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1 답변
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1 답변Not in this laggy ass game. Love destinys potential but they just cant seem to get a handle on it.
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5 답변All a high/low kdr signifies is that you are not being matched with people of the correct skill level. If you always fight with and aginist people of simular skill level your kdr should be around 0.75 and 1.25 (0.5 to 1.5 in the extreme ).
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10 답변
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작성자: TheCyo 1/11/2017 1:56:01 PMThe way skill based matchmaking works in Destiny it is basically worthless, because the system will strive to get you close to 1. The only way you have a high KD is: * You just created your 10th new character and abused the skill based matchmaking to inflate your KD * You are a year one player and still carry over your inflated and coddled KD from pre skillbased times * You run stacked teams to pubstomp * You KD farm in the non skill based matchmaking Trials (the good old farm 3 games and reset method) * You are on the upper end of the skill tree and the match making can not find equals (the only scenario where KD has meaning - but there are not that many Destiny players in this bracket)
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9 답변Come back to me when you're holding a 2.0+ with over 100,000 kills. Go ahead and don't pick me to be on your fireteam. ~[i]TheGreatNike[/i]
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1 답변
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8 답변I mean its a decent indicator for skill, if you die more than you kill you're probably not very good at crucible. That's completely okay though of course, plenty of people play for the PvE and not the PvP.
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18 답변작성자: Ant Heuser Kush 1/7/2017 7:05:57 PMUnless you're a pro gamer and you get paid to play... k/d doesn't matter. Yup, my k/d is shit, but I couldn't care less how you feel about me. I play to have fun. As long as I have fun, I don't care what you think.
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2 답변Honestly that's a personal question, do YOU or I care about k/d. If so great if not great
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1 답변[quote]Answer is no .[/quote] In the current state of the crucible, no it doesnt matter. Half of the gun battles, who wins them, are basically decided by rng.
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4 답변
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4 답변At times it does not, at times it does. From what I've seen it depends more on the map and the mode. My KDR sucks. It's not so much that I'm a bad player but that I'm just learning Crucible. Up until very recently if I went in to Crucible, it was simply to farm legendary marks or experience. Actually *playing* Crucible means learning the maps, best loadouts for situations, practicing new tactical maneuvers, etc. that really aren't part of the PvE skills set. I'm a better player than my <1 KDR. Partly for the above, but also because I'll take a death or 3 to help the team. If the rest of the group is going to put up with my learning curve, then I have no problem being a meat shield for the runner in Rift, getting killed to revive a better player in Skirmish, etc. And while I may be shy on kills, I do get a lot of assists. So I'm not exactly useless while I'm doing the "git gud" grind.
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1 답변
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130 답변
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4 답변작성자: Phat King Bing 1/8/2017 1:41:19 AMKd+A is a better assessment. Kd is for kill stealing whores who sit in the back and don't actually fight.
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1 답변
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1 답변Find me a .3 player and tell me you'd want them on your team. That should tell you if it matters
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작성자: RingersCheckmate 1/10/2017 1:19:41 AMI wouldn't say so. I imagine most people with KD And ELO requirements have requirements for their friends on social medias. They can't friend anyone with >500 friends, can't follow anyone above 1,000 followers, etc. It's a very bland stat that isn't very representative of actual skill, especially when the meta punishes people for using certain weapons. You can have a helluva sniper with no land beyond who is really accurate, but due to his high use of no land beyond his KD is less than those who use shotguns, pulse rifles, and other meta choices. Why so many people worship this number is baffling to me.