Quitting Games In Events and BR
-
Someone explain the logic to this. I don’t play online that much because the people that do tend to be much better than me. That being said, I don’t get why anyone would quit an event or BR game when the it’s an elimination mode.
Like I’ll go up 2-0 in the first inning. Here comes the pause menu and then the blank has quit message. Or another game I was in earlier. They went up 2-0 in the first inning. I didn’t quit and came back to take the lead 4-2 in the bottom half of the inning. They of course quit. Seriously, I just came back from down 2. You obviously can do the same. Especially in BR when you’re facing similarly bad pitching.
-
BR and Events are totally different ball games.
Quitting in Events make sense to me especially if you are short on time. You need an X amount of wins in a week so why stay in a ball game you are down 5-0 in the first innings. Not impossible but odds are you aren't coming back.
Props to those though that finish put any game no matter what.
-
Events it’s more efficient. I don’t play BR but also don’t understand either
-
@htonsecurity5x said in Quitting Games In Events and BR:
Events it’s more efficient. I don’t play BR but also don’t understand either
Events I can understand more because it’s free. BR costs stubs.
-
@dewrock_psn said in Quitting Games In Events and BR:
@htonsecurity5x said in Quitting Games In Events and BR:
Events it’s more efficient. I don’t play BR but also don’t understand either
Events I can understand more because it’s free. BR costs stubs.
BR costs 1500 stubs, which is pocket change in the grand scheme of things. You can make more than that in a single flip on the market which could take less than 60 seconds. People redraft and toss those 1500 stubs down the toilet multiple times because they don't get the cards they want without even playing a single game.
I'm more likely to quit an event game than BR since there is no penalty to quitting, outside of needing to reset your lineup every time. It's a matter of using your time efficiently. If I only have X amount of time to play and my opponent is blowing me out early, I may tip my cap and quit out to get my win elsewhere. You're just trying to get to the end of the reward path in that mode as quickly as you can. No sense is wasting time in a lost cause.
Now for BR, I've found myself quitting far more often this year than I have in the past because of the program. Earlier todayI knocked out total bases, strikeouts, and Justin Wilson strikeouts within the same game. I wasn't thrilled with the makeup of my team and had lost a game in that run earlier, so I quit out so I could redraft and try to get new mission players.
-
I’ll quit out if I don’t like my team. I won’t auto redraft but if I don’t like my team I’ll go in with the mindset of looking for an easy win or 2. If the matchup doesn’t make me think it’s easy, I’ll quit and find another matchup knowing at the end of the day my lineup was bad and I’ll just redraft.
-