Double reverse casual filter

Double reverse casual filter

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Always amusing seeing middle investment fire emblem players claiming jeigans are bad. Always gets a laugh out of me.

Fire emblem fans are retards that will believe anything you tell them. Anything you guys think would be amusing to trick the community into believing?

are you implying marcus somehow isn't good?
play the game idiot, he's better than sain until like, battle before dawn maybe

Yeah Jeigan are total curveball
I've been trying to S rank everything and I just let go of my preconception
Can't five star Tactic without him

I think the "jeigans r bad" meme was hilarious while it lasted and we need to replace it with something.

using them too much will legitimately ruin your exp rank though so it's a balance

Always promote late in Three Houses, because all the class mastery skills are totally worth it

By the way, I promoted Sain at level 15 and he only really caught up offensive wise at level 6-7, while marcus still has better stat overall like super high res compared to the rest of Cavalier

High res is the advantage Marcus always has
Starts with much higher res than the rest of the cavs will ever have
Marcus has a low defense growth so he'll be slightly squishy later on but his base defense is decent even in the end-game
Sain has crazy high strength and will easily cap it no matter when you promote him

I find that only using him when an enemy prevent your weaker unit to fully use all their movement is enough to give you perfect Exp and Tac rating, and an alternate way beside Wolf Beil to soften boss

Jeigans have their uses, but in FE6 their growths are fucking hideous and you know it.

It's funny how there are 3 phases to FE players
>the beginner: pre-promotes are OP
>the scrub that beat like 2 or 3 games: pre-promotes are a beginner's trap
>the experienced player: pre-promotes are OP

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There's more stages in the cycle
>the slightly more experienced player: pre-promotes are useful but success rates can be maximized by paying attention to exp distribution and extensively training a couple unpromoted units
>the FE master: pre-promotes are OP, base stats are plenty because my units never get hit all my attacks are crits

I personally wouldn't count RNG abuse as "mastering Fire Emblem", to be honest.

Jeigans are amazing for 2 things :

Weakening units
Standing without weapons in the middle of the map to bait enemies

If you actually kill anything with them you're a retard, unless it was a life or death situation.

I personally fucked my first playthrough by using Marcus too much, back then I was a save state abusing scrub so well

Jagens are for faggots. There is nothing more enjoyable than raising a unit from it's weakest and turning it into a monster.

>there are people out there that didn't distribute exp evenly between their good units

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The fact you gotta shuffle your roster around to make sure the RIGHT character gets killing blow is a failure of game design.

No, it's a failure on your part as the player if you keep giving kills to the one unit that gains significantly less experience per kill. It should be very obvious after a few battles as the Jeigan gets one or two exp per hit, whereas any other unit is getting around ten even for just damaging an enemy.

>defending stupid NES JRPG design tropes
RNG stats are a failure of design
Even NEEDING a Jeigan is a failure of design

no you're retarded
this is like 2004 gamefaqs thinking
grow up and realize that yes, the game actually does give you a good unit from the start

In that case what do you consider FE mastery? If you ask anyone else they'll point you to LTC runs with RNG manipulation.

Do they really?
I watched one FE RNG-abuse speedrun and while it was impressive in a "Jesus that they managed to figure out which movements they need to make to get the RNG they need" I wouldn't call it impressive in terms of how well that dude could actually play Fire Emblem as a game. RNG-abuse reminds me more of a TAS, to be honest, except less amusing.
Honestly, what you called a "slightly more experienced player" sounds way closer to a master of the game than the dude who mapped out the RNG in advance and didn't have to do any real thinking on the fly or deal with unexpected situations.