Playing (and Losing) in Competitive Games For Fun

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streamed June 20, 2024
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Пікірлер: 473

  • @dqflynn
    @dqflynn14 күн бұрын

    The soundbite of Sajam sarcastically saying "He's trying to WIN in a game where the objective is to WIN??" in an old vid lives rent-free in my head

  • @Alex-tq4jd

    @Alex-tq4jd

    14 күн бұрын

    need to find that soundbite...

  • @frobuddy8082

    @frobuddy8082

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Alex-tq4jdI need it bro

  • @ApexGale

    @ApexGale

    14 күн бұрын

    my favorite is "its a shooting game, not a fighting game"

  • @SwapGoTron

    @SwapGoTron

    10 күн бұрын

    Skill Based Matchmaking is Good, Actually (Again) - 4:18

  • @ethangonzalez9265

    @ethangonzalez9265

    8 күн бұрын

    The objective of the game is always to win. Doesnt mean you have to take it seriously or that winning has to be the players objective.

  • @michaelaeschbacher4648
    @michaelaeschbacher464814 күн бұрын

    This image was made by someone who thinks they're the person on the left, but is actually the person on the right.

  • @kite4803

    @kite4803

    14 күн бұрын

    You are so spot on😂😂 the logical fallacy of the image creation is astronomically laughable

  • @eebbaa5560

    @eebbaa5560

    14 күн бұрын

    many such cases. glad to see a take from someone who isn’t dickriding in this comments section for once

  • @deadfr0g

    @deadfr0g

    14 күн бұрын

    Is this about politics too because holy man you might still be spitting

  • @laxdemon13

    @laxdemon13

    14 күн бұрын

    Came here to post this sentiment but you did it much better than I could.

  • @syrelian

    @syrelian

    11 күн бұрын

    Almost every goddang time, yeah

  • @dyrr836
    @dyrr83614 күн бұрын

    "There should be a separate que for people like me with full time jobs" - famous last words from someone who is about to star in a Brian F clip.

  • @leubzo1436

    @leubzo1436

    14 күн бұрын

    Funny thing is, that queue already exists, it's the lower rank queues, but people's egos can't handle it

  • @zhoujo

    @zhoujo

    14 күн бұрын

    It’s called casual mode

  • @ectothermic

    @ectothermic

    14 күн бұрын

    @@zhoujo Casuals and the hub are for that.

  • @AnalogLanguage

    @AnalogLanguage

    14 күн бұрын

    There is a good amount of pros with day jobs. The reality is that these types complaining are just salty about things that require effort.

  • @mhan00

    @mhan00

    14 күн бұрын

    @@zhoujofor SF6, it’s actually better to play in ranked if you’re looking to get matched consistently to people around your skill level. BH is full of Master ranked players who don’t want to grind MR, and the level can go from “barely squeezed into Masters and would be a 1200 MR player” to 1800+ MR level play. There are also true beginners to intermediate players in there, but it would be harder to find them and keep playing them. Ranked basically guarantees you games against people similar to your skill once you’ve played enough to get to a level where you’re winning only about half of your games.

  • @GothMoth_exe
    @GothMoth_exe14 күн бұрын

    similarly to how you should just go "aw dang it" when you guess wrong, when you lose a game or a set you should just go "damn he's good"

  • @TidleFrat

    @TidleFrat

    14 күн бұрын

    I AM the "Aw dang it" sound bite whenever I play 😂

  • @AnalogLanguage

    @AnalogLanguage

    14 күн бұрын

    Bro locked in 😂 cant hate the hustle.

  • @CowboyTalksTooMuch

    @CowboyTalksTooMuch

    14 күн бұрын

    The "aw dangit" meme has legitimately improved my mental for the better. I am faaaaaaar less salty now making a wrong guess the moment the sound plays in my head lol

  • @Permafrost1

    @Permafrost1

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@CowboyTalksTooMuch I should try this lol

  • @awxangel6781

    @awxangel6781

    14 күн бұрын

    Some of Sajam's most subtle but positive mindset was when he gets hit by absolute bullshit and he just says out loud "ok, you got me" I tried doing it and it's super positive for mental, in my experience.

  • @geng6443
    @geng644314 күн бұрын

    If you lose you're stupid If you win you're a sweat

  • @killerkonnat

    @killerkonnat

    14 күн бұрын

    The crouch tech of ego defense.

  • @SuperEllis64

    @SuperEllis64

    13 күн бұрын

    The only acceptable skill level is my own.

  • @matrix3509
    @matrix350914 күн бұрын

    The "People that play for fun" is this terrible meme are the people who are typically the best at the game. They are the ones getting sweaty in training mode for hours at a time, they are the ones grinding ranked all day. If that wasn't fun for them, they wouldn't be doing it. Very few people can actually make a living playing competitive games, so most people are just playing for fun. The "toxic overcompetitive players" are typically the worst, least skilled players. They are the LowTierGods and the DSPs of the gaming world. They rage the most, they blame others for their own failings the most, etc. The thing that's shitty is that the scrub that made this meme is trying to cast himself as the "playing for fun" type of person, when he's clearly the other type, and he's assmad about it.

  • @zusty9589

    @zusty9589

    14 күн бұрын

    no one writes something like this if they're not dripping with sweat

  • @jellewijckmans4836

    @jellewijckmans4836

    14 күн бұрын

    Plenty of people play all sorts of games out of a sence of compulsion or even a weird sense of spite. The amount of people I have say they "play this for fun" while looking on edge and miserable every time the entire time is hugeand frankly kind of sad. They will pull out the most unfun bullshit to beat me and then look upset that they had to do unfun bullshit to beat me. Like there is some kind of demon compelling them agianst their will to seek victory at all costs all the while their human soul is taking emtotional damage. I'm not saying it is the majority of guys let alone the majority of guys that beat me but let's not pretend it's not a tragically common guy.

  • @matrix3509

    @matrix3509

    14 күн бұрын

    @@jellewijckmans4836 I always just assumed for these people, their sense of self-worth was tied to whether they are winning or not. If you put these people in any competitive setting, whether it be games, marathon running, baseball, soccer, whatever, they'll be the same miserable pile of rage they are in fighting games. There's something fundamentally broken with these people and how they see the world.

  • @gwen9939

    @gwen9939

    14 күн бұрын

    @@matrix3509 Maybe this is an unfair example because it's a festering pit of misery, but I have had so many people in League just straight up try to shame and belittle me when I said I was playing the game for fun. They'd take pride in the fact that they're not having fun, that _they_ are trying to get better and win at all costs like they think they're some anime protagonist. I think you're right that it's an ego/self-image thing, where they can't imagine not seeing themselves as this self-sacrificing tryhard, and I think it's really sad that they don't have anything else to hang their hat on than being like top 25% at a video game. Like not even good, just sort of OK.

