babo Wrote:I mean if you can't play the good champions well, why even bother trying the others?
im just trying to give some good advice to people here who constantly complain about how they cant get out of their tier and feel like they should be higher than they are.
In my experience I'd say it's much the opposite. At least in League, anyway. I probably wouldn't say the same about SC2, but then again I haven't payed much attention to it recently so I'd probably be wrong.
Look at Cloud9 and many the korean teams. They went from being unknowns and in financial distress (at least in Cloud9's case) to being some of the strongest teams in the world by employing "lower tier" champions and tactics. They did what other pro teams weren't doing and it's been done quite well.
This isn't Super Smash Bros where every champion falls under a strict tier. Every champion is good in different situations.
People were terrified of straying from the solo top/mid, jungle, and duo bot meta for the LONGEST time. And now you rarely see a professional match that doesn't.
And if you're a lower elo player trying to rise the ladder, what good will it do you to try and be something you're not? How far will that get you? The second I stopped trying to be a "good" player is when I found myself doing the best. In LoL, sticking to what you know and what you're good at goes much farther than trying to pretend you're knowledgeable about how powerful champions are compared to others.
Edit: Plus, I don't see how pro players can afford to try new things and other players can't. I'd think it would be the other way around. Pro players make a living off of doing well, other players have as much freedom as they want to try new things. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." If it's been rather broken for them in the past, why not try new things?