F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming R6S community too toxic

R6S community too toxic

R6S community too toxic

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WPaige
Senior Member
377
02-25-2024, 09:19 PM
#21
I want to mute voice and chat, but then I won’t get enough info from my team, which will be a problem. But I can’t stop their S*it talks.
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WPaige
02-25-2024, 09:19 PM #21

I want to mute voice and chat, but then I won’t get enough info from my team, which will be a problem. But I can’t stop their S*it talks.

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Dianthiel
Junior Member
15
02-27-2024, 12:59 AM
#22
Ahahaha, so you're suggesting that if you lose because your teammates aren't meeting their expectations, you should simply accept it and blame yourself instead of acknowledging their lack of effort?
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Dianthiel
02-27-2024, 12:59 AM #22

Ahahaha, so you're suggesting that if you lose because your teammates aren't meeting their expectations, you should simply accept it and blame yourself instead of acknowledging their lack of effort?

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JavaCatX
Member
99
02-27-2024, 01:56 AM
#23
No, you're being too confident and not giving your teammates enough credit for their abilities.
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JavaCatX
02-27-2024, 01:56 AM #23

No, you're being too confident and not giving your teammates enough credit for their abilities.

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WizardryGamer
Junior Member
33
03-14-2024, 11:18 AM
#24
Yes, you'll notice their mistakes too, and it will probably influence you since we're emotional beings. I think it's important to accept this inevitability. Focus on what others overlooked and consider how you can prevent or correct it. You're not alone in making errors—acknowledge them as part of the process. Keep your composure; losing it will hurt your performance. If you truly want to succeed, try to persist each time. As I said before, begin by giving clear feedback. Instead of harsh criticism, offer specific suggestions like "Their jungler started on x side and you had no wards, please pay more attention next time" or "He was on A and on this map; to rotate to B as fast as he could, he should have taken route X." Remember, it's about learning. It will loop back if you stay focused and avoid bias.
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WizardryGamer
03-14-2024, 11:18 AM #24

Yes, you'll notice their mistakes too, and it will probably influence you since we're emotional beings. I think it's important to accept this inevitability. Focus on what others overlooked and consider how you can prevent or correct it. You're not alone in making errors—acknowledge them as part of the process. Keep your composure; losing it will hurt your performance. If you truly want to succeed, try to persist each time. As I said before, begin by giving clear feedback. Instead of harsh criticism, offer specific suggestions like "Their jungler started on x side and you had no wards, please pay more attention next time" or "He was on A and on this map; to rotate to B as fast as he could, he should have taken route X." Remember, it's about learning. It will loop back if you stay focused and avoid bias.

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Zikblackniggg
Member
145
03-15-2024, 07:09 PM
#25
If it's not a contest, toxicity usually fades away.
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Zikblackniggg
03-15-2024, 07:09 PM #25

If it's not a contest, toxicity usually fades away.

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