Played a few matches today and realized that Luna’s Howl is only dangerous if the person shooting it is good. Here’s are very different opponents I faced today with it.
Opponent 1: this person with Luna was a deadeye shot to the highest order. He stood ground, aimed his shots and repeatedly blew our heads off. You could tell that this person braved the fires of comp play and came thru the other side with his Luna’s Howl. He was calm, collected, and played like a person that has been battle tested. When engaged with this player I knew that I had to think and not fire unless I knew I could get the jump on them. Any missed shots on my part would lead to my death.
Opponent 2: I’m assuming this person paid for his Luna. This player was actually the polar opposite of opponent 1. The shots were all over the place and it seemed that they weren’t very comfortable using a hand cannon. Noticing this ,every time I saw this player I would rush in while they frantically shot at me. This usually ended with a couple shots before I closed in for a melee kill or quick shots from a AR.
Having these two opponents with Luna’s made me realize even tho that gun is good the person behind it is what really makes Luna dangerous. You can also use this same theory with any weapon in the game. I’ll happily go against a team of players using shotguns because they think it’s an easy kill. I’m not great in crucible but I do realize that observation of your opponents can help you battle them.
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3 RespuestasStrafing and vertical gameplay is the key to victory Not a 0.67 time to kill