The same reason why players on UR play ELO all the time, to jack up their rating as much as possible. In my case though, it's win rating. ELO is about who can commit the most time in achieving (and maintaining) a high ELO score within a weeks time. Lately, I've only been able to play a couple of games a week; thus my measly score gets reset and I have to commit all over again. With win ratio, all I need to do is keep winning and I can take long breaks in-between without interference.
I see you play for win rating but what's the idea of posting a video where you play t1, the most noob game mode ever? Play Elo, get your rating over 1400 and forget the irrelevant win ratio.
The point of playing in T1 is to capitalize on as many wins as possible in order to boost my ratio. While it may not be relevant to your interests, it IS relevant to me.
Could you explain me what's the point of boosting the ratio? As we can see, it doesn't tell anything.
sp1n0sama 3 months ago
@sp1n0sama
The same reason why players on UR play ELO all the time, to jack up their rating as much as possible. In my case though, it's win rating. ELO is about who can commit the most time in achieving (and maintaining) a high ELO score within a weeks time. Lately, I've only been able to play a couple of games a week; thus my measly score gets reset and I have to commit all over again. With win ratio, all I need to do is keep winning and I can take long breaks in-between without interference.
DraikRoan 3 months ago
I see you play for win rating but what's the idea of posting a video where you play t1, the most noob game mode ever? Play Elo, get your rating over 1400 and forget the irrelevant win ratio.
sp1n0sama 3 months ago
@sp1n0sama
The point of playing in T1 is to capitalize on as many wins as possible in order to boost my ratio. While it may not be relevant to your interests, it IS relevant to me.
DraikRoan 3 months ago