  • @Bonemannes

    @Bonemannes

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@zusty9589fr bro I just write and read for fun what's their problem lol people that write or read more than 3 paragraphs are such sweats they should write in their sweatie-specific commment section!!!

  • @mariomcp
    @mariomcp14 күн бұрын

    When I first tried to get into fighting games seriously it was SF4. I played against a 'friend' who offered to help me learn and he spent the entire time laughing at me, making fun of me, winning and gloating and on the odd chance I hit him with someone he would complain. Made me pretty much give up on trying to play fighting games for a while and I only watched. Later on, when Strive came out, I tried again with a different friend who cultivated me. He hyped me up, taught me what I was doing wrong, showed me how to train, and encouraged me even when I lost. I had a lot of fun playing with him, even if he had an 85-90% winrate vs me. Now I got into SF6 on my own and found success (by my own standards) cause of what he taught me to do in Strive.

  • @anthonyrodriguez9232

    @anthonyrodriguez9232

    14 күн бұрын

    Beautiful, hope the friend that helped you is doing well. Love to see good people in the FGC.

  • @SeaAycheEyeEye

    @SeaAycheEyeEye

    14 күн бұрын

    This is why I love playing third strike with my roommate, he'll notice me struggling and give me tips on what I should do and we'll take a minute mid match to try it then get back to playing for real

  • @forestskilbred9461

    @forestskilbred9461

    14 күн бұрын

    We should have more people like the latter. There's better ways to learn.

  • @Freakattaker

    @Freakattaker

    14 күн бұрын

    Reminds me a bit of the person that got me into playing Soku and consequently taking a FG seriously for the first time. They were pretty similar where they'd have tons of fun and laugh at how silly their character is when they're winning, but complain the moment anything I did hit them and would say that im a "spammer". I remember they tried to get me into DNF too and would say stuff like "ah man it's great you just get it with how to do builds cuz everyone else I've tried teaching this game just screws it up". In hindsight I'm not surprised they prob didn't have many friends. It's a bit ironic too that they didn't like fighting online Soku players because they were "nerds", but that community was what fostered a very slow burn interest into FGs for me.

  • @davose8756
    @davose875614 күн бұрын

    The ago old problem of people not being ok with losing, and making up reasons to protect egos.

  • @caelan5301
    @caelan530114 күн бұрын

    The amount of people who one and done me after dying to me doing nothing but frame trapping them over and over again is staggering. The people who "play for fun" often times just don't like blocking and get mad when I press my buttons on them.

  • @azechase6597

    @azechase6597

    14 күн бұрын

    me a zangief not approaching at all, literally whole game all i do is anti air and grab when they get too close. Basically just zoning with gief all night bc people do the same shit forever.

  • @huevonesunltd

    @huevonesunltd

    14 күн бұрын

    They are getting mad at you for actually playing the game, people who lose like that are not even trying.

  • @Memanruler

    @Memanruler

    14 күн бұрын

    "I didn't pay 60 dollars to block"

  • @ShjadeNexayre

    @ShjadeNexayre

    14 күн бұрын

    @@azechase6597 Imagine approaching a stationary Gief on purpose. Couldn't be me. That's death right there.

  • @caelan5301

    @caelan5301

    13 күн бұрын

    @@ShjadeNexayre I approach far enough to hit with my longest button, and never any closer

  • @goldenspiral6008
    @goldenspiral600814 күн бұрын

    This is completely true. The truly toxic people are the guys who are obssesed with winning at anything they try, but don't want to put in the effort to be good at anything. Competitive players have fun learning and casual players find fun independently of winning or loosing. Those guys that complain about tryhards are the most toxic people in every multiplayer game.

  • @Danceofmasks

    @Danceofmasks

    14 күн бұрын

    That seems like a lot of words to say "DSP is a scrub"

  • @manzanito3652

    @manzanito3652

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Danceofmasks DSP is the blueprint for scrubs.

  • @lsfree3933

    @lsfree3933

    13 күн бұрын

    LTG

  • @bageltoo
    @bageltoo14 күн бұрын

    Another W for Skill Based Matchmaking

  • @z1u512

    @z1u512

    14 күн бұрын

    Like i genuinely dont understand why people hate sbmm. If you hate its just outing yourself as a skilless tryhard that only plays to pubstomp

  • @Thatonedude227

    @Thatonedude227

    14 күн бұрын

    @@z1u512I’m sorry but using “tryhard” in the comments of this video is incredibly funny

  • @SaddisticSpeller

    @SaddisticSpeller

    14 күн бұрын

    @@z1u512 Depends if there's both a competitive and a casual mode. If the option to play with SBMM is right there, then complaining about SBMM is a self report that they're mald that the rank it gives them is lower than they want it to be.

  • @fajarfarrel932

    @fajarfarrel932

    14 күн бұрын

    Agreed, i don't really get why people hate it either

  • @GS_CCC

    @GS_CCC

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@z1u512 they want to easily beat weak players to feel good. Bots aren't real so they won't do that. With sbmm they are going agains similar skill players and you need to learn more to win more.

  • @Sorrelhas
    @Sorrelhas14 күн бұрын

    On that note, if you're playing a game and nothing in it invites you to improve, don't feel bad about stopping You don't have to get good to have fun, the process of getting good itself should be fun

  • @BillytheEntertainer
    @BillytheEntertainer14 күн бұрын

    If this was a few years ago, before I played fighting games, I unironically would've agreed with this meme. I can't speak for everyone, but for me personally, I know my brain framing the other players as "toxic overcompetitive players" and myself as "person that plays for fun" was only to protect my ego from the fact that I REALLY wanted to win and I wasn't. It allowed me to protect my ego from the fact that I wasn't good at something I wanted to be good at. Somewhere along the way of Playing SF6, my mind shifted, and I became more interested in the learning process instead of winning. It makes the game much more enjoyable, since anything not going my way is an opportunity to try something new, instead of a excuse to spike a controller. Ironically, SF6 is also the game I am best at, and is probably the game I have sunk the most hours into. It's funny how that works.

  • @Rusty_Fruit

    @Rusty_Fruit

    14 күн бұрын

    Hey cool to see this perspective!

  • @ultracrazed2215
    @ultracrazed221514 күн бұрын

    My only response to people who complain that I'm only playing to win when they're only playing for fun is, "You can't do both?"

  • @greensky5328

    @greensky5328

    14 күн бұрын

    Improving and then winning is a big part of what makes fighting games, and most difficult or competitive games fun. Of course before you can improve you have to fail, and some folks just can't get past that.

