Hey there buddy - so offensive pressure against really good teams can be difficult. In high level comp matches - the front line usually is a fist fight, both sides exchanging blows with no real ground gained. Some teams may get pushed back a bit but they usually rebound and reestablish the line. Then when it comes to sneaking around and flanking their cap point - they usually will have really good defensive minded people out on the perimeter stopping such probes. SOMETIMES you can get lucky and somebody can sneak behind the lines and get a red zone garry up close to their point, but it's rare I'd say. In competitive matches, usually the main breakthrough occurs when one side has a armor advantage (one sides tanks is dominating the other sides tanks) - so then the tanks can push up freely and support the infantry by switching to HE shells and blasting the hell out of enemy positions. In my experience that's probably the most common "big push method" you'll see.
GG what an epic nail biter right up to the last 2:00 minutes
@@truefactjack it was heart wrenching to watch again when uploading the vod. So close
that ending was awesome! Keep up the vids!
Got plenty more to come buddy !
Tough one, controlling during most of match only to lose last few seconds. We’ve all been there. GG
Yea it was a brutal last minute loss for sure
notice how important gettings supplys out is - he is mutli tasking -
Why no offensive pressure?
Hey there buddy - so offensive pressure against really good teams can be difficult. In high level comp matches - the front line usually is a fist fight, both sides exchanging blows with no real ground gained. Some teams may get pushed back a bit but they usually rebound and reestablish the line.
Then when it comes to sneaking around and flanking their cap point - they usually will have really good defensive minded people out on the perimeter stopping such probes.
SOMETIMES you can get lucky and somebody can sneak behind the lines and get a red zone garry up close to their point, but it's rare I'd say.
In competitive matches, usually the main breakthrough occurs when one side has a armor advantage (one sides tanks is dominating the other sides tanks) - so then the tanks can push up freely and support the infantry by switching to HE shells and blasting the hell out of enemy positions. In my experience that's probably the most common "big push method" you'll see.
way to much chatter