Dude, I'm not trying to make you remember games we played earlier, it's just I'm quite sure the record is 3-0 or 4-0 using your Rain team against me at the moment.
That doesn't matter. The "less than optimal moves" were not that light either. Get Hitmontop Zen Headbutted was probably the biggest mistake in the game (Since no revenging of Kabu later), after your needless saccing of Gorebyss. If you remember correctly, wasting turns is probably one of the biggest parts of beating a rain team, so yeah. Anyway, there's probably no point comparing these, since it still proves that if you make a mistake you are condemning yourself to loss, which I almost did. However, Smurf going "If you make a mistake against a Rain team, you lose" is just a very silly argument, because you can apply this to everything. It is also a crappy argument because if you lose because you misplayed, whose fault is it, Rain's or yours?? I'll quote the best one liner in MoP's Mence paragraph (The other bits were average, are going to be ignored because they sometimes are not the strongest arguments you can put forth):
I don't want to sound sore, but is this really relevant?? If anything, you're telling me that Rain is more likely to lose against crappier players than better players, which is a complete contradiction to what I've been fed already. Yes, I'm not an elite player going around, but I will just remind you that I have voted quite a number of times and have the experience to tell what is broken and what is not.
It doesn't work that way. I don't want to come to my warstory again, but when you finally had Rain up in the battle, how many times did I mindlessly switch around?? "Switching around hoping to get lucky" is exactly why people think its broken. There is a difference between analysing your position and switching with purpose and mindlessly switching like what appears to be a good move.
There's no point in comparing your screw ups to mine. I lost a sweeper in early game due to a stupid move. You made slightly-less-than-optimal moves that didn't cost you anything but turns (which are important, granted, but not 1/3 of your offensive force important). I screwed up harder.
That doesn't matter. The "less than optimal moves" were not that light either. Get Hitmontop Zen Headbutted was probably the biggest mistake in the game (Since no revenging of Kabu later), after your needless saccing of Gorebyss. If you remember correctly, wasting turns is probably one of the biggest parts of beating a rain team, so yeah. Anyway, there's probably no point comparing these, since it still proves that if you make a mistake you are condemning yourself to loss, which I almost did. However, Smurf going "If you make a mistake against a Rain team, you lose" is just a very silly argument, because you can apply this to everything. It is also a crappy argument because if you lose because you misplayed, whose fault is it, Rain's or yours?? I'll quote the best one liner in MoP's Mence paragraph (The other bits were average, are going to be ignored because they sometimes are not the strongest arguments you can put forth):
You have to play Pokemon by eliminating threats WITH YOUR POKEMON, not with BANS.
I've beaten players who are better than you (no offense mate) multiple times
I don't want to sound sore, but is this really relevant?? If anything, you're telling me that Rain is more likely to lose against crappier players than better players, which is a complete contradiction to what I've been fed already. Yes, I'm not an elite player going around, but I will just remind you that I have voted quite a number of times and have the experience to tell what is broken and what is not.
If you want to argue why rain isn't broken, you'll need to point out how an average team in this metagame can beat it without just switching around for 6 turns and hoping to get lucky. Especially against a good player...
It doesn't work that way. I don't want to come to my warstory again, but when you finally had Rain up in the battle, how many times did I mindlessly switch around?? "Switching around hoping to get lucky" is exactly why people think its broken. There is a difference between analysing your position and switching with purpose and mindlessly switching like what appears to be a good move.

















