When to go silver-gold-platinum
#1
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 01:00
#2
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 01:19
There are countless barometers to use to determine when to move up. I always say that you just know. Getting through games without paying full attention, when the game slows down, when you get through super fast without dying or using rockets, are all valid measurements of readiness.
#3
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 01:24
You know you're ready for a tougher level when you're just too damn stubborn to give up.
Plus what Clyde said.
- Vormav, Salarian Master Race et BloodBeforeTears aiment ceci
#4
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 01:25
I would say you move up in difficulty depending on your comfort zone.. If you are very familiar with certain characters and weapon combos..go for it..Never hurts trying..unless it does wind up actually hurting..
I moved up in difficulty based on my ability to constantly top-score..no matter what character-weapon combo..and figuring out how to survive..without dying at least twice a game....I remember being on the bottom of the score board..just amazed at how much the top-scorer would do..and I would wonder how were they able to do that...Then I put in the time..and I figured it out.
When I finally moved into Gold.I knew I didnt want to be a huge burden on the team..so I learned cheese characters..like the Harrier-TGI..SilentStep & BlissGirl.. can attest to my scrubster ness when I first started...Its about being comfortable...
Soloing..can really help..especially getting into / putting yourself in horrible situations and figuring your way out of them that doesn't involve using missiles.
- Al Swearengen of Deadwood et larsdt aiment ceci
#5
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 01:42
I use a simple rule: Move up to the next level when the level you're currently playing at isn't a challenge any more.
Also, when you're moving up, you may want to use a character with some form of DR, in order to help "ease" yourself in to how much fire you can take on the new level.
- pinkdiva92 et BloodBeforeTears aiment ceci
#6
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 01:53
When I was in your situation (and trust me, all of us were at some point), I would play silver when experimenting with builds and loadouts, or when I was low on decent consumables. When I found something that worked pretty well and gained some decent consumables for that kit, I would up it to gold. Once you have enough experience with a variety of kits, you should be able to play gold regularly, and let your consumables dictate your kit selection. Platinum is different ballgame altogether. You need pure DPS and a bit of survivability. When I play platinum, I feel pigeon-holed into taking a smaller pool kits/weapons, since not doing so can lengthen the game considerably.
IMO, you should play the hardest difficulty that you can withstand - it will make you better. You should be wiping every now and then. If you never wipe, then you've clearly mastered the kit/faction/difficulty and should move up or laterally (try a different kit/weapon/build).
- Teh_Ocelot, Cryos_Feron, Salarian Master Race et 1 autre aiment ceci
#7
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 02:11
Another subtle indicator is your own personal camping tendencies. If you find yourself frequently camping certain areas on certain maps, even when there's no enemies in the area, then you are probably not ready to move up. Part of playing efficiently, IMO, is the ability to flow smoothly throughout the map, only stopping briefly at tactically advantageous locations to dispatch enemies.
- larsdt et Arkhne aiment ceci
#9
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 02:31
#10
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 02:47
#11
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:01
- Caineghis2500 et ClydeInTheShell aiment ceci
#12
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:03
tbh I don't think this method has ever failed. By far the best way to learnJust do what Clyde did and have people drag you to higher difficulties until you are ready
#13
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:12
- Caineghis2500 et Al Swearengen of Deadwood aiment ceci
#14
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:12
Fair point but what will you do if you end up having to solo a wave because I can guarantee with 100% certainty that it will happen a couple times even more if yer playing with pugs.. It pays to learn some self sufficiency ya know?Type 2 understands that the game actually rewards intelligent team play and try to support the team to the best of their ability, no matter how limited. This is supposed to be co-op afterall.
- TMB903 aime ceci
#15
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:14
Maybe its the emphasis on weapons/consumables from day 1 of the game that is the root of the problem.
That part is frustrating. Recently started a new manifest on PC (about 70 hrs in), so I feel your pain. FWIW, Reegar, Acolyte, Arc Pistol are the most OP rares - they are good even at level I. Learn how to use them and you can be competitive, even on plat, w/ level III consumables. Of course, those weapons aren't going to solve your problems, but they will at least help level the playing field.
