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I personally think that overall, TF2 is approaching it's "Jumping the Shark" moment.

...

I've never liked this term, whoever came up with it just didn't like the episode of Happy Days that this was in. Happy Days still grew in popularity and ran for a long period after this episode (it wasn't even at it's mid point when this episode aired)

So although it's supposed to mean the show/game/etc. has reached it's peak, it doesn't for me.

I've never liked this term, whoever came up with it just didn't like the episode of Happy Days that this was in. Happy Days still grew in popularity and ran for a long period after this episode (it wasn't even at it's mid point when this episode aired)

So although it's supposed to mean the show/game/etc. has reached it's peak, it doesn't for me.

It doesn't have anything to do with popularity, though, and never has. It means "outlived its freshness." In other words, it's no longer unique, not what it once was, recycles ideas, etc. There are plenty of instances in television (most, I'd argue) where a program grows in popularity well after it's "jumped the shark."

I don't know that I'd go that far. Most of my loadouts aren't standard. Just from memory (the weapons with statistical differences):

- Scout -- Special Delivery set

- Medic -- Quick-Fix set

- Pyro -- Degreaser, Axtinguisher

- Heavy -- Tomislav, Killing Gloves of Running Urgently, Family Business

- Demo -- Scottish Resistance

- Spy -- Dead Ringer

- Engineer -- Frontier Justice, Gunslinger

- Soldier -- Black Box, Reserve Shooter, Equalizer/Disciplinary Action

Some of those are just minor changes, but some are pretty big (Gunslinger, Special Delivery, Black Box).

You're underselling yourself with the Scout set, SR and Black Box. The Scattergun is vastly superior if you can use it properly (I'm biased in this case anyway), the SR's playstyle isn't really as effective and the Black Box's +15 buff isn't really significant to outweigh the extra rocket.

That and the Original is pretty much the best thing ever.

No seriously, the Original should be the only weapon in the game.

...I love it a bit too much methinks.

Maybe unlocks just don't bother me that much anymore.

You're underselling yourself with the Scout set, SR and Black Box. The Scattergun is vastly superior if you can use it properly (I'm biased in this case anyway), the SR's playstyle isn't really as effective and the Black Box's +15 buff isn't really significant to outweigh the extra rocket.

That and the Original is pretty much the best thing ever.

No seriously, the Original should be the only weapon in the game.

...I love it a bit too much methinks.

Maybe unlocks just don't bother me that much anymore.

The Scout set is worth it, easily, for the +25 health and the distance it provides. Plus extinguishing teammates with your milk never gets old. I love taking out sentries from a distance with the Shortstop (which wouldn't really be feasible with the pistol). I'd agree that the Scattergun is, in general, much better, but the extra health makes up for it, easily.

As far as the Scottish Resistance: I will never understand why people prefer the standard Sticky to it. You get far more stickies, and you can defend multiple points at once. I've never found it to be ineffective. In fact, I've found it to be far more effective than the standard Sticky; there's always multiple entries to a CP or the Intel, and I literally can't even begin to count the number of times in a single game that both will be hit at the same time.

Black Box is just preference. I'm a good aim, so I don't think missing the extra rocket has ever put me in a situation where I'd be dead without it (especially when I get back the health I'd lose from the other free rockets while people shoot me during a reload).

The Scout set is worth it, easily, for the +25 health and the distance it provides. Plus extinguishing teammates with your milk never gets old. I love taking out sentries from a distance with the Shortstop (which wouldn't really be feasible with the pistol). I'd agree that the Scattergun is, in general, much better, but the extra health makes up for it, easily.

As far as the Scottish Resistance: I will never understand why people prefer the standard Sticky to it. You get far more stickies, and you can defend multiple points at once. I've never found it to be ineffective. In fact, I've found it to be far more effective than the standard Sticky; there's always multiple entries to a CP or the Intel, and I literally can't even begin to count the number of times in a single game that both will be hit at the same time.

Black Box is just preference. I'm a good aim, so I don't think missing the extra rocket has ever put me in a situation where I'd be dead without it (especially when I get back the health I'd lose from the other free rockets while people shoot me during a reload).

Eh, I disagree; the 25 health doesn't make up for the reduced effectiveness of the Shortstop in my opinion. The better you are with the Scattergun, the less attractive the Shortstop is.

The standard sticky launcher is preferred because no one really uses stickies to defend. A Demo is far more effective flinging pipes and stickies into enemies, rather than sticking (hurr) back and trapping.

RL-wise it's less about aim and more about overall damage output, this tends to become a bigger downside with more players or if the opposition has medics.

I was hoping the Original had the Quake "blip" hit sound. Turns out it didn't. Darn misleading Youtube video :(

If you mean the bleep from Quake 3, then you can have it if you get a wav file and link it with tf_dingaling_wav_override.

Eh, I disagree; the 25 health doesn't make up for the reduced effectiveness of the Shortstop in my opinion. The better you are with the Scattergun, the less attractive the Shortstop is.

