tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5500664206436287151.post6435775236836186008..comments2022-11-16T06:52:20.275-08:00Comments on Battleground PvPer: AV Weekend RoundupLeynadhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01385988586552207235noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5500664206436287151.post-39788738538725699872010-01-15T10:23:38.144-08:002010-01-15T10:23:38.144-08:00Could not agree more with this view of the Horde z...Could not agree more with this view of the Horde zerg. I don't know what put it into the Horde's head to do this, but everyone was clamoring to do it. Around 25 people would actually group up and ride directly there, and it would seem to be going well at first: they'd ride right over the bridge that so often becomes a bottleneck for us and cap the Aid Station quite early. <br /><br />Of course, they hadn't capped any towers and most importantly graveyards on the way north. Any Horde attempting to were easily overtaken, and the map was soon blue except for Dun Baldar. The zerg would rush in and attempt Vann+4 without any rational reason for rushing, die nearly to a man and (surprise!) res in the cave. The few matches where they waited were almost worse, as they would yell at the struggling few to the south to "CAP TOWERS!!1" and "Why haven't u killd Bal scrubs?". It was as if the AFKavers were back, but seeking new intrigues had chosen a new cave to stand in uselessly and heckle their team. <br /><br />I also agree that defense is the right strategy for Horde these days. Pretending to do the Alliance zerg should have shown players exactly how Horde can defeat it: when players get accustomed to riding directly to a pve boss and winning, they can't react well to a concerted effort to stop them. In non-zerg matches we broke their momentum at Galv and worked our way up, capping everything, losing nothing and our reward was 2k honor.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com