Jan 21, 2015, 08:03 PM
did you come back after 2.5 years to bitch about that?
before anyone was kicked everyone was warned. anyone that got kicked willfully chose to ignroe the warning concerning abuse of a map glitch
you can keep quoting the wiki all you want but it doesnt make you right, especially considering any shithead noob can write whatever they want as a "strategy"
the fact remains that the exploit changed the way the map was supposed to be played, and not for the better.
feel free to fuck off for another 2.5 years
later, fucker
before anyone was kicked everyone was warned. anyone that got kicked willfully chose to ignroe the warning concerning abuse of a map glitch
you can keep quoting the wiki all you want but it doesnt make you right, especially considering any shithead noob can write whatever they want as a "strategy"
the fact remains that the exploit changed the way the map was supposed to be played, and not for the better.
feel free to fuck off for another 2.5 years
Quote:Question: Jumping the rocks on Degroot will get me kicked?
[B]Quick Answer: Yes.
[B]Long Answer: After A and B are capped, you're fine, perform the jump all you want. But before that, yes, it really will get you kicked. It's technically a bug, and it doesn't matter what Robin Walker did in a tourney or how fun it is to do. It's an exploit.
[/B][/B]Question: Then why can I do it on every other map?
[B]Quick Answer: It's not an unfair advantage on other maps, and doesn't ruin the objective.
[B]Long Answer: On Degroot, what's in front of you is what you have to worry about. On every other map, you also have to worry about what's above you - stickies, pipes, rockets, flares, sentries, boolets etc, making it a lot less of an advantage. A quicker way of thinking is 'Can a sticky or two get the demo there?' If you're on a map where stickies aren't allowed (Degroot) then the answer is no, and the answer is you can't use that glitch.[/B][/B]
later, fucker
The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth becomes the greatest enemy of the State.