  • @JohnXuandou
    @JohnXuandou14 күн бұрын

    I quoted this post where all I said was I don't understand why casuals play a competitive game against competitive players and then get mad when they're competitive, and that shit blew up with thousands of people trying their hardest to misunderstand what I said and pointing out that the picture has the word toxic in it. There's no comma, the toxic nature is the overcompetitiveness if we are reading the image with an above 5th grade reading level. People shouting slurs in pub chat aren't toxic because they're overcompetitive, they're just toxic, the competitiveness has nothing to do with it. In a competitive game, the competition is the point and what people do for fun. People have this weird idea that because they don't take things seriously that only their version of fun is the correct one.

  • @edfreak9001

    @edfreak9001

    14 күн бұрын

    and if they get backed into a corner it changes to "Why are you taking it so seriously it's just a silly meme for fun" for non-competitive people they sure do love their option selects

  • @Bloomfie3

    @Bloomfie3

    14 күн бұрын

    I saw you in the thread. It's crazy the mental leaps the replies were willing to make and the others that they refused to acknowledge.

  • @JameboHayabusa

    @JameboHayabusa

    14 күн бұрын

    Tbf were all closer for playing video games

  • @greensky5328

    @greensky5328

    14 күн бұрын

    Good on you for pointing out the distinction between the two. Playing to win and improve is not toxicity. Toxicity usually comes from insecurity/tilt (inability to take a loss or taking out negative emotions from a previous loss on someone when they finally win.). Leave it to twitter to take a slightly nuanced topic and misconstrew it in a way that makes a large group of people look bad lol. The rage bait is evolving.

  • @Bone8380

    @Bone8380

    14 күн бұрын

    Did you also quote the post where you admitted to driving drunk from EVO and were proud about it?

  • @owencmyk
    @owencmyk14 күн бұрын

    If your response to losing is something like "God he was so sweaty" or "He's such a tryhard" than you ARE the person on the right.

  • @No1Porkchop
    @No1Porkchop14 күн бұрын

    Can't wait for Sajam to make this video again 6 months from now.

  • @Gnolle082
    @Gnolle08214 күн бұрын

    Used to say stuff like this whenever I played Tekken. I realized at some point that I just hate playing tekken

  • @monkeyduhluffy
    @monkeyduhluffy14 күн бұрын

    idk who needs to hear this, but i promise if you just take a step back and give your opponent credit for the good things they do you will enjoy yourself SO much more. you’ll also probably have an easier time improving.

  • @greensky5328

    @greensky5328

    14 күн бұрын

    I've made it a habit at locals or when playing with friends to say "Nice jump-in" or "Clean punish". Totally improves the mood and makes playing, regardless of outcome, much more enjoyable.

  • @sirwilczek1813

    @sirwilczek1813

    14 күн бұрын

    Nah cause DR is dumb as hell and I hate the game designer at Capcom who thought of it specifically

  • @YabbyUra

    @YabbyUra

    13 күн бұрын

    Yes, but sometimes it’s good to take a break and not think about it in the moment if you’re having a really bad time. At least for me if I’m really tilted, “they’re so good” devolves into “they’re the same rank as me, why can’t I do the bare minimum?”

  • @monkeyduhluffy

    @monkeyduhluffy

    13 күн бұрын

    @@YabbyUra 100% absolutely, i've definitely been in the same spot. everyone gets frustrated/angry which is natural, and breaks (or even taking a longer time away from the game) helps clear my head and mitigate those feelings of self-defeat when they happen.

  • @motorcat99
    @motorcat9914 күн бұрын

    I remember seeing a comment on twitter soon after Tekken 8 came out that was something like "I just played through the story mode and all the character episodes! Loved the game! Can't wait for Tekken 9!". These games already have plenty of modes and systems for casual players to enjoy, because that's most of the people they're selling to. "Toxic overcompetitive players" are only gonna be in the ranked modes anyway

  • @Thatonedude227

    @Thatonedude227

    14 күн бұрын

    Based tweet

  • @slartymcguarty2954
    @slartymcguarty295414 күн бұрын

    I will tell my opponent after they beat me that i actually won because they are trying too hard and i just wasnt even trying

  • @heavyhauler426

    @heavyhauler426

    14 күн бұрын

    "For you, it was the biggest moment of your life. For me, it was a Tuesday."

  • @dyrr836

    @dyrr836

    14 күн бұрын

    Oro is that you?

  • @SatoruTheFifth

    @SatoruTheFifth

    14 күн бұрын

    “I was actually playing blindfolded with a USB steering wheel and my little brother was holding the controller for me.”

  • @chasepalumbo2929

    @chasepalumbo2929

    14 күн бұрын

    😂

  • @Thatonedude227
    @Thatonedude22714 күн бұрын

    Win game, feel nothing. Lose game, the voices are back.

  • @ryo-kai8587
    @ryo-kai858714 күн бұрын

    Like Sajam said, Battle Royale games are a perfect example of this. You go into every match NOT expecting to actually "win", but rather play as well as possible, feel skilled, pull off cool stuff and have an awesome game. Winning is one of those "Oh snap, we did it!" moments that happens every once in a while. Even when I get bodied in fighting games (and even if I get frustrated by it), I don't call someone a "sweat" or "tryhard" because we're all just trying our best and working to improve. Every time I see someone use those terms, I'm like "Oh, you mean someone trying to win in a competitive game :O?"

  • @KFP_ES2
    @KFP_ES214 күн бұрын

    I think the most fun I ever have with fighting games is when I have a really close match with someone, win or lose my brain just gets hit with a wave of "hell yeah, brother" when it all ends. It's also always really fun to play someone who's clearly way better and trying to slowly figure out ways to gain ground, regardless of whether you actually manage to win in the end or not.

  • @vyrde
    @vyrde14 күн бұрын

    Feels like this is most prevalent in games that force teamplay and team responsibility (e.g. MOBAs, team shooters) where there's always one guy more than willing to blame their teammates for the team's loss. Imagine you're just vibing and some schmuck on your team says you're not trying hard enough It's still the same mentality behind the toxic overcompetitive meme, that being people preoccupied with winning but looking to blame other factors than themselves for "being denied" of that win

  • @NihongoWakannai

    @NihongoWakannai

    14 күн бұрын

    Yeah this does apply more to team games with toxic teammates

  • @azechase6597

    @azechase6597

    14 күн бұрын

    This is why i turn off my game audio and listen to music when i play games like that. No mic, no chat just playing at night by myself listening to outkast

  • @Pokemonmovemaster

    @Pokemonmovemaster

    14 күн бұрын

    It happens in Fighting games too, they just blame the character they're fighting. They don't have to be the one fighting them either! Guys will literally come out of the woodwork every major for every game, look at the winner, and if it was a top tier say "Oh they didn't deserve the win. They picked the strong character that's easy to win with."

