2vs2 (AEROWALK)
blue
  • aardappel
  • sane
vs
pink
  • doum
  • kaichi
Rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
10 minutes, Deathmatch 3, Teamplay 2
Wed 17 May 2006 on OFQSP | Ktpro | New Jersey
low avg high team total players RA YA GA Quad
25 27 28 pink 55 2 14 8 19 5
51 72 91 blue 47 2 6 18 19 5
ping pl frags team name Kills TKs Deaths RA YA GA QUAD
91 0 40 blue sane 44 1 45 3 12 3 2
28 0 31 pink kaichi 41 7 39 6 2 8 3
25 0 24 pink doum 29 5 25 8 6 11 2
51 0 7 blue aardappel 14 2 42 3 6 16 3
399 0 spectator greenmachine 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
230 1 spectator spamO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
52 0 spectator Z man 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
53 0 spectator new player 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
90 0 spectator PhasE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Award Score Winner(s)
Efficiency 49.0 doum
Frag Streak 10 kaichi
Quad Runner 4 sane
Spawn Fragger 4 doum, kaichi
Unluckiest Spawner 5 aardappel
Thursday 18 May 2006, 01:07
#1:
oneshotflinch
Cool. Do you recall if that was with or without spawn safety?
Thursday 18 May 2006, 02:11
#2:
oneshotflinch
Btw, when you say "no guessing", does that mean you had no conscious plan as to which spawns you were going to target based off of some sort of logical deduction? Or you were just completely of a zen-like blank mind and just randomly chose which spawn you were going to target.

We have a tournament foosball table at my school and the school hosts tournaments and whatnot. There's a lot of people who play quite competitively. There's actually no drop slot for the ball to be fed into and so it must be tossed to the center so it banks off the sideboard and then is supposed to randomly roll towards either side. What almost always ends up happening is that the person who tosses the ball banks it so it almost always (95% +) rolls to their side for an advantage. I do it as well and it's almost entirely unintentional. When you claim to put no guesswork into your intentions it's amazing how much your subconscious mind influences your intentions, unbeknownst to your conscious mind. It's really quite amazing when you see people unintentionally always tossing the ball to their favor. When you think about it, when you are say sitting in front of the TV and you decide you thirsty and make a decision to get a drink from the fridge, you really only send one command to your brain to initiate a remarkable chain reaction response most people are almost totally oblivious to. The muscles in your body position and tense in just the right way to lift yourself from your seat. There is quite a complex process of equilibrium to calculate the position, momentum and gravitational forces around you. Then you traverse through a series of environmental obstacles, a sort of pathfinding algorithm. Finally you open the fridge, reach for a cold one, and pour yourself a drink and then navigate yourself back to your seat. If you can imagine what it would be like to program a robot to do such an algorithm this would take, it would take an enourmous amount of code for these basic tasks to be done. The main thing here is to remember that you initiated all this complex activity with 1 simple command, "I'm thirsty, I'm going to get a drink" and then almost entirely without consciously thinking about the process you effortlessly do so.

My point is, the subconscious mind is extremely powerful, so something that might seem to you to be entirely random may infact be much more predmeditated / predetermined than you think.
Thursday 18 May 2006, 14:44
#3:
kaichi
yes. Tons of people say the why is not important. Ofcourse it is also agreed by many that you already know the how but are relearning in a different state of mind(concious). Ofcourse that would also lead to the fact that the concious doesn't need to know what the subconcious already knows. Meaning you already know.
Thursday 18 May 2006, 14:45
#4:
kaichi
Dani CALIFORNIA!!! hot one. get it!
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