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If it flies, it diesÂ.
Date of registration
: May 30th 2012
Platform: PS4
Location: SURROUNDED BY FUCKING MOUNTAINS
Reputation modifier: 20
All these people encouraging griefing against mortar trucks.
Just because they're using a long range vehicle and supporting people from the backline doesn't mean they're useless.
They're basically mobile BL9s and when properly used definitely help break up defenses.
Unfortunately it seems people simply lump trucks together with backline snipers.
Quoted from "MsMuchLove"
I find majority of the complaints I hear about this game somehow never appear in my games.
If it flies, it diesÂ.
Date of registration
: Dec 14th 2014
Platform: PS3
Location: The Heart of Europe
Reputation modifier: 8
People are really getting unreasonably butthurt about indirect fire.
Often, people in that game dont get the possibility to counter it. Because the map does not offer the counter-vehicle, or the map doesnt allow a route to flank. Or because there are far too many players crammed into a small area to perform any tactical meaningful action. DICE map design right there.People are really getting unreasonably butthurt about indirect fire.
An indirect fire death is always very humiliating and there's nothing someone can do about it properly without dying first and having to switch gear.
I dont understand why its not obvious to you that getting hit on your head by surprise isnt fun and so is indirect fire no matter the density of it.
Yes, gameplay wise it makes sense to include them for gamemodes with frontlines and pushing back the enemy, but it certainly is a component which can severly damage the fun.
If it flies, it diesÂ.
Of course, this ignores the non-constant cross-sectional first moment of area across the chest as well as non-constant material properties of the boob; it would be difficult to perform a more detailed analysis (as in, I'd have to have a shape function AND I'd need to derive a function for elastic modulus as a function of lateral breast coordinate) but whatever. It's 2am and I'm lazy.
I always believed science should be very hands on experience.
You should also answer this question I had posed in that thread: Would you be willing to pay your surgeon more if he was going to use a chainsaw for the opening incision of surgery? Clearly using a chainsaw isn't truly suited for surgery but that doesn't really matter. If he's "skilled" enough to be able to use the wrong tools of the trade, he should be rewarded for that skill right?
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