  • @Danceofmasks

    @Danceofmasks

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Pokemonmovemaster sure, but if you don't have voice coms, who cares how hard they're raging? they can plug or whatever if they're mad enough, but if I can't hear them, who cares?

  • @FloydianHate

    @FloydianHate

    14 күн бұрын

    you'll run into similar stuff in any fighting game that actually has voice chat. some people just need to be a dickhead no matter what and they'll always find a way, but the fewer tools they have the less common it is.

  • @bruhyote132
    @bruhyote13214 күн бұрын

    Yeah mentioning the chill people who are cracked at games minding their own business is so real. Aceu is a prime example of someone who plays like a complete demon in Apex and yet you tune into his streams and he’s like “haha that was sick” and just keeps it pushing like he didn’t just shred through half the lobby in two minutes 💀

  • @Vadered99
    @Vadered9914 күн бұрын

    "The people on the right don't really interact with the people on the left very often, because they'll be matched up against people of the same skill level." But Sajam, that's the problem. I'm toxic and overcompetitive and also bad.

  • @guanyu8539
    @guanyu853914 күн бұрын

    Back when you had to go to arcades to play fighting games there was a dude who lost all the time but would cheerfully keep putting his quarter up to enter the rotation to play again. He just loved MvC(and all the other fighting games we ran through) and enjoyed being there, watching and participating. He would ALWAYS congratulate you when you beat him and point out something that he thought you did really well during the fight. He is still my inspiration and I try to live his energy whenever I'm playing these days, whether I'm winning or losing.

  • @chopman5152
    @chopman515214 күн бұрын

    There's an inherent contradiction to this mentality that somehow never gets addressed by the other side when it comes up. If you're playing for fun, why do you care if you lose? If you can only have fun when you're winning, then *you* are the toxic competitive player ruining everyone's fun, actually.

  • @nyrva2876

    @nyrva2876

    13 күн бұрын

    Why would 'playing for fun' imply 'caring if you lose'? The contradiction is in your sentence. Anybody playing for fun doesn't care about winning or losing. It's about the experience. It's like a trip. The fun is in the trip itself, not the destination. When I played SF4 with my brother and got 25 losses in a row, I was having fun because the game is fun.

  • @malcovich_games

    @malcovich_games

    9 күн бұрын

    @@nyrva2876 "If you're playing for fun, why do you care if you lose?" Do read it again, it's a rhetorical question against the fake "for fun" players who are the target of this video.

  • @ethangonzalez9265

    @ethangonzalez9265

    8 күн бұрын

    I dont care if i lose. I care if the other player makes the game boring on purpose because they take it that seriously when I dont. Think Zoners (playing lame). Justin Wong says he loves zoning so much because he enjoys making people angry. If your version of fun is taking fun away from other people why would I want to fight you? (master zangief first season staying above 1500 MR btw)

  • @malcovich_games

    @malcovich_games

    8 күн бұрын

    @@ethangonzalez9265 You’re just proving the point of this video, don’t you think? Zoning takes away your options, you are taking away your own fun.

  • @ethangonzalez9265

    @ethangonzalez9265

    8 күн бұрын

    @@malcovich_games Im not choosing to have lame games, the person playing opposite me is. which isnt most people so i dont want to deprive myself of playing altogether.

  • @greensky5328
    @greensky532814 күн бұрын

    I think what Sajam said about toxicity not coming from a competitive additude but more inexperience in dealing with losses is very smart. I remember watching a GDC talk about character balance by a developer who worked on Playstation All Stars who mentioned that statistically most players feel like something new (or that they haven't fought much) is unfair/unbeatable unless they are winning 70%+ of the time. While it'll obviously going vary a lot person to person (and will definitely be lessened by experience) it's a very interesting notion, and quite telling if you consider what kind of players are the most likely to rage at a game, (No seasoned tournament player is going "This guy has no life!" when they lose.). Now ingame trash talk doesn't effect FGs much (unless you're offended by the rare teabagger) and trash talk from your teammates is non-existent; but for team based competitive games, my heart goes out there to all the people, especially new players, that can play league of legends solo queue (I feel for you junglers) or Overwatch ranked tank solo queue and take crap from their teammates without either being toxic themselves or muting chat/leaving. The image that sparked this video is quite ironic but I think it's worth considering the casual players of other genres and what they may percieve as a toxic or "overly competitive" additude as well, even if the sentiment is misguided towards the latter.

  • @sirwilczek1813

    @sirwilczek1813

    14 күн бұрын

    Nah cause unironically low rank Junglers in League would shrimply be more useful doing a two person top lane. They already steal my farm anyway, at least they wouldnt feed other lanes too

  • @dj_koen1265

    @dj_koen1265

    12 күн бұрын

    toxic teammates is part of why i will never play lol again and why i avoid teambased competitive games like the plague i wouldnt care if people dc'd mid match but the harassment you get from just playing is crazy

  • @greensky5328

    @greensky5328

    8 күн бұрын

    ⁠@@dj_koen1265I feel ya. I don't really care if my opponents talk trash but it hits different when it comes from someone you're supposed to be working with.

  • @buff00n3ry
    @buff00n3ry14 күн бұрын

    I am the Midwest drunkard mashing buttons in bracket in-between accepting shots of Malort from strangers. If I lose, I lose. If I muck up your bracket run? LOL LMAOOOO

  • @Dwykid1

    @Dwykid1

    14 күн бұрын

    Based as hell

  • @pedroscoponi4905

    @pedroscoponi4905

    14 күн бұрын

    Absolute royalty behavior.

  • @anthonyrodriguez9232

    @anthonyrodriguez9232

    14 күн бұрын

    This is the behavior I live for. Keep it up king.

  • @grumpydoodle8455

    @grumpydoodle8455

    14 күн бұрын

    My GOAT

  • @sirwilczek1813

    @sirwilczek1813

    14 күн бұрын

    I'd legit just off myself if you mucked up mine

  • @SatoruTheFifth
    @SatoruTheFifth14 күн бұрын

    My problem stems from me feeling like I’m fighting for my life, but my opponent isn’t thinking about anything either of us are doing and still winning, and it drives me up the wall on my bad days. I understand this isn’t the case, and even when I look back at replays my win/loss ratio vs players that make me feel that way are actually in my favor, but in the moment I just can’t control that frustration. It doesn’t happen often any more, but when it does I’m genuinely angry, and despite recognizing that I can’t stop playing because I feel like I have to prove I can beat whatever “dumb” thing I think my opponent is doing. I know the issue is with me, I just haven’t figured out how to work through it yet.

