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Every Competitive Game Has Variation, And Rocket League Should Be No Different.

9 years ago by Chewytie in Academy

I have been seeing posts all over the place about how nonstandard maps are going to kill competitive Rocket League. Usually these people are citing that the differences in the maps reduce competitiveness of the maps or makes the game "unnecessarily hard."

This goes without saying, but all competitive games rely heavily on their players executing play in an positive and effective way, that's the core of every game but the concerns I'm hearing are all about variation.

Both of these claims are demonstrably incorrect, and maybe I'm just firing back at knee-jerk reactions to a change that will end up smoothing out over time, but I wanted to throw in my $.02.

Competitive games of any genre have variation built in as a part of what makes them good competitive games, all of this variation comes in one of four forms:

Environmental, Strategic, and Mechanical

Any well received, popular competitive game has all of these in one way or another. Some examples:

CS:GO, all players are equal from their ability to purchase guns, grenades, etc, but the maps are all different and open up different strategic routes of attack, some teams/players are better on some maps than others. Which makes the game feel more dynamic and gives you as a player a list of things you can work on becoming better at. So CS:GO relies heavily on Strategic and Environmental variation. League of Legends/MOBA's in general, every MOBA is based around one central map, but all the variety in these games come from the idea of team composition and strength's/weaknesses of your particular heroes/champions and their roles and abilities. So for the most part, MOBA's are relying on Strategic and Mechanical variation

Which brings me to Rocket League. From its core, rocket league relies almost solely on Execution, strategy (in the form of rotations and playmaking) also play a role but it is much more slight, for example having better strategy than the other team will not win the match if they outplay you at every stage.

Vehicles in Rocket League will never have vastly different stats from one another so the vehicles you use for a "team comp" or "team synergy" will not factor into the overall competitive landscape of the game.

So if the game had remained as one central map style the game would start to stagnate around players getting to their personal skill caps and there would be no progression therein.

Which leaves us with environmental variation. With the introduction of irregular maps This opens up a lot of doors for strategy and execution at every level. Maybe you focus on getting very good on Neo Tokyo and become one of the best at that map, you will have a decided advantage over people who may be better than you on an execution level. But you have the upper hand on the map that you've practiced on.

So with the commitment Psyonix has made to introducing irregular maps they are also committing to evolving Rocket League in a way that that keeps the core of rocket league intact without jeopardizing the potential of individual skill.

TL:DR: Psyonix is putting new, different maps into the rotation to keep the game from getting stale. And adding new, different maps is the only way that can happen. If you change anything else, you change what Rocket League is.

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PDubZ_BLIA

9 years ago
The true problem with the entire fanbase that disagrees with "irregular" arenas is the vast majority never played SARPBC cause if they did they would think the plain jane flat floored neglectfully created arenas were the irregular ones. Granted i dont care for wasteland but i didn't care for it on SARPBC either but Neo Tokyo aka revamped Cosmic is amazing for the competitively playlist because it brings back, for me at least, the actual full extent of the true nature of whicb Rocket Leagues predecessor had and makes rocket league that much Better for sticking a little to its roots as well as having genuine creativity... Theres my late $.02 have a good days RL'ers
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MoustacheRL

9 years ago
@19linus97 is right. In no other game are you FORCED to play a map which you don't like. At the very least, there is a voting system. People always want to cite an article done by this site which polled close to 100 people of high level play, and community members, which came out 80/20 in favor of irregular maps. Great, but 100 people isn't even a decent sample size when the player base exceeds 200,000 concurrent players at peak times.



It's not so much to me, about the fact that they're in the rotation at all, it's the fact that I don't have any way of NOT playing them. In ranked, and unranked, I will run into these maps, whether I like it or not. That's not fair to the people who don't like it. If people want to play it so bad, they should be able to go to labs. Leaving these maps in Labs, doesn't take away from the game. Putting them in, divides the player base. People don't want to play it, and they actively avoid it. I've said this time, and time again. You're forcing people to play a map(s) that they want no part of. If you're willing to lose a chunk of your base, every time you add in YET another irregular map. Be my guest.
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BloodPointTV

9 years ago
The difference though is that in CS:GO and League of Legends, you are not forced to play maps you don't like. The fact that everybody are forced to play wasteland and Neo Tokyo just gives many people a worse experience of the game and as far as I know there's not many people that enjoy wasteland on higher level, not even professional players.
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