Being a pro gamer isn't easy. To master top competitive games takes hundreds of hours of practice — but Mister, Do It With Me, Not With Momalso knowledge. Each week, we'll share the most useful tips and tricks to improve your play. It's time to get good.
For Honorofficially released over a week ago but that doesn't mean we've all mastered the art of combat in Ubisoft's unique competitive fighting game.
If you're still having some issues getting a hang of the game's complex combat system or find yourself losing a lot of duels, the tips in the video above by Prima Games should help you turn some of those L's into W's in no time.
SEE ALSO: Pro tip: How to keep cool when you're outnumbered in 'For Honor'When you're on the offensive, it's important to vary up your attacks so that your opponent has difficulty blocking them. One important tip Prima gives is to hold your weapon in one of the three possible directions, and then change it right before you attack to keep your opponent on their toes.
In For Honor, the best offense is a good defense, but even if you are blocking your opponents' attacks nonstop you can get beat by a guard break. Lucky for you though, you can counter that guard break by also pressing the guard break button quickly enough.
Don't use the guard break too much though, because if an opponent is attack you while you're doing a guard break, you won't be able to block them.
The best way to beat an opponent is by parrying. To parry an attack, you need to attack in the same direction that your opponent just attacked you in at the exact correct moment. This will stop your enemy's attack and briefly stagger them.
Prima points out that this is what's known as a frame advantage, and gives you a huge time advantage -- almost any attack you throw at them will land without them being able to block it or counter it.
Be careful though, because if you parry too quickly or too slowly, you'll get hit. Practice makes perfect with this move, and its timing varies depending on what kind of attack your opponent is using against you.
Topics Esports Gaming
From Standby to NameDrop: 17 new features in iOS 17When Should a Series End?How Gordon Lish Antipicated “The Jinx”A Letter from Ernest Hemingway: “Liquor is my best friend”Is the Legend of Zelda Even a Legend? Games and Storytelling'Minecraft' spawns 1 trillion views on YouTubeStrife in the Fast Lane“Bankspeak”: Your New Least Favorite LanguageBe Dangerous: Robert Frost on “Meet the Press”Is the Legend of Zelda Even a Legend? Games and StorytellingHow Porn—and Lust—Have Changed Since the SeventiesFitness trackers for dogs are irresistible to dataGlitch Art Goes for BrokePeloton fires back at 'And Just Like That' with a cheeky PSA video featuring Mr. Big'Destiny 2' bug is getting a fix, Bungie saysSteven Crowder is one strike away from a permanent ban on YouTubeHow, and why, to create a Spotify blend playlistPeter Saul’s “Pictures with Problems”From Standby to NameDrop: 17 new features in iOS 17'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for September 18, 2023 The Paris Review’s Poetry Crossword by Adrienne Raphel Poets on Couches: Lynn Melnick by Lynn Melnick Return, Investment, Return by Leah Naomi Green Your Tove by Tove Jansson Vanished into Music by Olivia Laing Our Motto by Maira Kalman Quarantine Reads: The Anatomy of Melancholy by Dustin Illingworth The Land Empty, the World Empty by Jean Giono Classic Fiction with Binary Numbers by Tom Gauld Poets on Couches: Monica Youn by Monica Youn Dog Philosopher by Tom Gauld The Origins of Scandinavian Noir by Wendy Lesser Rethinking the Eighties: An Interview with Quan Barry by Elinor Hitt Still Life by Lynn Casteel Harper Why Certain Illnesses Remain Mysterious by Sarah Ramey July 7 by Bernadette Mayer On Reading Basho with My Ten Quarantine Reads: The Book of Disquiet by Eddie Grace What’s Inside That Giant Cross? by Steven E. Jones Poets on Couches: Shane McCrae Reads Lucie Brock
2.0252s , 10133.8125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Mister, Do It With Me, Not With Mom】,Pursuit Information Network