  • @Vanilla_Dpad

    @Vanilla_Dpad

    14 күн бұрын

    You're not alone friend, I'm in the exact same position of doing everything I can to try and control my frustration and outbursts. We'll get there!

  • @kingvelard

    @kingvelard

    14 күн бұрын

    random input from a stranger whos been there, you are entirely free to ignore and tell me to kick rocks but: framing situations where your opponent "isn't thinking" as moments where youre losing to something you "should be better than" isnt helpful(or true) sometimes a good decision is just a good decision even if you aren't actively considering its value, and on top of that just like sajam says in the video you cant read minds youve made up a guy in your head thats winning scenarios that youre putting a lot more thought into when chances are... you probably look like the guy who isn't thinking very hard to the other guy! like, you're probably thinking about the setups you've learned and the ideal spacing and all this other stuff but i know for me, all those thoughts of "i need to not lose here, i need my opponent to respect me and stop mashing like an ape, i want to stop losing to THAT move because i'm better than that" just create tunnel vision. so now i'm paying less attention to my overall gameplan and becoming easier to read because i'm kneejerk reacting to situations, i'm looking for "the right things to do" instead of keeping calm and trusting in the effectiveness of my gameplan. so then when rock inevitably beats scissors, it reinforces that feeling of "man, how am i losing to this mindless stuff" when in truth i'm losing because i'm way too distracted in my own head and not willing to respond to what my opponent is showing me. idk if any of this means anything or helps but that's what helped me sort my mental out

  • @SatoruTheFifth

    @SatoruTheFifth

    14 күн бұрын

    @@kingvelard the input is welcome, it’s why I left a comment about it. I’m not sure if your solution will help, but I’ll try relaxing and not focusing on specific things so hard. I understand that how I feel in the moment isn’t the truth, I just can’t help but be mad about it in the heat of it all, which is what I’m struggling with. It’s an impulsive feeling rather than my general frame of mind. Normally I’m just having a good time. There might be some more nuance to my issue that I just can’t recognize though, so I’m not 100% sure what my deal is.

  • @NightGhost-qs6yw

    @NightGhost-qs6yw

    14 күн бұрын

    I felt the same way for a long time. Whenever I went to me local and played against other people who played fox i thought they were so dumb but they still beat me it was frustrating. It wasn’t until just a couple nights ago when I attended that same local and fought a newer fox player. In that moment I saw myself in them, and I saw all the things my old opponents were doing that pissed me off I was playing that exact same way. Not really but the things I was doing I recall being the exact parts of the game plan I used to hate fighting against. The only thing that changed was I was far more knowledgeable on the game. Swapping positions with my old self really gave me a new perspective on competitive gaming as a whole.

  • @MarkoLomovic

    @MarkoLomovic

    14 күн бұрын

    Solution is very simple. Start analyzing stuff like that right away because there is probably lack of knowledge or experience in how to deal with what ever they are doing. Just remind your self that this is perfect learning opportunity and it doesn't matter even if you can't stop it just look at it and hit the lab. You know exactly why it is dumb but do not have ability or knowledge to stop it in a way you would expect, so it is important to be aware of this and use to your advantage instead of being pissed of. Channel the situation into positive one.

  • @hoagieland3716
    @hoagieland371614 күн бұрын

    I think there’s an important distinction that wasn’t mentioned. It’s not “better players” it’s “competitive players”. Generally I have found it absolutely true that a non-negligible portion of basically any game will actively shit on others not because they’re bad, but because they aren’t competitive. For example, if someone wants to play Smash Ultimate with items, more competitive players will give them a disgusted look as a “how could you even suggest such a thing”. And that also applies to pretty much anyone who doesn’t take whatever particular game seriously. It’s especially bad in team based games where you will actively see people shitting on their own teammates for not going for the win in games like Call of Duty

  • @patxs

    @patxs

    13 күн бұрын

    this is actually very true but leans more into the interpersonal interactions and discussions surrounding a game instead of gameplay (e.g. the smash example, that is only going to happen when you are playing with somebody for the first time and/or actively talking to them about the game) the cod example might be a game design issue, because most of the games don't have ranked modes (some do), and there's not actually that much incentive to try and win any individual match. there's no punishment for leaving, and a lot of people might be trying to grind out their challenges instead of playing the objective. maybe skill-based matchmaking solves this in many cases, but if that keeps happening, it might be time to pick a game that is more competitively friendly

  • @NANIKANSEIDORIFTO
    @NANIKANSEIDORIFTO14 күн бұрын

    I agree with the video in the scenario of you vs opponent but at the same time I think this image makes a lot more sense if you think of both players of the image being on the same team. I think it's fair to say most have experienced at least once that one guy on your team who just wants to win and flames everyone anytime something goes wrong.

  • @shmooters5599
    @shmooters559914 күн бұрын

    These are games, unless you are competing for money or prizes, priority #1 should always be to have fun. It don’t matter if to you that means playing serious or goofing off, as long as you are enjoying yourself you have completed the objective.

  • @DragonaxFilms
    @DragonaxFilms14 күн бұрын

    "Casual" players who complain about toxic competitive players are actually just pupating toxic competitive players who haven't hatched yet.

  • @Demonstormlord

    @Demonstormlord

    14 күн бұрын

    No, they are toxic competitive players, they're just bad.

  • @happycamperds9917
    @happycamperds991714 күн бұрын

    Somebody who self indentifies as a Timmy is rarely a Timmy.

  • @CloudCuckooCountry
    @CloudCuckooCountry14 күн бұрын

    "Why do my sweaty opponents care about winning so much?!?!" - guy who is mad because he lost

  • @baboogah
    @baboogah14 күн бұрын

    While I mostly agree with everything said here especially in fighting games, I definitely can see this and have experienced this in other more team based games. Where it's not me loosing that's making me upset, and it's not the other team being better that's annoying. But rather my one teammate who keeps team killing me, jumping in my face, and voting to kick me because they don't like how I play, or think that I haven't tried hard enough while we're playing in casual. That also is what "overcompetitive" means to me, it's fine to be upset with how your team performs in a competitive or even casual setting. It's just who you might be and how you enjoy and feel about things, even if it's not the best mindset for growth. Overcompetitive to me is when that want to win and agitation at failure to, consumes and controls their behaviors to an extent that it becomes self destroying. Screaming at teammates over the mic 99% of the time will not make them play better, but will usually make your chances of winning worse. It's when the competitive part of us hurts its own chances of winning.

  • @Vahrden
    @Vahrden14 күн бұрын

    I really appreciate the videos talking about topics likes this (the SBMM series comes to mind). They've helped me reevaluate my own mindset when playing competitive games and improved my overall enjoyment. I won't pretend that I don't still get salty sometimes, especially when I'm in the Battle Hub and wind up fighting a Master rank player (I'm Silver 3 lol, wtf is a combo?), but I always find myself coming back to these vids and reminding myself to find fun in the journey, rather than only finding joy in winning.

