Allow me to preface this by saying that while the matchmaking isn’t perfect, it’s pretty good for what it is. For me, at my level I’m often tiered with other mk5 and mk6s, and occasionally for some reason, there’s a mk 1 on a team (I have no idea where these mk1s with 1700 infamy came from, probably some weaklings who were carried). Sometimes there’s a medic on my team, sometimes there’s a medic on the enemy team. Sometimes there’s a medic on both teams. Sometimes two medics on either side.Some people have a problem with them being paired with high tier ships, but I put that to them being carried there by a lucky set of teammates. Some people have a problem with being put up against players with high damage weapons, but I reason that to be a high level player down on his luck and tanking on infamy. Granted, I’ve played against these players, and yes it feels horrible to lose ten battles in a row. I once had 1900 infamy and had a string of horrible battles, dropping all the way down to 700 infamy. Those horrible battles weren’t because the matchmaking, it was bad teamwork and poor ship coordination. Finally, with my mk6 ship and lvl 4 cannons, I ended up eating through battles, the players on the enemy team stood very little chance with their mk3 ships. My point is is that everyone has bad battles, and everyone has good battles, look at how you played, how your teammates played, figure out what you can learn, post what you learned in the forums, and prevent this community from becoming even more toxic. If you look at your win/lose ratio (divide total battles by number of wins) you will always be above fifty percent. You win more than you lose, despite what it may seem. The game is purposely designed that way.
While I know that I might of angered many people, I genuinely want to here your arguments against my point. What is your experience with the matchmaking, how can it be improved. I frequently see someone say “the game needs better matchmaking,” and this doesn’t help anyone. Concise, constructive, well thought out criticism is what’s needed to improve this game.
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