely on the star power of the people involved, but if it wants to have any kind of longevity then I expect they will have to add more value to the $20 passes, otherwise, they may quickly have a lot of people who feel they didn’t get much out of their purchase. And I think another point that's important to know is the value that's listed day one is not the value that is like stagnant, we're always going to be adding more and more and more to try to prove out the value.” “So there's all kinds of different value adds and at the end of the day it's a decision that individuals have to make, but we feel confident. “I think what we've tried to do is wherever you fall on the spectrum of your competitive skill or your fandom, we want to provide value to you in some form,” says Benson. So $19.99 for some voting power, access to smaller tournaments and the potential to interact with a personality seems a bit steep, however, the team has said they know they need to offer value for people who buy these passes. I’m struggling to see why you would want to buy one of these passes when the initial tournament qualifier seems to be open to everyone and all the action will be broadcast for free. ![]() There will also be weekly community tournaments for pass holders and giveaways, but unless you are really good at Fortnite or very lucky they might not offer much value. There’s also the promise of exclusive access to the creators, including Discord servers that feature AMAs and potential in-person experiences with them, although specifics have not been revealed. The pass gives you the ability to vote on some areas of the tournament, including the players that are signed to the creator's team, the rules for the competition and what format future tournaments will take. Each creator in the tournament has their own pass, and you can only have a pass for one creator, although you can buy multiple passes for the same creator if you want. At a minimum, the creators will actively manage their teams and broadcast games on their channels.Ī key part of the creator league is the Community Passes, which you can buy for $19.99. However, creators do not have to actually play in the tournament if they don’t fancy it, so it may just be a lot of fans competing. After the open qualifier is done there will be a launch show where the creators will draft their teams, and from there the league will get underway with the final of the first split taking place in early October with a $200,000 prize pool. There is an open qualifier for the tournament, which features a $50,000 prize pool with the top players getting a spot on their favorite creator's team. These creators will each lead a team in the Creator League, which kicks off with a Fortnite custom map tournament. ![]()
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