  • @lucashira337
    @lucashira33714 күн бұрын

    Ah, the old adage of "Everyone worse than me is a loser. Everyone better than me has no life".

  • @StoneEagle194
    @StoneEagle19414 күн бұрын

    Holy moly is that R Crumb for the thumbnail

  • @SillyGnome
    @SillyGnome14 күн бұрын

    I used to play a shit load of TF2 and my god the self proclaimed casuals in that game are some of the most toxic and elitist people I have ever come across in a player base. Whenever I heard “I’m playing the game like it was meant to be played” it was never from a try hard soldier main begging his medic for heals, it was ALWAYS and I mean ALWAYS from a hoovie giving out sandviches and using try hard like a slur whenever someone asked if they could help out the team

  • @pvprangergod4024

    @pvprangergod4024

    13 күн бұрын

    stay away from tf2, groomer

  • @yosha101
    @yosha10113 күн бұрын

    I'm so glad I already kinda went through a phase in a non-fighting game in which I had this exact mentality, the whole "The other team is just full of sweats and blah blah blah" Nowadays, I just enjoy myself! I pick the Biggest Big Body Grappler on the roster, and have the time of my life slowly inching toward my opponent across SEVERAL games!

  • @z1u512
    @z1u51214 күн бұрын

    This video just called out 99% of the rainbow six siege community

  • @justincha4973
    @justincha497310 күн бұрын

    Perfect explanation at its finest🤌

  • @psyonicpanda
    @psyonicpanda14 күн бұрын

    Need to send this every Dead By Daylight player.

  • @Zant5976
    @Zant597614 күн бұрын

    I've been on an extended break from fighting games mainly because I can't decide on a controller, but also because I've been stuck in a state in my mental where I want to play for fun but there's a deeply rooted part of me that desperately wants to win while doing so. Logically, I know that the only way that can happen is if I've learned enough to consistently play well and win, but I also lack the patience to get there in the first place. I've been trying to take a more measured approach with other competitive games, though, so we'll see how that develops when I inevitably go back.

  • @Bager_RBN
    @Bager_RBN14 күн бұрын

    I know one game where that image is correct, and it's ironically World of Warcraft PvE. A lot of people in parties/raids get SO MAD when their teammates don't put out the numbers they decide are appropriate, even in content that's easily cleared, and will petition to kick people from groups for not "pulling their weight". It's really bizarre.

  • @GerBessa

    @GerBessa

    14 күн бұрын

    Shoutout to "Why it's rude to suck at WoW" by Folding Ideas for a full breakdown of how it got there.

  • @Bager_RBN

    @Bager_RBN

    14 күн бұрын

    @@GerBessa Ooh, thanks for the tip, I'll check that one out. I've been a returning player running classic casually, and I've been perplexed as to why people get angry at other players in easily cleared heroic dungeons.

  • @FloydianHate
    @FloydianHate14 күн бұрын

    I think the focus here really oughta be on the word "toxic". in fact if you drop "overcompetitive" entirely, suddenly the meme becomes fully accurate in regard to almost any game with any kind of PVP.

  • @FloydianHate

    @FloydianHate

    14 күн бұрын

    anyway all games should be either strictly in-person or have zero ability for players to communicate with each other.

  • @blackestyang7528
    @blackestyang752814 күн бұрын

    > fixed an issue where losing players would option select "playing for fun"

  • @zegim
    @zegim14 күн бұрын

    That thumbnail is goated

  • @MJCKCA
    @MJCKCA14 күн бұрын

    Only case I feel this meme applies is with smash at parties. To specify, some people that are very competitive are not able to play outside of 1v1s, and some party players cannot accept when one person wins over and over

  • @thefgcsensei4482
    @thefgcsensei448214 күн бұрын

    Sajam said it already but its all about the mindset. I was recently feeling burned by newer fighting games and decided to pickup older games (3rd strike, Alpha 3, VS and +R) I had no experience at any of these games and most players have been at it for years. yet despite losing most matches (Badly too mind you), I was having way more fun because my mindset was about learning and trying stuff out rather than trying to optimise of hyper focus on strategies and shit

  • @iliakatster
    @iliakatster13 күн бұрын

    I don't think its about winning or losing, but about the ego damage that happens when you feel helpless. I think most people are fine losing when they feel they got to do something but the other person did better, even if they knew they had no shot of winning, at least they could get a lick in. But when it feels like every option just leads to more failure over and over, you see even the most calm people start to get tilted. It definitely happens more to casuals bc they lack critical information such as how to block, how to punish, and the opponent exploits that to create a one sided game and they just don't know what to do against it. Not to say its a problem w fighting games, its just the nature of playing a 1v1 competitive game that sometimes you just have to hold that feeling of humiliation, and some people deal with it by scrubposting.

  • @SSM24_

    @SSM24_

    11 күн бұрын

    This is definitely the essence of it for me, I think. It's not that I can't deal with losing, it's that I want to spend my time playing the game, like... actually having fun. And that feeling of "I couldn't do _anything_ that round" is just not that fun, especially if it happens often.

  • @pizzaeater8905

    @pizzaeater8905

    11 күн бұрын

    Honestly, I agree. I kind of have the same mindset.

  • @Raven-kn5ih
    @Raven-kn5ihКүн бұрын

    3:17 That's totally it. Which is why I love games like KoF where it gives you tiny victories as the match goes on (Getting to face an entirely new character feels like a big achievement even though you're really only taking 1/3 of their life bar) or anime fighters because just breaking a really good player's block string can be satisfying. I feel like fighting games give you things to be satisfied with besides a blanket victory it's just a matter of finding where those victories are

  • @pendent23
    @pendent2313 күн бұрын

    Sajam, my man. You’ve got some amazing cats. Just amazing. Big fan of the content too of course by goodness what good cats

  • @DemetriTheLast
    @DemetriTheLast14 күн бұрын

    @ the Elden Ring community 😂 I see this thought process constantly. Very well put 👌🏾

  • @CHex.
    @CHex.14 күн бұрын

    You know that gif of a guy writing and the letters and his arm start burning? That's Sajam in this vid.

  • @rockinrom1524
    @rockinrom152414 күн бұрын

    i finally got sf6 recently and after practicing for few days went into a casual match. only played against one dude who beat my butt well over 30 times but man was it fun. it was a mirror match so i got to learn in that long session. i started copying stuff they were doing to get out of situations or reminding me of mechanics i forgot about. it was just fun learning a whole new system and testing out what i could and couldn't do and seeing some of the possibilities of my main. think i only got 2 matches of the dude but it still felt good. i feel like people get caught up in only winning sure its great but was the match good? did you learn something? personally i play to win but also to do cool stuff with my character.

