Oct 22nd, 2012, 2:10:02 PM
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#50
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fat Scarfwynaut
I think the cutoff between stall and semistall is the difference in the kind of offensive pokemon you use (if you use any at all, then its obviously full stall). I feel if the main offensive pokemon is specifically geared to sweep teams rather than just function as a check, versus a pokemon to act as a sort of glue to the team. If it is the first one, its probably semi-stall. Examples of semisteall might be DD-dragonite or SD-Terrakion + a strong deffensive core. If instead the pokemon if there to simply function as a more offensive check to threats for a team, its probably still stall, for example if a team uses only CB-tyranitar, scarf-tyranitar, or CB-Scizor as its main offensive pokemon, and then the rest are defensive. Generally, its probably not semistall as that pokemon isn't geared to sweep.
The difference between semistall and balanced is very blurred, even more so by the notion of bulky offensive. Generally though, semi-stall is much more defensive than a usual balanced team, balanced is the traditional core + sweepers team, and bulky offense is balances but with more "tanky" pokemon.
So basically, Whitakker, your team is probably a more defensive "bulky offensive" team, not stall.
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Thanks for clearing that up for me, Scarfwynaut. I wasn't being very clear with my words.
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