Too often I hit spot and have to say “I don’t see him but he’s in this direction”
Blah blah yeah spotting sucks, catering to FT. I don’t see a way this could take away from anyone’s experience
Too often I hit spot and have to say “I don’t see him but he’s in this direction”
Blah blah yeah spotting sucks, catering to FT. I don’t see a way this could take away from anyone’s experience
Because spotting defeats the purpose of the predators cloak, I agree it should be in the game but I don’t agree that it should hilight the predator for the entire fireteam to see, it should just be a way to say I see him in this direction not a way to uncloak him. I’ve had good fireteams spot me every time I came into view, and never stopped spotting me until I was out of view, they tracked my blood trail and found me healing half way across the map then proceeded to light me up.
Green aura feature can be as a part of some perk or gear
They could reduce the highlight to 2 seconds for a trial and see how it goes. Maybe end up with one second or even a green highlight where he was when spotted but not tracking his movements. They do need a spot mechanic though. Removing it is like saying in real life you couldn’t shout out exactly which tree and branch he is on and which direction he’s moving in.
Also if you nerf spotting then I say you remove the alert the pred gets while spotted. How could he possibly know?
I kinda do that too. I’ll spot the tree he’s most likely in and say in voice chat he’s over there somewhere.
It’s far easier to get used to the compass and just call out a direction. Rooftop to the west etc.
That’s always my counter to the spotting argument. The predator knows when he’s spotted. I feel like that’s fair. It’s not like they’re spotting you, lining up simultaneous head shots and shooting without you knowing they see you
Yeah. Nerf spots a little but remove his psychic ability so I can spot him and let my FT line up their guns so we can all fire at the same time and give him a shock. If he’s got eyes he will see us all stop and begin aiming right at him which is his cue to move.