The standard sticky launcher is preferred because no one really uses stickies to defend. A Demo is far more effective flinging pipes and stickies into enemies, rather than sticking (hurr) back and trapping.

RL-wise it's less about aim and more about overall damage output, this tends to become a bigger downside with more players or if the opposition has medics.

To each his own, but I will always utilize my SR for it's intended purpose. It's not even simply about defending your own intelligence; if you've just pushed the enemy back and are capturing a CP, you know where they're going to be coming from. Plus I have the Grenade Launcher for enemies coming at me. Never let me down so far.

So with the exception of stuff like the Equalizer for example, most people rolling non-standard loadouts are just kill-fodder.

I'd have to agree, I roll as follows:

Scout - all vanillla weapons

Soldier - vanilla (but strange) + equalizer

Pyro - degreaser + mailbox

Demoman - pure vanilla again

Heavy - standard minigun (though I'd probably use Tomislav if I had no strange minigun), Sandvich, Gloves of Running Urgently

Engineer - Vanilla wrench + shotgun, wrangler

Medic - uber / kritz, vanilla syringe gun and Amputator / Ubersaw

Sniper - Jarate, Vanilla Rifle / Huntsman, Tribalman's Shiv

Spy - Vanilla Knife, Cloak and Dagger or vanilla watch and enforcer

To each his own, but I will always utilize my SR for it's intended purpose. It's not even simply about defending your own intelligence; if you've just pushed the enemy back and are capturing a CP, you know where they're going to be coming from. Plus I have the Grenade Launcher for enemies coming at me. Never let me down so far.

That's the thing, I don't think classes really have a intended purpose; the demo is an offensive powerhouse, the engineer can be played offensively to great effect too, as can spy. There are a number of varied playstyles that can be -really- effective, provided you embrace them and practise.

I'd have to agree, I roll as follows:

Scout - all vanillla weapons

Soldier - vanilla (but strange) + equalizer

Pyro - degreaser + mailbox

Demoman - pure vanilla again

Heavy - standard minigun (though I'd probably use Tomislav if I had no strange minigun), Sandvich, Gloves of Running Urgently

Engineer - Vanilla wrench + shotgun, wrangler

Medic - uber / kritz, vanilla syringe gun and Amputator / Ubersaw

Sniper - Jarate, Vanilla Rifle / Huntsman, Tribalman's Shiv

Spy - Vanilla Knife, Cloak and Dagger or vanilla watch and enforcer

Yeah I'm pretty much the same. Except I roll with the pan/caber, engineer pistol, and DR for spy.

Did I mention I love the Original by the way? :whistle:

That's the thing, I don't think classes really have a intended purpose; the demo is an offensive powerhouse, the engineer can be played offensively to great effect too, as can spy. There are a number of varied playstyles that can be -really- effective, provided you embrace them and practise.

I think that, for the most part, the Demo and Engineer are going to be best utilized on defense. They're not going to be the classes you rely to charge at a location; they aren't really going to become that involved until other classes get there. Can I play them offensively and be effective? Sure, but I'd much rather play as a class that's actually going to have more use, such as the Scout, Soldier, Heavy, etc.

I think that, for the most part, the Demo and Engineer are going to be best utilized on defense. They're not going to be the classes you rely to charge at a location; they aren't really going to become that involved until other classes get there. Can I play them offensively and be effective? Sure, but I'd much rather play as a class that's actually going to have more use, such as the Scout, Soldier, Heavy, etc.

You're welcome to your opinion of course, but in regards to the Demoman - if you ever watch a competitive 6v6 match you'll see that Demo is in many cases the primary offensive class.

Demo has the benefit of having essentially two very powerful primary weapons, if you can use them and pull off stickyjumps - you can become pretty much a 1-man-army.

The following is under specific circumstances, but demonstrates the power of what a skilled demoman can do:

You're welcome to your opinion of course, but in regards to the Demoman - if you ever watch a competitive 6v6 match you'll see that Demo is in many cases the primary offensive class.

Demo has the benefit of having essentially two very powerful primary weapons, if you can use them and pull off stickyjumps - you can become pretty much a 1-man-army.

The following is under specific circumstances, but demonstrates the power of what a skilled demoman can do:

Sticky jumper + gernade launcher + Persian Persuader is a fun combo. :laugh: I miss the glitch when having the sticky jumper you took no damage from your own gernades, I used to jump to the battlements in 2Fort and just kill snipers with the gernade standing right next to them. I cant believe Valve let that glitch/bug go on for so long. They did a bad job with the fix. If you put down stickies and change to gernade or melee your stickies will kill you if you want to jump and if you shoot gernades around and switch to the sticky jumper you will take no damage from your gernades.

I agree with you that a good Demo can do some real damage on offensive. Detonating stickybombs in the air is the key.

Edit: Im not sure if he had the Persian Persuader on in the video, I just saw him get health and I thought it was from ammo (ammo = health with Persuader). I dont know if its first blood because i dont play that mode mostly CTF, Payload, and CP.

The weapons aren't really all that numerous when you think about it, most are minor stats variances and don't hold up to the default loadouts.