  • @ireallydontknow6709
    @ireallydontknow670912 күн бұрын

    Love the thumbnail, it's 100% accurate. When I first started playing street fighter all I wanted was to land the hardest combo in an online match and I would lose 80% of the time and would be salty and call the other guy tryhard, but now that I got way better at sf I'm chill even when I lose because I know what I'm doing

  • @harryshappers8702
    @harryshappers87028 күн бұрын

    alot of my friends behave like this and its really frustrating :(

  • @RealKengeki
    @RealKengeki14 күн бұрын

    I've recently been the bad player trying to get better but losing anyway and getting more and more frustrated, and I want help fixing that. I think the majority of the issue is mindset. It's not so much that I'm losing, but what I'm interpreting the loss to mean. I'm aware of that and yet I don't seem to be able to control it.

  • @AlluMan96

    @AlluMan96

    14 күн бұрын

    It's the longest road to travel in anything you want to take pride in. That painfully mediocre realm of "Intermediate", where you neither feel like you can excuse yourself as a beginner, yet also haven't achieved a quality that you can recognize in yourself. It really depends on your goals, what it is you actually want to achieve, but I can tell you right off the bat that the goal should never be only to winning. Playing only to win is a hollow place of unreasonable expectations and inevitable disappointments. Recognizing that is what helped me curb some of that mentality, anyway. As Daigo puts it in his book "The Will to Keep Winning", victory is only the results of you reaching your personal goals and not the goal in and of itself. So what is the goal then? That'll always be up to you to find out, but it's best done taking it one step at a time. How do I convert X situation into my good combos? How do I stop players from doing X and Y? How do I beat this crazy-strong move? How do I keep myself in my most advantageous position? How do I prevent my opponents from getting in said position? What am I bad at and need some practice in? Focusing in on these smaller accomplishments allows you to both have tangible objectives you can be proud of overcoming, while passively gaining you the knowledge and skills necessary to eventually win. It's also important to realise that not all good players become so the same way doing the same thing. If you're going to become good at fighting games, you're gonna need to figure out how you want to be good at them. To draw from personal example, I know alot of people that are absolute combo-monsters, but I never really liked doing long and elaborate combos for example, so honing those didn't really give me any satisfaction. Trying to get good by competing with them directly at that is thus fruitless, because I just don't have it in me to be good at that. Instead, I'd learn some simple, yet efficient combos with characters that could get big damage from lower execution and made it my goal to beat them at neutral and scrambles. It's not that I neglect learning combos and execution, but I narrowed my focus to the things I cared to get better at and only practice the less fun parts as much as I deem necessary. I hope any of that helped you find something to make losing feel a bit less bitter or at least give you something to help it go down.

  • @sirwilczek1813

    @sirwilczek1813

    14 күн бұрын

    Simply stop playing if you dont have fun as a new player, fun wont suddenly materialize out of thin air when you are "good"

  • @vaporsailulu
    @vaporsailulu14 күн бұрын

    moste, can we have the edited meme used for the thumbnail? i feel like it will be useful for whenever another person decides to start this drama again

  • @LadyMourne
    @LadyMourne14 күн бұрын

    How would you recommend changing your mindset? I mentioned on a very old video of yours where you talk about the toxic mindset of feeling like you are a bad player and that you are wasting peoples times. this is something I struggle with. beyond that Im also not having any fun in playing tekken anymore. If its something I have to change, then what do I have to change, what is the mindset I need to strive for. How do I have fun again alongside getting over my self-confidence issues when playing with others who are much much better than me?

  • @morenorristhannorris
    @morenorristhannorris13 күн бұрын

    My brother and I have played fighting games our whole lives and he has consistently been better than me, so most of our sets are like 95-2 but it's always a great time just doing cool shit, plus it gives me such a good avenue to get better.

  • @superbnns
    @superbnns14 күн бұрын

    Are you saying I DON'T have to place the entirety of my self worth on the outcome of my next match that I opted into?

  • @mokkorista
    @mokkorista14 күн бұрын

    "Is the EVO to you?" "It's not that serious." *rage*

  • @chaosoblivion5582
    @chaosoblivion558213 күн бұрын

    People can play competitive games for fun casually, especially nowadays with fighting games since they have good offline modes/content again, as well as competitively without going to tournaments/participating in online tournaments, depends on the person. Left fighting games plenty of times to play casual games and competitive (sometimes truly toxic) games like CSGO and League but I always return to them because it just scratches that itch for me where I can see the improvement in my own gameplay the more I play and learn and the games that I'm having with people become more fun, especially when my opponent's better than I am.

  • @purplepudding9384
    @purplepudding938414 күн бұрын

    I agree with everything cept the spawn camping bit. That's just not letting the other person have a chance to play the game. Especially in game modes where killing the enemy at spawn doesn't actually win the game and is just delaying the end to rub it in. Saying I'd justify it in my own mind if I was doing it doesn't apply because I wouldn't in the first place.

  • @Totally_not_Kelkel
    @Totally_not_Kelkel14 күн бұрын

    I remember playing tekken 7. I played it for fun with chloe (because cute) and didnt know any fighting game theory except about punish and high/mid/lows. I somehow climbed to brawler rank and I had fun playing. After quitting the game after a session however I got alot of hate comments on my steam profile about how I was a spammer and that I was a horrible player. It was the first time people went to the length to hate on my steam profile, and it really killed my enjoyment for the game. I never played that game afterwards. Saying that the people who complain are bad doesnt make their prevalence in fighting games any less prevalent, and it does turn off new players that would have liked the game otherwise.

  • @pkspadoosh5275
    @pkspadoosh527514 күн бұрын

    Spitting straight facts as always

  • @BacchusGames
    @BacchusGames14 күн бұрын

    0:15 there are Taco Bell fighting games???

  • @dectilon
    @dectilon14 күн бұрын

    There's a third type of player that I don't entirely understand that I ran into once in League. Some friends had been mumbling about maybe getting back into it, so I decided to load it up and play a bot match to warm up in case we got a chance to pull a whole group together. I just played a stupid gimmick AP Soraka. Would never work in a real game of course, but it was against bots; anything works. But then some guy on the team got super mad about it, started typing in caps about how I'll never go anywhere and started listing the correct items for Soraka. The guy had already died to towers several times, even before they started typing. What was going on with them? They clearly weren't competitive, so what were they exactly?

