I think I learned the most from watching Oyassuu and Vadimdmish (who isn't playing CR actively anymore sadly). I was playing against the same decks as all the good 2.6 players but somehow they won and I lost. So I tried to find out exactly what they were doing differently and how they solved those situations that always overwhelmed me. The more you practice, the more comfortable and consistent you will get with these situations and in the end, that means that you will win more games :) So the key is to build up a consistency so that you win the good matchups (for example Bridgespam or most crazy midladder decks) very frequently and almost never lose them. Trying to win the bad matchups is also important but those are harder of course, so worry about them later 😅. A lot of matchups seem bad because they are hard to play but in reality, they are good and it's in your power to win them. Knowing what the best move or strategy is (from watching good players) and being able to execute that, those are the main points. Have fun :)
@@pineapple0008 I didn't get enough good games in that tournament to make a video out of them. Usually I only want to upload games that are interesting or special in some way :)
We need a long vid with both 2.6 in 2v2
What would you say is the key to reach the next level with 2.6 and get good finishes? How did you do it and became so good?
I think I learned the most from watching Oyassuu and Vadimdmish (who isn't playing CR actively anymore sadly). I was playing against the same decks as all the good 2.6 players but somehow they won and I lost. So I tried to find out exactly what they were doing differently and how they solved those situations that always overwhelmed me. The more you practice, the more comfortable and consistent you will get with these situations and in the end, that means that you will win more games :)
So the key is to build up a consistency so that you win the good matchups (for example Bridgespam or most crazy midladder decks) very frequently and almost never lose them. Trying to win the bad matchups is also important but those are harder of course, so worry about them later 😅. A lot of matchups seem bad because they are hard to play but in reality, they are good and it's in your power to win them. Knowing what the best move or strategy is (from watching good players) and being able to execute that, those are the main points. Have fun :)
what about the recent gt video?
@@pineapple0008 I didn't get enough good games in that tournament to make a video out of them. Usually I only want to upload games that are interesting or special in some way :)
Could you give me a friend seat please❤thank you