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Tunneling at 5 gens necessary???

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Comments

  • I_CAME
    I_CAME Member Posts: 1,302

    I can subjectively say that almost no killer I run into chases good survivors first. Smart move if all you care about is winning. I don't think it makes you good at the game though. I have not been successfully tunneled in my last 100 solo queue games because killers will usually drop chase with me when they realize I won't go down quickly. 90% of tunneling I encounter in my games is an experienced killer bullying a less experienced survivor. Usually the lowest hour count player. It doesn't mean you have no skill but it does mean you are taking the path of least resistance. The majority of killers I run into who tunnel at five gens are very mediocre in chase based on my interaction with them. They win solely because there is one survivor who is significantly worse than the other three. If you can't win consistently without having a bad survivor to tunnel out then are you really any good at the game? Probably not.

  • pseudechis
    pseudechis Member Posts: 3,904

    Sure and I’m not gonna say that your experience is in anyway invalid, it’s your own experience after all.

    However… just as being able to effectively pressure 4x survivors is an example of skill… so is being able to quickly identify a weak link and exploit it for advantage.

    A player may be stronger in one tactic than the other but that doesn’t necessarily make them “unskilled”. I’ve seen plenty of players who pressure gens pretty effectively but also make poor choices chase wise and often end up on the back foot in the long run.

    Remember after a game you only have that single experience on which to base your assessment of another player and as Nietzsche says “even the strongest among us will have moments of fatigue.”

    While some players love the statement “if you tunnel you have no skill”, I would argue that if you know whom to tunnel to maximize advantage then you are applying game knowledge and decision making, and those combined are what defines skill.   

    Does it matter if someone “goes for the win” or not? Playing to win is a completely valid motivation to play. 

  • WW1PilotAce
    WW1PilotAce Member Posts: 91

    its not that hard to believe if a survivor goes down in a dead zone againts an alchemist ring blight he is ######### it doesnt matter if he is the best player in the world

  • bjorksnas
    bjorksnas Member Posts: 5,616

    tunnel at 5/4 gens usually you get a 3v1 with 2/1 gens left, tunnel at 3/2/1 gens you get 3 escapes, hope this helps

  • Anti051
    Anti051 Member Posts: 660

    As long as it's possible for the gens to be decimated a few minutes from game start, the killer has to take that into account and act accordingly. There is no way to accurately gauge the players you are about to face and nobody with an iota of sense is booting up a PvP game with the intention of losing.

    If you want the game to be more chill, then the win conditions have to be altered, but all the devs want to do is screw around with MMR to lessen their work load.

  • MrsGhostface
    MrsGhostface Member Posts: 987
    edited November 2023

    I get what you’re saying, as someone who plays both sides I go out of my way to not tunnel especially at the start of the match since it’s simply not nice for the other side lol… Any decent killer usually has no reason to. But 1-2 gens left? I get it then.

    People who tunnel simply don’t care about other players experiences (which they don’t have to). Trying to explain how it sucks won’t do much to change their minds. They most likely don’t play enough survivor to empathize. Just know it’s not you, it’s them lol… they just want their precious 4k.

    edit: My point is, they do it because all they care about is winning, which is fine. Some killers like me on the other hand, have a different definition of a win that isn’t a 4k, or they just play casually.

  • duygu
    duygu Member Posts: 333

    repairing a generator is the easiest thing you can do and yet it is also the most important objective for survivors. the most important objective of killers is to kill survivors and chasing is the only way to do it, which also happens to be the most difficult part of playing killer. but there's no point in arguing with this reasoning because that's literally just how the game is designed as an asymmetrical game. you cant have survivors primary objective require interaction with the killer because then why are we even playing dbd at that point and not a 1v1 game.

  • BenSanderson55
    BenSanderson55 Member Posts: 454
    edited November 2023

    "repairing a generator is the easiest thing you can do and yet it is also the most important objective for survivors" so you just gonna stand there as killer and let me do gens and chase someone who isn't on a gen only?

    or how about they remove basekit gen auras for killer, survivors dont get to know where gens are all the time. If survivors objective is doing gens, just like killers objective is to protect them not really fair.

    See person, chase same person is much more intuitive to win than split on gens to win, double up on gens they'll go faster dominates soloq thinking. My point is soloq survivors need to be told to split gens and be convinced its more efficient.

  • zarr
    zarr Member Posts: 1,003

    If you're good enough at killer, you can kill every survivor in most of every match even if you refrain from tunnelling altogether. This has been proven (while also refraining from using a killer ability...). With matchmaking as it is, getting an actual challenge is a once-in-a-hundred-matches(-if-that) occurrence for good players. Goes for good 4-player SWFs as well. Well, maybe one in fifty matches now, with the seemingly somewhat more strictened MMR.

    But tunnelling at any amount of gens is fair game, and regularly the optimal play if you want to kill as many survivors as possible as consistently as possible. For anybody that is struggling to get kills and cares more about getting kills than chasing and engaging every survivor and whatnot, tunnelling ASAP is something that can only be recommended.

    It is definitely a balance problem for solo queue/duo queue scenarios, but good players that are in a group will or at least should welcome the challenge of a killer playing optimally and hard. Getting tunnelled is also very engaging for the person getting tunnelled, if they actually want to play the game (i. e. get chased). Of course, some killers are so oppressive in chase that tunnelling is particularly problematic and allows these killers to consistently 4k even against the strongest of teams, and win thousands of matches in a row. Those killers need adjustments.

  • CrossTheSholf
    CrossTheSholf Member Posts: 308

    Because we are sick of dealing with bs and playing 1 v 3 is easier than 1 v4

  • Mr_K
    Mr_K Member Posts: 9,225

    If it takes zero skill, what does that say about the survivor that went down? What does that say about the team that can't time manage one gen in the time it takes to chase, down, and hook a survivor?

  • DemonDaddy
    DemonDaddy Member Posts: 4,167

    I think its acceptible, killers dont need to wait for survivors to prove how good they are. Taking it easy can completely backfire and there is no proper gen count for pressuring survivors or going for a kill.

  • H2H
    H2H Member Posts: 753

    Gen rushing at 0 hooks necessary???

  • ratcoffee
    ratcoffee Member Posts: 1,475

    my snarky sarcastic response is "you know technically nobody has to do anything"

    my more serious response is that i'm fine with any killer who says that tunneling at 5 gens is necessary, so long as they agree to add the caveat "in order for [them] to have a chance to win against the opponents that ranked matchmaking regularly puts [them] against" and to own up to all that entails