Darkslay
Well-Known Member
So, the second installment in this "series" is finally here, i've been mainly busy with other projects but i think its time to do another one of these as i got a pretty good response in the last one, both analytically and progressively.
This is yet again, a very touchy subject in the community and not exclusively to FSD but sites like SRK and Tekken Zaibatsu, among others.
The reason for this is that, when speaking of this specifically, terms like "mashy" and "scrub" fall in this gray area as well, for better or for worse, it seems pretty much anyone in every community has their own interpretation of "respect" when it comes to fighting games.
Sometimes even an overconfident person can be called "disrespectful" but, why is that? if that person proved his/her superiority by beating you 2-0 is it correct to call them that? in my opinion this is a yes and a no. Sure you beat the other person convincingly, but then the question of "how did you beat him/her?" also raises, leaving far to many factors and variants to be taken into consideration.
There's "disrespecful" behaviours and "strategies" in every fighting game, lets face it, we can take our game, DOA, as an example. in DOA taking risks when punishing is considered "disrespectful", or someone who fishes for CHs too much, or someone who doesn't "respect" the other player's wake up, list goes on.
Looking at it from the other perspective, do you feel like you're disrespecting your opponent? or what if you're just responding to something you found "disrespectful" from the other player? again, far to many things to take into consideration.
Lets take a couple more examples, say you're playing a fairly new player and you notice he/she's not pubishing or doing it improperly, are you going to punish him/her everytime to send him/her a message? or are you going to let it slide just this once to give him/her a chance and encourage him/her? how about when someone drops a combo and the other player was clearly waiting for it so he/she could "mash" out of it? is that "disrespectul"? was he/she belittleing their opponent's skill so much that they were convinced he/she were gonna drop that combo?
All in all, another very interesting subject that is just that, subjective, as with last time i'm waiting to see what you guys think and what your input is on this "bad habit or legit strat", keep it civilized. Cheers.
This is yet again, a very touchy subject in the community and not exclusively to FSD but sites like SRK and Tekken Zaibatsu, among others.
The reason for this is that, when speaking of this specifically, terms like "mashy" and "scrub" fall in this gray area as well, for better or for worse, it seems pretty much anyone in every community has their own interpretation of "respect" when it comes to fighting games.
Sometimes even an overconfident person can be called "disrespectful" but, why is that? if that person proved his/her superiority by beating you 2-0 is it correct to call them that? in my opinion this is a yes and a no. Sure you beat the other person convincingly, but then the question of "how did you beat him/her?" also raises, leaving far to many factors and variants to be taken into consideration.
There's "disrespecful" behaviours and "strategies" in every fighting game, lets face it, we can take our game, DOA, as an example. in DOA taking risks when punishing is considered "disrespectful", or someone who fishes for CHs too much, or someone who doesn't "respect" the other player's wake up, list goes on.
Looking at it from the other perspective, do you feel like you're disrespecting your opponent? or what if you're just responding to something you found "disrespectful" from the other player? again, far to many things to take into consideration.
Lets take a couple more examples, say you're playing a fairly new player and you notice he/she's not pubishing or doing it improperly, are you going to punish him/her everytime to send him/her a message? or are you going to let it slide just this once to give him/her a chance and encourage him/her? how about when someone drops a combo and the other player was clearly waiting for it so he/she could "mash" out of it? is that "disrespectul"? was he/she belittleing their opponent's skill so much that they were convinced he/she were gonna drop that combo?
All in all, another very interesting subject that is just that, subjective, as with last time i'm waiting to see what you guys think and what your input is on this "bad habit or legit strat", keep it civilized. Cheers.