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Pop quiz

or a survey. 

What does flapping ping your arms on the hook mean?

Comments

  • RekinShark
    RekinShark Member Posts: 21
    I believe some hooked survivors use it signal to other survivors if the killer is close or far. 
  • michaelmyers87
    michaelmyers87 Member Posts: 458
    Okay so is it close or far
  • Khalednazari
    Khalednazari Member Posts: 1,433
    I do that  to signal survivors to come and save me. It works for me that way.
  • Cetren
    Cetren Member Posts: 985
    It means the killer is camping.

    The meaning has been construed since we get a lot of people during the free weekends who interpreted it as come save me. 

    All I know is that if I'm flapping and you come to save me, I'm going to think you're an idiot.
  • altruistic
    altruistic Member Posts: 1,141
    The Killer is camping.

    At some point it evolved into “please come save me.” Not sure when that happened. 

    Me personally?  I just do it because I enjoy chaos. 
  • Mister_xD
    Mister_xD Member Posts: 7,669

    there are different ways to do it.
    1: stopping the animation before your hands hit the hook means "hurry up and save me already!"
    2: let the hands touch the hook and 'struggle' on it (like, stopping before you actually make the escape attempt) means "CAMPER!!"
    3: making the whole animation means "i dont trust my team to save me, so ima gonna get that job done myself." or "LOL 4%!!!!!".

  • Cardgrey
    Cardgrey Member Posts: 1,454
    edited November 2018


    O.o this is what it means....

  • HellDescent
    HellDescent Member Posts: 4,883

    I do that when the killer really likes me and standing next to me

  • Countfunkular
    Countfunkular Member Posts: 405
    It either means one or two things
    1. The Killer is still nearby
    2. The Killer is gone

    This can be confusing so it's best to just listen for the heartbeat if there even is one.
  • Shadoureon
    Shadoureon Member Posts: 493

    If someone is flapping their arms I wont come save them. In the first 6 months it was known that if you flap your arms it means the killer is close. Dont know wich tards decided to flap their arms whenever they want but those wont be saved by me.

  • akbays35
    akbays35 Member Posts: 1,123

    it means that they want to fly, like a dragonfly
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8t-iFr9q1I8

  • SanKa_Games
    SanKa_Games Member Posts: 201

    I once made same one on surveymonkey. Majotiry of people did it to show that killer is near, around 25% were doing it if you could save them and others (not so much) were doing it because it's entertaining.

  • Watery
    Watery Member Posts: 1,167
    Usually means the killer is camping- that is, if you couldn’t tell by the heartbeat. It depends on the player really.
  • SnakeSound222
    SnakeSound222 Member Posts: 4,467

    The Killer is standing near a hooked Survivor menacingly.

  • michaelmyers87
    michaelmyers87 Member Posts: 458
    Yeah exactly exactly. Sometimes people flaps their arms when the killler is gone. 
  • DwightsLifeMatters
    DwightsLifeMatters Member Posts: 1,649
    edited November 2018
    I do that  to signal survivors to come and save me. It works for me that way.
    Not in my lobby lad, I won't come over if you wave. It's a signal for camping since release. People like you are screwing solos over lol, better adapt on old things than creating new ones 
  • wisdom
    wisdom Member Posts: 216
    On the dead by daylight Facebook page there was exactly a survey., like an actual poll. 80 something percent said it was camping, so I use it for camping.

    consistency is key 
  • Peanits
    Peanits Dev Posts: 7,555
    Flailing = Camping.

    The other way is just silly. They're already going to come save you, it's free points and increases their odds of escaping.
  • purebalance
    purebalance Member Posts: 661

    @Cardgrey said:

    O.o this is what it means....

    "Patrolling" is the other term they misuse. Patrolling would mean you actually left the area when they don't.

  • MegaWaffle
    MegaWaffle Member Posts: 4,172

    @michaelmyers87 said:
    or a survey. 

    What does flapping ping your arms on the hook mean?

    Here is the problem, during the initial release days on PC and the initial release days of console flapping your arms on a hook meant the killer was still close OR was on his way back within sight.

    Once a ton of new players joined the game I think the original meaning was lost and now I have seen it used for Killers being close, Killers being far, Survivor getting impatient, survivor trying to confuse people or get attention, etc. I think it no longer holds any meaning because of how skewed the original intent has become. I often ignore the arm flapping and use my own senses to determine how safe that rescue will be.

    Basically trust no one but yourself.

  • MisterCremaster
    MisterCremaster Member Posts: 614

    It means the killer is near by.

    I'm not going to change that idea, but I'd rather it be the other way around. When I'm a killer, I'll get accused of camping (maybe it is) because I rightly assume that if I hook you, and you just start flapping, someone is near by trying to get the unhook. I'm usually right. If you just hang limp, I assume that no one is near by for you to signal, so I wonder off.

    If the fully going up meant "I'm ready to be unhooked" then you could do it when you notice someone coming for you. If you go still, it meant the killer is back. This way the killer really shouldn't know whether or your signalling or not.

  • Carpemortum
    Carpemortum Member Posts: 4,506

    It means the killer is near by.

    I'm not going to change that idea, but I'd rather it be the other way around. When I'm a killer, I'll get accused of camping (maybe it is) because I rightly assume that if I hook you, and you just start flapping, someone is near by trying to get the unhook. I'm usually right. If you just hang limp, I assume that no one is near by for you to signal, so I wonder off.

    If the fully going up meant "I'm ready to be unhooked" then you could do it when you notice someone coming for you. If you go still, it meant the killer is back. This way the killer really shouldn't know whether or your signalling or not.

    This is actually a really good arguement for the alternate use. Since everyone knows its universal meaning it would be easier to hide.

    But then once we all adapt to that isnt sitting still the exact same signal?