I've been planning on holding a Tetr.io beginner's tourney and this thing is what I exactly needed to explain spiking: slap two heavy clears for an attack, and if you can, preceded it by a combo of any length. I can use this both to coach them and also in my games. Thank you, Caboozled.
nice lecture! although just a small note that kaidan setups don't have to be on the sides of the matrix because even if it appears in the center of a 5-4 stack or any middle well stack it can still be set up :P
I’d like to ask how to prevent spikes. I can stop opponent from spiking at lower ranks, but seems hard to deal with when players start getting competent after SS rank.
Noice On the topic of STSD, it would have been better if you mentioned the Boomerang technique, which is aborting the first TSD with a J/L spin double. This can also be effective when counteracting the 1/10 situation of the T piece falling through. Although that being said, learning all spins is generally an advanced tech, so it makes sense you omitted that I guess.
CsQ_RandomRepository It’s a good fix that I briefly mentioned in the live lecture; I didn’t include it here as it is a fix that doesn’t yield a spike (the purpose of the lecture). I do agree that Boomerang is a useful tech, though.
no mention of b2b TSmini on the side (in a side 1 well like Kaidan/sprop) for 1-3 cheese into TSD-quad damn such an underrated setup that allows deferring the T spin to the next bag’s T so having an I piece in hold by then is basically guaranteed
@@CaboozledPie I usually don’t consider minis as wel but side 1well is very inflexible for t spin setups by forcing around minimum 5 pieces to set up a tsd- so setups that neither waste it on the stack nor force an early TSD are actually surprisingly good
there’s different shapes for the two different ones; normal t-spin singles are better as they send 2 + B2B Bonus lines (assuming no combo), while t-spin mini singles only send 0 + B2B Bonus (but they keep B2B)
10:05 is kinda messy- o piece would've been better instead of z, because then you can stack up the o, z, o, s, and then tsd -> j skim -> tetris for a spike :) I think I popped onto this lecture live but wasn't there the whole time; great tutorial though!
i like it when tetris tutorials come in the form of a power point presentation. it makes them feel educational
after watching this guide now i 50 spike every round consistently without 4 widing! great guide!
LOL
@Вероника Заглотова hi
@Вероника Заглотова hi nue
I have no words for how good this was. So much effort put in to a presentation and everything was understandable and thorough.
Thanks :)
I've been planning on holding a Tetr.io beginner's tourney and this thing is what I exactly needed to explain spiking: slap two heavy clears for an attack, and if you can, preceded it by a combo of any length.
I can use this both to coach them and also in my games. Thank you, Caboozled.
This helped me so much for understanding the game mechanics more as well as taking advantage of them. Nice vid.
5:18 you can actually send more by placing the 2 O's to the left, sending a quad, then doing a tss that lets you send another quad.
You can use L and J pieces in STSDs in case you need to cleanly get rid of an STSD. Also works when it's broken due to garbage
Yeah, I left the boomerang skim out of the video because I wanted to keep it somewhat succinct
3 years late but with the new allspin rule this actually sounds super useful
edit: nevermind it doesn't count
nice lecture! although just a small note that kaidan setups don't have to be on the sides of the matrix because even if it appears in the center of a 5-4 stack or any middle well stack it can still be set up :P
true, I just considered that the most useful place for them usually
6:12 cab are u ok
very nice lecture, would love to see more like this in the future
this video is amazing. helped me to understand more n see more setups
I’d like to ask how to prevent spikes. I can stop opponent from spiking at lower ranks, but seems hard to deal with when players start getting competent after SS rank.
sending cheese should prevent your opponents from spiking as much, but in reality in tetrio there’s no way to 100% prevent them
Noice
On the topic of STSD, it would have been better if you mentioned the Boomerang technique, which is aborting the first TSD with a J/L spin double. This can also be effective when counteracting the 1/10 situation of the T piece falling through. Although that being said, learning all spins is generally an advanced tech, so it makes sense you omitted that I guess.
CsQ_RandomRepository It’s a good fix that I briefly mentioned in the live lecture; I didn’t include it here as it is a fix that doesn’t yield a spike (the purpose of the lecture). I do agree that Boomerang is a useful tech, though.
no mention of b2b TSmini on the side (in a side 1 well like Kaidan/sprop) for 1-3 cheese into TSD-quad damn such an underrated setup that allows deferring the T spin to the next bag’s T so having an I piece in hold by then is basically guaranteed
mini tss to other stuff is a good method of preserving b2b but I didn’t consider it for spiking
you are right though it does help
@@CaboozledPie I usually don’t consider minis as wel but side 1well is very inflexible for t spin setups by forcing around minimum 5 pieces to set up a tsd- so setups that neither waste it on the stack nor force an early TSD are actually surprisingly good
Me:plays in custom game with stupid bonus and holds an I and wait for another I piece and casually I spin twice
I got to SS today because of this!
Thanks a bunch
Rumour has it the more times you watch this video, the more likely you are to win a UC…can’t say for sure but it is a great video regardless!
This video is very helpful! Thank you for making this guide :)
Amazing lecture!
"12 lines, which is super huge, and will leave your opponent scrambling for answers."
says the dpcer
caboozled is a qt
agree
who are these idot trolls scamers
do not trust
@@SilicosisNotBeta both these accounts were made a week ago lol
@@m200 moment
Very nice lecture!!
Tetriology student here, great video
i love you father caboozle
After watching this guide, I still can’t use my ipad to play tetr.io.
Caboozled needs to host a tourney where u can only send spikes
what if I don't send a spike
@@SilicosisNotBeta TF DID YOU JUST SAY
@@corvidconsumer did i stutter
why i couldnt find this 3 months ago
i already learned this from random yt comments section xd
good video wish i found earlier
So I noticed at 16:35 there are tspin singles and tspin mini singles. What's the difference?
there’s different shapes for the two different ones; normal t-spin singles are better as they send 2 + B2B Bonus lines (assuming no combo), while t-spin mini singles only send 0 + B2B Bonus (but they keep B2B)
minis are the ones that you flick into place right?
3:25 TWO more lines
Thanks for this, Im having trouble getting to Mid U
hi caboozl
hi smolfeesh
caboobiepie
very helpful video
Excellent video!
Thank you carboozled very cool
Why can't you have a line peice in hold then you double Tetris?
you can but it’s unlikely that will happen because the enemy can send you a lot of more garbage before you even get to another line piece
@@2karu I stack pretty fast and double Tetris works pretty well ss 22.5k tr rn
@@alvinchen9632 oh then idk u just built diff my guy
@@2karu I think I just play fast sprint pb is 34:599
when next vid
Splashhy hmmmmm
VERY HARD ENGLISH
LOL
@Sean Wu YEA
10:05 is kinda messy- o piece would've been better instead of z, because then you can stack up the o, z, o, s, and then tsd -> j skim -> tetris for a spike :)
I think I popped onto this lecture live but wasn't there the whole time; great tutorial though!