As a uni student (teaching degree), your videos not only made me climb from plat to emerald, but improved my grades at uni and overall well-being. Thank you for providing quality content.
This is a great resource for when you already have the skill of not only looking at your minimap but also are capable of gathering relevant information quickly. I actually think that for most people, even until diamond, a drill to get better at that would be even more useful. Something like for the first game everyday, you play a normal game. And most champions have a breakpoint where they can clear the wave relatively quickly. So the moment you reach said breakpoint, your gameplan for the rest of the game is literally just the following: -crash your wave asap. -walk back to your turret into fog of war, this should in theory put pressure on the rest of the map, even though you're not doing anything. -answer the following questions: 1. What is the state of every wave on the map. 2. What allies are available on the top side of the map. 3. What allies are available on the bottom side of the map. 4. What enemies are on top side of the map. 5. What enemies are on the bottom side of the map. The only purpose of the drill is to make gathering that information a habit. It's not to win the actual game, although you can certainly still win the game. The benefit of the drill is so that you gather the fundamental data about the state of the map. Learning what you can do with that information can come later. But even just being aware of all of those things all the time will drastically improve your map awareness. This video feels like a skill you build on top of that skill, but most people lack the skill of actual map-awareness
I like how in the last example you point out that instead of elongating the lane you couldve taken the base at the same time quiyana was respawning. That wouldve essentially put you on the same tempo as her and keeps your lane frozen in an advantaged state. Great stuff
The crazy thing about this is no one thinks they're the Hwei until they actually go and look. "I would never do that" statements without any investigation is so common
Thank you! To answer your question, the way I see it is that tempo is a part of macro. For example, you use your understanding of tempo to make the right macro calls. You want to fight an objective? Make sure you are reset at a good time to be up tempo for the play. Are you down tempo for an objective? Try to trade on the other side of the map instead. Tempo is a tool to help you make the right decision.
how would i go about playing one tricking? its a thing everyone recommend for climbing and i just can't manage to do it, what i do is i one trick a character for about 100 or 200 games and then i just can't play it anymore and i have to switch, i believe that is the sole reason im stuck emerald, i also changed the role im playing 3 times since i've gotten emerald, i actually changed about 10 characters at this point, if i try to force myself to play only 1 character i stop playing league as a whole, i wonder how people can play 1 character for years
One tricking is not for everyone. It may be the most efficient learning path, but that is only true if you are the type of player that can play one champion for so long. I think it's very regular to go insane and want to swap after 100 games of a champion Even me being a one trick feels this. You have the play the same role, but play 2 champions at the same time is what I would recommend. Play one champion most of the time, and then if you start to want to swap, go to the second one and try going back and forth. That should at least be a good start
As a uni student (teaching degree), your videos not only made me climb from plat to emerald, but improved my grades at uni and overall well-being. Thank you for providing quality content.
High quality, concise, and with examples? This video is amazing, keep it up. Praying for your channel to blow up 🙏
Thank you so much 🙏
This is a great resource for when you already have the skill of not only looking at your minimap but also are capable of gathering relevant information quickly.
I actually think that for most people, even until diamond, a drill to get better at that would be even more useful.
Something like for the first game everyday, you play a normal game.
And most champions have a breakpoint where they can clear the wave relatively quickly.
So the moment you reach said breakpoint, your gameplan for the rest of the game is literally just the following:
-crash your wave asap.
-walk back to your turret into fog of war, this should in theory put pressure on the rest of the map, even though you're not doing anything.
-answer the following questions:
1. What is the state of every wave on the map.
2. What allies are available on the top side of the map.
3. What allies are available on the bottom side of the map.
4. What enemies are on top side of the map.
5. What enemies are on the bottom side of the map.
The only purpose of the drill is to make gathering that information a habit. It's not to win the actual game, although you can certainly still win the game.
The benefit of the drill is so that you gather the fundamental data about the state of the map.
Learning what you can do with that information can come later.
But even just being aware of all of those things all the time will drastically improve your map awareness.
This video feels like a skill you build on top of that skill, but most people lack the skill of actual map-awareness
been struggling to understand tempo this really cleared things up
I like how in the last example you point out that instead of elongating the lane you couldve taken the base at the same time quiyana was respawning. That wouldve essentially put you on the same tempo as her and keeps your lane frozen in an advantaged state. Great stuff
The crazy thing about this is no one thinks they're the Hwei until they actually go and look. "I would never do that" statements without any investigation is so common
10/10 video. Thanks for the top lane advice also, I wasn't expecting it, tbh
why am i only finding you now? i needed a guide as easy to understand as yours for long time
I love your videos keep it up
Which one do you say is more important, macro or tempo. Thank you for the high quality video!
Thank you!
To answer your question, the way I see it is that tempo is a part of macro. For example, you use your understanding of tempo to make the right macro calls. You want to fight an objective? Make sure you are reset at a good time to be up tempo for the play. Are you down tempo for an objective? Try to trade on the other side of the map instead. Tempo is a tool to help you make the right decision.
how would i go about playing one tricking? its a thing everyone recommend for climbing and i just can't manage to do it, what i do is i one trick a character for about 100 or 200 games and then i just can't play it anymore and i have to switch, i believe that is the sole reason im stuck emerald, i also changed the role im playing 3 times since i've gotten emerald, i actually changed about 10 characters at this point, if i try to force myself to play only 1 character i stop playing league as a whole, i wonder how people can play 1 character for years
One tricking is not for everyone. It may be the most efficient learning path, but that is only true if you are the type of player that can play one champion for so long. I think it's very regular to go insane and want to swap after 100 games of a champion
Even me being a one trick feels this.
You have the play the same role, but play 2 champions at the same time is what I would recommend. Play one champion most of the time, and then if you start to want to swap, go to the second one and try going back and forth. That should at least be a good start
@@Sentrial i'll try that
Lets get the algorithm going on this one boysss
Great video
generic comment for algorithm boost
first
you had tempo on this one
@@lollekompolle actual good one