#16
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:28
When you get bored.
#17
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:34
QFT. Personally, I attribute my progression as a player to PUGing. Playing with a lobby of friends is fun for the convos more than anything but it makes it a bit too easy. Playing with randoms, however, puts you in near constant situations where you either adapt or you die. After doing this a while you are prepared for anything. My 2 cents anyways...Fair point but what will you do if you end up having to solo a wave because I can guarantee with 100% certainty that it will happen a couple times even more if yer playing with pugs.. It pays to learn some self sufficiency ya know?
- Caineghis2500 et Al Swearengen of Deadwood aiment ceci
#18
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:36
I attribute my progression as a player to PUGing. Playing with a lobby of friends is fun for the convos more than anything but it makes it a bit too easy. Playing with randoms, however, puts you in near constant situations where you either adapt or you die. After doing this a while you are prepared for anything. My 2 cents anyways...
I agree. Playing with friends was more for chill and joking around for me personally but if I wanted a more serious challenge and learning under desperation moments, I'd pug or just solo something crazy.
Edit* I attribute the bulk of my progression to soloing with some side of PUGing ![]()
- TMB903 et Al Swearengen of Deadwood aiment ceci
#19
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 03:44
Just PUG Platinum with a Jug , no consumables & an Omni-Blade mod
- 7twozero aime ceci
#20
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 04:29
You won't be ready for gold if you don't play it. Nor Platinum. It's the tiny game speed increase and you need to adapt to it. And I could only adapt by playing it. Of course kill speed helps tremendously - there'll always be that bit of "go faster" being required to handle it.
I'd say the capability to solo most of the waves in the current difficulty can be an indicator to step it up.
#21
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 04:49
I had a system back when I was new. If I could extract 3 times in a row on bronze then I'd move up to silver. If I could extract 3 times in a row on silver then I'd move up to gold. Etc, etc... I'd go back one difficulty for each failure.
As for general signs to look out for...
1. You eventually start relying more on right hand advantage and realize that the ability to stick to cover usually only exists to get you killed by banshees.
2. You start running for ammo boxes on instinct rather than having to stop and think about where they are.
3. You become more concerned about the wave 10 objective and extraction seems like a bonus rather than a goal. There's been times that we've intentionally wiped after the wave 10 objective rather than risk a disconnect.
4. One glance at your squad's formation gives you a pretty good idea of where the enemies will spawn at the start of a wave.
5. You learn how to "safely" approach instant-kill enemies without getting grabbed.
- Dalakaar, TMB903, Caineghis2500 et 1 autre aiment ceci
#22
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 04:59
1. You eventually start relying more on right hand advantage and realize that the ability to stick to cover usually only exists to get you killed by banshees.
True. But on the other hand, hard cover offers DR if you have to take the hit. It also seems that the DR reduces DoT damage after the fact (e.g. if you get warped by a banshee and then take cover).
- Salarian Master Race et afgncaap7 aiment ceci
#23
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 05:08
True. But on the other hand, hard cover offers DR if you have to take the hit. It also seems that the DR reduces DoT damage after the fact (e.g. if you get warped by a banshee and then take cover).
True. I'm just saying that you start relying on it less as you get more comfortable and you avoid it like the plague when a banshee gets close because you know that cover becomes 10x more magnetic when it's the absolute last thing you want to do at that moment.
- BloodBeforeTears et Arkhne aiment ceci
#24
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 05:16
When you find Bronze boring, go to Silver.
When you find Silver boring, go to Gold.
#25
Posté 26 septembre 2015 - 05:26
Op, if u solo bronze stop wasting time there, maybe your gold ready. DOont make the mistake to protect your teamates too much and spend a lot of time on silver.
If u need op setup to score 50-80 k on gold, use them. Or wait to see if 2 seasoned player are in the lobby (cant be sure though)
Dont spend hundreds of hours on silver like me ![]()
- MPApr2012 et m-99 saber aiment ceci





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