  • @dj_koen1265

    @dj_koen1265

    12 күн бұрын

    yeah i remember a month or so ago thinking why not run a normal game again to see if it can be fun? then got harassed by my teammates all game despite doing my best and not even playing that badly yet they all blamed me because they were dying to the enemy jungler over and over again after that i uninstalled the game again, i tend to avoid teambased games in general because of stuff like that

  • @Ragness10
    @Ragness1014 күн бұрын

    See, my first thought for that image was Dark Souls

  • @neonaofumi5572
    @neonaofumi557214 күн бұрын

    You know nowadays I play games like Strive for the joy of learning. But that can carry me so far before I encounter army of stronger players at floor 10 and make me feel insecure afterwards (especially after getting hit by full charge dust repeatedly). I usually forget about it quickly, and I do believe I'm improving. But failing the Celestial challenge and going back and forth between floor 7 and 10 for 2 years makes me feel less enthusiastic about the game.

  • @The_Houseman
    @The_Houseman14 күн бұрын

    Where I can absolutely see this happening is queueing in team games without friends And the solution to that is: queue with friends

  • @dj_koen1265

    @dj_koen1265

    12 күн бұрын

    yeah when you play a teamgame and you are just trying to play and your team just keeps harassing you because you are "bad" then this meme is pretty accurate

  • @Neuvost
    @Neuvost14 күн бұрын

    preach

  • @SESauvie
    @SESauvie14 күн бұрын

    Mindset is such a massive and unexpected part of falling in love with the fighting game genre. Also, just knowing when you don't want to play something and just want to win at something is a great step. I was not fond of SFV but I tried to like it for years and it made me furious, usually even if I won. Meanwhile I would get destroyed in MKX or Guilty Gear or even Marvel infinite and because I enjoyed the core game at play I could take things from losses and I could still be having a blast going 0-20 against people that were juuuuust a bit too much for me at the time.

  • @threedee5831
    @threedee583114 күн бұрын

    Spittin facts as usual

  • @rogerlegrow-cormier7197
    @rogerlegrow-cormier719714 күн бұрын

    I think there is also 2 parts to this kinda meme or mindset. I think people also apply the "Toxic Over competitive players" label to anyone playing with the goal of intentionally pissing other players off. Im not referring to just being good. Im referring to the "will use any in-game method to act smug and gloat over everything" type of players. The ones who find an exploit that can hold a game match hostage and load into games repeatedly with the sole goal of abusing it to ruin the other people's day.

  • @mattb6616
    @mattb661614 күн бұрын

    Lmao bro the R. Crumb thumbnail

  • @ScarletMimic
    @ScarletMimic14 күн бұрын

    The five-second cat clips are what keep me coming back

  • @saxmanmel
    @saxmanmel14 күн бұрын

    Once again, Sajam continues to be the voice of reason within a toxic echo chamber.

  • @blargh559
    @blargh55914 күн бұрын

    I don't mind losing to someone clearly better than me, but I do dislike bad sportsmanship like getting a voicememo from your opponent on Xbox Live telling you to kill yourself for your choice of character even though they steamrolled your ass

  • @cuttaman8657
    @cuttaman865714 күн бұрын

    I would say this image applies to people that are the first to queue in weekly for fun game modes. Reminds me of the people that google the best recipe in hearthstone weekly casual queues.

  • @TheAciditty
    @TheAciditty14 күн бұрын

    I wonder if a mod that changes the text and audio for you lose/defeat to "Good effort we are all winners here" would be popular.

  • @SourMoonBlues
    @SourMoonBlues14 күн бұрын

    Look man I'm just here for the cats.

  • @jsj0520
    @jsj052014 күн бұрын

    I remember complaining about “sweats” a lot when I was a teenager. Now I’m 24 and I agree with this entire video, I still get into that mindset every once in a while but I’ve gotten better at calling myself out when I do. It’s such an ass backwards thought process. “Oh I’m playing for fun, but if you win that means you’re a sweat. If I win then I’m just having fun”. These people think they are entitled to an easy match, that it should be served to them on a silver platter. And the moment there is any resistance they act like they’ve had a stick shoved up their ass for the entire day.

  • @hummussandwhich9463
    @hummussandwhich946314 күн бұрын

    Does anybody know how to get jamie level 3 launcher, I can’t figure it out for the life of me

  • @Mage_Nichlas_
    @Mage_Nichlas_14 күн бұрын

    At least in fighting games your Rank means something relative to your skill level when being matched up with other people. In card games like Yugioh Master Duel, Bronze Player number 865 can and likely will be playing card for card a Deck that is incredibly overpowering for someone who is trying to screw around or someone new who is actually Bronze Rank. Not only that, Casual Duels is literally either Ranked 2.0 with the same Decks 95% of the time and the rest *MIGHT* be some experimental builds or somebody who is learning the game and hasn't learned what makes a card valuable to run for them and it actually do something.

  • @japanimationman4442
    @japanimationman444214 күн бұрын

    In Strive, I, a simple floor seven filthy casual, would always play celestial matches in the park. I would usually loose 0-20, but sometimes I'd get a lucky hit on a Chipp player a sneak out a win. And I always had a great time.

  • @DirtyOldmanOG
    @DirtyOldmanOG14 күн бұрын

    It kinda do be people in the middle. I see it sometimes in battle lounge. The person who wins, complains about how the person who loses plays. It’s probably frustrating but you won.

  • @kilianconn5091
    @kilianconn509114 күн бұрын

    The weak fear the strong

  • @stealth3122
    @stealth312214 күн бұрын

    sajam so real frfr

  • @hollowknight4630
    @hollowknight463013 күн бұрын

    As much as I agree with this sentiment for most games, dead by daylight’s unique 1 v 4 creates a very toxic and evil group of players who form “bully squads” where their entire objective is to bully the killer into quitting

  • @kaleidoslug7777
    @kaleidoslug777714 күн бұрын

    I just wanna win man. Whether or not I'm serious about the game at all, I've never played a game and *not* tried to win. I don't get upset if I lose but I think the idea of playing without the objective to win and improve is so strange. If I didn't wanna win at a fighting game I wouldn't be blocking on wakeup or doing combos and at that point why even play at all?

  • @MirvDingle
    @MirvDingle14 күн бұрын

    The only part I could agree with is that it can be boring when people are using the same weapon, character, etc. This is immediately null if you are playing in a competitive mode

  • @z1u512

    @z1u512

    14 күн бұрын

    Genuinely fuck people that play shit like snake eyes in fucking casual yugioh

  • @KibaKitsune
    @KibaKitsune14 күн бұрын

    I'm bookmarking this video for later because Sajam is spitting the truth in every thing he says here.

  • @SaintSalted
    @SaintSalted14 күн бұрын

    this is a mindset im trapped in sadly, i was very high ranked in KI and i always expect to be as good at other games as i was in KI, which obviously doesn't go well for me mentally

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