So with the exception of stuff like the Equalizer for example, most people rolling non-standard loadouts are just kill-fodder.

For the scout I really like the soda popper and the candy cane. lots of crits and nice health drops :). For the soldier I roll with the equalizer and the original and it seems very effective, and heavy I am a big fan of the tomislav.

You're welcome to your opinion of course, but in regards to the Demoman - if you ever watch a competitive 6v6 match you'll see that Demo is in many cases the primary offensive class.

Demo has the benefit of having essentially two very powerful primary weapons, if you can use them and pull off stickyjumps - you can become pretty much a 1-man-army.

The following is under specific circumstances, but demonstrates the power of what a skilled demoman can do:

Probably not the best example to utilize, given the map. Again, I'm aware that the Demo can be a suitable offensive class. Just that I think he's best utilized in a more defensive manner. And he doesn't do anything I'm (or he's, I'm sure) incapable of doing with the SR.

For the scout I really like the soda popper and the candy cane. lots of crits and nice health drops :). For the soldier I roll with the equalizer and the original and it seems very effective, and heavy I am a big fan of the tomislav.

The Soda Popper is certainly a nifty little unlock, and is even better with the ramp-up changes Valve made to it - but still isn't anywhere near as effective as a properly-applied Scattergun.

But eh, I'm biased towards the Scattergun anyway. After using it so much I've gotten pretty good with it, despire my "better" class being demoman/soldier.

Well, skill ceiling for the demoman is extremely high, a good demoman can take out any class in 1v1 combat. When played right it's the most powerful class in the game.

This * 1000.

I have a hell of a time trying to aim. Anyone know what's the best mouse sensitivity and acceleration for more precise and accurate aiming? Would it help in any way to purchase a gaming mouse, right now I am using a Wireless Microsoft mouse.

I have a hell of a time trying to aim. Anyone know what's the best mouse sensitivity and acceleration for more precise and accurate aiming? Would it help in any way to purchase a gaming mouse, right now I am using a Wireless Microsoft mouse.

There's your problem.

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    • Are you going to do performance benchmarks comparing all states? I'd be interested in seeing that in the next "part".
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These are essentially called P-States. If you are not familiar with them, Processor Power Management is done through Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) P-states and C-states. While P-states or performance pwoer states handle CPU voltage-frequency scaling, C-states deal with CPU sleep states so that some of the CPU functions, which are not necessary at that moment, can be disabled. The P-states and C-states work together to make the processor run more efficiently. It helps the OS and apps determine which cores can be parked and which should be boosted. Of course not every user is an enthusiast or knows the technicalities and integrities of how things like overclocking or undervolting work. Thankfully for them Windows itself offers something pretty cool, though it is hidden by default on all systems. By default, Windows only has two P-States, "Minimum Processor State" and "Maximum Processor State." However, this can be changed with a Registry trick to expand the options under a secret "Processor performance boost mode" dropdown. This essentially enables the HWP or hardware P-States available on a device, and these are not controlled just by the OS itself as the underlying hardware gets involved too. In total there are five Processor Performance Boost Mode profiles that control how Windows requests and allows CPU turbo/boost behavior under the different power policies. They are: Disabled: In this mode, processor boosting is effectively turned off. The CPU will avoid entering turbo or boost frequencies and instead operate closer to its base frequency ceiling. This can significantly reduce power consumption and heat output, but at the cost of reduced burst performance and responsiveness in short workloads. Enabled: This is the standard behavior where boost functionality is allowed under normal conditions. The processor can opportunistically increase frequency when workload demands it, balancing performance gains with power and thermal constraints as managed by the system. Aggressive: Aggressive mode favors performance more heavily, allowing the CPU to enter higher boost states more readily and sustain them longer. This should in theory improve responsiveness under bursty or heavy workloads but increases power draw and thermal output compared to the default enabled behavior. Efficient Enabled: This mode still allows boosting, but with a stronger bias toward energy efficiency. The system attempts to use boost more selectively, avoiding unnecessary frequency spikes when the performance gain is marginal. Efficient Aggressive: This is a hybrid approach where boost is still performance-responsive, but the system continuously weighs efficiency more heavily than in Aggressive mode. It aims to deliver noticeable performance improvements while reducing wasted power in less demanding scenarios. Here's how to enable the Processor performance boost mode: Open Registry Editor: Press Win+R, type regedit, and click OK. Go to: HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Power\PowerSettings\54533251-82be-4824-96c1-47b60b740d00\be337238-0d82-4146-a960-4f3749d470c7 (where HKLM stands for HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE_) Modify the value of Attributes from 1 to 2 (you can find modify option by right-clicking) After that, exit Registry, you should now be able to see the new "Processor performance boost mode" dropdown menu: As you can see there are now five new P-States or CPPC states or power profile available that help define the boost mode processor setting on your PC. Wrapping it up here's a quick run-down of the settings as defined by Microsoft itself. Setting Description Disabled The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is disabled. Collaborative Processor Performance Control (CPPC) behaviour is disabled. Enabled The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is enabled. 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