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New to this place at the time of making this thread, so I figured I'd introduce myself while also asking a question I want to ask (and sorry for getting rambly, I do that a lot). So anyway I fully admit I am most definitely a newbie player. While I've always had a liking for fighters (especially after watching my cousin play Mortal Kombat 2 when I was young), I admit to not owning many, and I've never been all that great at them. Thing is, I typically like to play fighters just for the fun of it, usually just learning things as I go, while still checking move lists to make sure I'm remembering inputs correctly. I'm also not the owner of an arcade stick, I still stick to controllers.
When I first heard of Skullgirls a few years back I looked more into it, and thought it looked pretty neat, but never really played much of it from demos. Then the Steam free weekend happened not too long ago, I tried more of it then and just got hooked. Playing arcade mode on "normal" with different characters really got me into the swing of things, but of course I checked out the training mode to get a better grasp on certain aspects of the controls. I liked it so much I made sure it'd be one of my next major Steam purchases. Unfortunately I wasn't able to get it while Squigly was still free, but hey at least I've got the game anyway. Right now I tend to use Ms Fortune and Valentine a lot, what I've found from playing other fighting games is that I'm more into characters with more speed to them. I love all the character designs, but I like Ms Fortune's a lot because not only have I just had a general liking for "cat girls" in things like anime (yeah I'm more of a cat person, heh heh), but I love the look of the scars having a noticeable "depth" to them in the official artwork, and the added detail that when she's doing her bouncy idle animation you can see the muscle fibers in her leg moving too, is just a nice bit of detail. I'm not deep in any character's stories yet, but I'm liking what bits of backstory and lore I've gathered so far from most everyone.
This leads me to a major question, especially in regards to people who are much much more proficient at fighters than I. Is it somehow "wrong" to just play a fighting game such as this one more for things like "having fun while learning at my own steady pace," the characters designs and stories, and sticking more to CPU difficulty that's not very hard, rather than doing things like striving to become some "tournament level" player who can dish out 40 hit combos in a few seconds, "training" for hours on end, and memorizing long combo lists and "tiers"? Heck I'm not even all that knowledgeable on fighting game lingo, only knowing a little bit from what I've picked up from things like Two Best Friends Play. So basically I'm asking, am I gonna somehow ruffle a lot of feathers out there by professing that I do not wish to strive to become some "EVO Tournament player", or is being an eternal newbie perfectly fine so long as I don't bother the professional players? Already played online a teensy bit. First quick match? Couldn't even get in more than maybe two hits. I have a feeling online might always be that way for me so I dunno if I want to bother much more with it since I'll probably only be wasting peoples time.
When I first heard of Skullgirls a few years back I looked more into it, and thought it looked pretty neat, but never really played much of it from demos. Then the Steam free weekend happened not too long ago, I tried more of it then and just got hooked. Playing arcade mode on "normal" with different characters really got me into the swing of things, but of course I checked out the training mode to get a better grasp on certain aspects of the controls. I liked it so much I made sure it'd be one of my next major Steam purchases. Unfortunately I wasn't able to get it while Squigly was still free, but hey at least I've got the game anyway. Right now I tend to use Ms Fortune and Valentine a lot, what I've found from playing other fighting games is that I'm more into characters with more speed to them. I love all the character designs, but I like Ms Fortune's a lot because not only have I just had a general liking for "cat girls" in things like anime (yeah I'm more of a cat person, heh heh), but I love the look of the scars having a noticeable "depth" to them in the official artwork, and the added detail that when she's doing her bouncy idle animation you can see the muscle fibers in her leg moving too, is just a nice bit of detail. I'm not deep in any character's stories yet, but I'm liking what bits of backstory and lore I've gathered so far from most everyone.
This leads me to a major question, especially in regards to people who are much much more proficient at fighters than I. Is it somehow "wrong" to just play a fighting game such as this one more for things like "having fun while learning at my own steady pace," the characters designs and stories, and sticking more to CPU difficulty that's not very hard, rather than doing things like striving to become some "tournament level" player who can dish out 40 hit combos in a few seconds, "training" for hours on end, and memorizing long combo lists and "tiers"? Heck I'm not even all that knowledgeable on fighting game lingo, only knowing a little bit from what I've picked up from things like Two Best Friends Play. So basically I'm asking, am I gonna somehow ruffle a lot of feathers out there by professing that I do not wish to strive to become some "EVO Tournament player", or is being an eternal newbie perfectly fine so long as I don't bother the professional players? Already played online a teensy bit. First quick match? Couldn't even get in more than maybe two hits. I have a feeling online might always be that way for me so I dunno if I want to bother much more with it since I'll probably only be wasting peoples time.