blaze
04-15-2011, 11:42 PM
1) Your Alias
Your Steam Community Page Link
Your IRC alias on Network
blaze
http://steamcommunity.com/id/-1
blaze
2) Location
British Columbia, Canada (West)
3) Class(es) You Mentor
I'm looking to mentor a scout/soldier/team that compete in ESEA, preferably mid to top open.
4) Competitive TF2 Experience (List current teams, leagues, etc., how long you've been playing competitive TF2)
I began playing TF2 back in STA 8v8 and began playing ESEA TF2 in Season 3. I've played on eMazing Gaming, Finesse Gaming, Exultance Gaming, and Area51 Gaming. I'm currently playing roam soldier in IM for washed up gaming.
5) Answer: "Why would you be a good mentor?"
I have some strategies that would easily help any team get their feet off the ground. I have the knowledge of timing and who needs to be doing what in certain situations.
6) Available Times to be Mentored (Please include days, times, and timezone.)
I'm pretty busy due to school and work. I can usually help on the weekdays from 5 pm est to 9 est~ as well as nights for weekdays and weekends.
7) Status (Put "AVAILABLE." Change to "UNAVAILABLE." once full or unavailable.)
Available
Important
Some things I want to throw out there before anyone asks me. You need to be able to take criticism, It's essential that you have an open mind when you're looking to receive help. I can't help anyone with an attitude problem or someone that gets frustrated about their game to the degree that they're screaming at their monitor and putting down their teammates. You're in ESEA Open. It's a stage of learning, not perfecting. Everyone on your team (including yourself) has things they need to work on. Blaming things on others during scrims or matches is just as easy as them turning around and blaming things on you. It's also important that you put forth the effort to getting better. You won't see many results if I just tell you strats and positioning and you don't practice them in scrims. Yes, in the beginning what I tell you may throw your game off a bit, but you'll get better the more you practice it.
I don't focus on teaching people how to aim. I have a few tricks that I can show you to give you an edge over your opponent in a 1v1 situation using movement, positioning, and timing. I can't teach you how to aim. That's a style you need to figure out for yourself either by MGEing or playing 5v5 SOAP DM. It's also important that YOU message me when you have a demo you want to go over or a question you want to ask me. I'm usually caught up in something and I don't have the time to message each one of my mentees to see if they have a new demo or just to check up on everyone. Some people think that if I don't message them I don't care or I'm not interested in helping. That's not the case. I'm usually always online and you can drop a message and ill try to get back to you as soon as possible. Feel free to ask to come in my team's mumble channel and watch us scrim anytime. We can try to answer any questions you have after the scrim.
Mentees:
Maik - ESEA Open Scout
Predecessor - ESEA Open Scout
Your Steam Community Page Link
Your IRC alias on Network
blaze
http://steamcommunity.com/id/-1
blaze
2) Location
British Columbia, Canada (West)
3) Class(es) You Mentor
I'm looking to mentor a scout/soldier/team that compete in ESEA, preferably mid to top open.
4) Competitive TF2 Experience (List current teams, leagues, etc., how long you've been playing competitive TF2)
I began playing TF2 back in STA 8v8 and began playing ESEA TF2 in Season 3. I've played on eMazing Gaming, Finesse Gaming, Exultance Gaming, and Area51 Gaming. I'm currently playing roam soldier in IM for washed up gaming.
5) Answer: "Why would you be a good mentor?"
I have some strategies that would easily help any team get their feet off the ground. I have the knowledge of timing and who needs to be doing what in certain situations.
6) Available Times to be Mentored (Please include days, times, and timezone.)
I'm pretty busy due to school and work. I can usually help on the weekdays from 5 pm est to 9 est~ as well as nights for weekdays and weekends.
7) Status (Put "AVAILABLE." Change to "UNAVAILABLE." once full or unavailable.)
Available
Important
Some things I want to throw out there before anyone asks me. You need to be able to take criticism, It's essential that you have an open mind when you're looking to receive help. I can't help anyone with an attitude problem or someone that gets frustrated about their game to the degree that they're screaming at their monitor and putting down their teammates. You're in ESEA Open. It's a stage of learning, not perfecting. Everyone on your team (including yourself) has things they need to work on. Blaming things on others during scrims or matches is just as easy as them turning around and blaming things on you. It's also important that you put forth the effort to getting better. You won't see many results if I just tell you strats and positioning and you don't practice them in scrims. Yes, in the beginning what I tell you may throw your game off a bit, but you'll get better the more you practice it.
I don't focus on teaching people how to aim. I have a few tricks that I can show you to give you an edge over your opponent in a 1v1 situation using movement, positioning, and timing. I can't teach you how to aim. That's a style you need to figure out for yourself either by MGEing or playing 5v5 SOAP DM. It's also important that YOU message me when you have a demo you want to go over or a question you want to ask me. I'm usually caught up in something and I don't have the time to message each one of my mentees to see if they have a new demo or just to check up on everyone. Some people think that if I don't message them I don't care or I'm not interested in helping. That's not the case. I'm usually always online and you can drop a message and ill try to get back to you as soon as possible. Feel free to ask to come in my team's mumble channel and watch us scrim anytime. We can try to answer any questions you have after the scrim.
Mentees:
Maik - ESEA Open Scout
Predecessor - ESEA Open Scout