thanks for the fights brother good to see a og back and you should check out the discord bro a lot of info events and general chit chat with the other guys on there would be nice to see you there !!!!
Hey just saw your comment on one of my fighters about CnS. The style was implemented before my camp focus was decided. So if I used it was mainly for a bad match up switch. Though my theory on the style is that it requires wrestling and either sambo or judo with strength as its main right side stat, my reasoning for this is because its more of a power submission based style and from reading CnS descriptions on the internet it seems more of (Pro)Wrestling and combination of Sambo and Judo style.
i dont keep track of who ive challenged but ifi see you online ur getting a challenge. however il try to remember not to challenge that specific guy ty
hey man I have a question about the game, its like no matter what I do none of my fighters win in the harder organizations. Do you have any tips to help me win a bigger title
Hi bro¡ I tried it without boxing and lowered the rate of ko's. Now I want to try it again at least to give me a nice change from PL and Ipon. I suspect cond also helps.
no I think KB is part of the build but not as strong without boxing I'd say. Your right tho I don't think KB when it was implemented was solely used just for HKK so that's why I thought CS may be another especially when the description says it utilizes "kicks and punches". BTW on your list, focus is used by ippon,pib, as well as hkk builds just off the top of my head.
Using CS without boxing as an experiment to see if KB is one of it's stats. Seems that it is as I've had some success doing that. Probably needs boxing still but that guy is a undersized fighter so I'm just using as a test fighter really.
no I don't usually drop guys unless they are really shitty off the hop. I typically keep the small fighters as trainers and always keep guys who cut bigger, ideally 20 lbs or more. If they turn out the hiddens are shitty down the road I still keep them as fighters to get money. Sometimes those guys train others or I simply use them as guys to experiment with a different stat to try with my build. Guys can still win belts with crappy hiddens I just don't have much in terms of expectations of th
I also try to get my recruits to train enough to not get demolished right off the hop. It's incubating but not very much. At least then you'll know they can compete. After that you look at possible hiddens based on the first number of fight results
I always pick my fighters based on weight. Bigger the better. It doesn't always workout that they have good hiddens but weight is a big factor in this game and is something you can see right away. Saying that you won't know for sure if they will be decent until you fight them. Always try to cut your fighters as much as you can if they suck at cutting big weight I usually make them into trainers. I typically have many trainers on the go but only because I don't need money anymore.
Robbie "The Strongest Man Alive" Foster announced his retirement today. He will go down as one of the best fighters in Evolve MMA's history. Born with an unnatural strength and an uncanny work ethic, Robbie trained and forced his way to the top. Despite spending most of his career at MW, he made real waves at WW, which was his natural weight. He will be missed.
i realise ur not on often but would u like to rejoin mod? now that mkicks back the lag is a lot better so the games future looks brighter. u always have a home in mod :)
In my experience, sio is suspect at best against DB. GNP crushes DB, but sio is like 50/50. plus my guy has killer elbows, that wasnt his first stoppage
Thanks! It's ALL about finding the right training partner for the right guy. Forget single stat trainers. Starting from scratch, a guy who trains with a good 3.5 star partner will improve faster than with a so-so 4.5 star partner. I've tested that theory and proven it. In fact, I've had two guys both start from scratch and beat another guy to 4 stars who was training with a 4.5 star partner the whole time.
"Lord" Raiden Ashida has retired, he was the toughest fighter I have ever had. Never once getting KO'd and only one being submitted in 100 fights. He spent most of his time in EFC and was on the rise when he eventually retired. Reaching rank 101. He retired on CBVT's Black Monday
Ramon "The Canadien Prodigy" Peterson has retired as the 1st ever CBVT GLORY Champion, first ever CBVT to get ranked in the top 25 and the first to get a shot at the EFC title.
He retired on CBVT's Black Monday
Greg "Great" Scott has Retired a slow starter and reluctant to training himself, trained most of the guys in camp and eventually got to the top himself holding the Strikefest belt.
Well the things an alliance provides are:
-A private forum to communicate and consolidate valuable information gathered.
-The option of joining alliance based events such as the Alliance Wars tournaments.
-Tournaments within the alliance.
-Bragging rights for when your alliance does well or has good members.
Essentially you get nothing tangible from joining an alliance but it does create a little more reason to play and expands your gaming options a bit.
ahh its just another way to get fights and fight other people on the forums. sometimes they do alliance vs. alliance battles. but basically its just a way to keep active on the forums also. some people set up tournaments. for example right now there is Striking tourney going on right now
im just trying to start an alliance in the forums and even though i have some fights that was from a year ago when i didnt know what the hell i was doing. but my original point im trying to get 6 people together to start one. but all in all its cool if you dont want to i would understand
Firts...Love your Av. I fight regularly, not fanatically. I fight fair fights, not fights that are style or stat rapping fights. I fight a fight that I have at least a chance of winning, not a fight that is impossible to win. Personally, I seldom challenge unless I'm in the top fifteen or so. I let people challenge me. I am predominantly a Stand Up style camp but not opposed to grappling. I play the game as if it was a real life situation. I don't click accept just for the hell of it.
never toss the ones that can cut weight back, regardless of how old. I've had a bunch of 30yrs olds fight until their 44, then i've had a lot of 19 yrs olds retire at 26 (must be actors). gl
My advice for any starting camp is to keep it simple. Things are rough at the start simply because you don't have the stats or the equipment to train as efficiently as established camps - so train less stats. PG is a decent style to start with - but I would stay away from the GP switch until you get more equipment (at least 50k in the stats you train). SiO is a good counter to the GPer's and already has the core components built into your PG style (wrestling, strength).
My advice would be to pick a style, and train all of your fighters to that one style, to start with. The styles that you'll see the quickest results are: Power Locks. For PL train Sambo, strength, and wrestling. Pull Guard. Foe PG train JJ, Flex, strength, and wrestling. SIZE MATTERS. Your fighters can cut between 5-33 lbs off of their "screen weight"...and they may not do it every time.
BH MMA Camp