Account Details | |
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SteamID64 | 76561198124589076 |
SteamID3 | [U:1:164323348] |
SteamID32 | STEAM_0:0:82161674 |
Country | United States |
Signed Up | August 26, 2014 |
Last Posted | September 6, 2024 at 9:24 AM |
Posts | 2212 (0.6 per day) |
Game Settings | |
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In-game Sensitivity | .5 |
Windows Sensitivity | 6/11 |
Raw Input | 1 |
DPI |
2400 |
Resolution |
1920x1080 |
Refresh Rate |
280Hz |
Hardware Peripherals | |
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Mouse | Logitech G403 |
Keyboard | Logitech K120 |
Mousepad | Logitech G640 |
Headphones | Sennheiser HD 280 Pro |
Monitor | VG258QM |
The one esport I'm good at casting and am involved in the production scene in actually has money in it
For legal reasons I have decided to take down my post and all following posts.
Blobfishsorry guys, i actually use wireless ethernet, sorry for the confusion
Not really sure what you mean by "wireless ethernet"? The closest thing I can think of is powerwire, which allows you to use your home's electrical circuit to send data over a wall plug adapter. In my personal experience this only really combats signal strength issues from long distances/different floors of a house, and depends very very heavily on the age and quality of the electrical wiring within your home.
I would most highly recommend using an Ethernet connected directly from your router to your PC; this will give you the most reliable connection in terms of any signal loss or degradation resulting in dropped packets or increased ping. If this is not an option, either powerwire (as described earlier) or WiFi are unfortunately your next best go-tos. Something that can improve your wireless experience is using a WiFi band analyser (most can be found as apps for free on IOS/Android) and changing your router's WiFi bands to the least congested channel, as many will just stay at factory default and interfere with the many other people either unaware or too lazy to change it.
Edit 2: For legal reasons I have decided to edit this post and take down all other posts regarding this issue.
Reserving post for later, already helped proofread for Ness but would like to add some things
Alright post time, home from work.
Over the past month, with uberchain coming forward with her story, BTS going from the most promising LAN the game seemed to have potentially in its history to a few people picking up the pieces and trying to salvage a LAN, and several major community figures being outed for engaging in inappropriate interactions with youths, I have heard the same question, over and over:
Is it finally dead?
No. No it is not.
Faith in the community is at a bare minimum right now. Bad people have been exposed at the very top of our scene's hierarchy; North America's home for the past 10 years is long gone, replaced by a league that many have wavering confidence in.
Instead of hating the fact that many people hailed previously as community heroes have had their flaws exposed, we need to stay tied to those who push this community the furthest and help teach new talents and interested players to climb to that level, while trying to keep past lessons learned about incidents involving the community and others in our minds when making decisions about working on future events and leagues.
For those who think that those expunged from the scene recently are just further evidence that the community as a whole is garbage tier and the game deserves any sort of decline it has coming, I would ask them to look again. In the past few days, Uberchain and I have received support from all OVER the TF2 community. Content creators, members of competitive organizations, teammates, friends, and even complete strangers that just happened upon my tweet or forum thread or have recognized us in pubs have almost spammed us with truly heartwarming support. Even those who have had questionable opinions in the threads about these issues have been trying on some level to dig from the bottom of their heart and at least try to make a statement about the current affairs of TF2.
We need to encourage each other that the game can live, and encourage anyone who is interested in stepping up in the best way we can; be it giving tips to a new caster, teaching new observers/producers how to set up a cast, encouraging friends and teammates to participate in major community PUG platforms and leagues, and attending local LANs to bond with friends over the same game we all love so much.
For the community's sake, please don't see this statement as the beginning of the end; see them as the beginning of a new era.
Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys - My Chemical Romance (2010)
Vices and Virtues - Panic! at the Disco (2011)
Th1rt3en - Megadeth (2011)
Conventional Weapons - My Chemical Romance (2012)
Dream Theater - Dream Theater (2013)
Madness - Sleeping With Sirens (2015)
Black Lines - Mayday Parade (2015)
Dystopia - Megadeth (2016)
I Thought You Didn't Even Like Leaving - Prince Daddy & The Hyena (2016)
Come Over When You're Sober Pt. 1 - Lil Peep (2017)
Come Over When You're Sober Pt. 2 - Lil Peep (2018)
Firepower - Judas Priest (2018)
Fear Inoculum - Tool (2019)
How It Feels To Be Lost - Sleeping With Sirens (2019)
Distance Over Time - Dream Theater (2019)
probably have more I'm forgetting, but these are the albums I've had on repeat the most over the past decade from said current decade (at least the ones sticking in my head)
0$ because I still get to hang out with TF2 friends in SoCal even if I end up flying out and there's no event :)
For legal reasons I have decided to take down my post and all following posts.
added to tftv pub list :)
For legal reasons I have decided to take down my post and all following posts.
For legal reasons I have decided to take down my post and all following posts.
trippai’m aware we’re fucked now, but the only person with any actual necessary skill to run an event was dashner
finding a replacement for him would’ve been hard. lets not act like samiface or tsc were bringing anything to the table that a normal level headed adult wouldn’t be able to do
Tbh some of the more broadcast-savvy people in the community can tell you that dashner's strength was never technical ability on a broadcast. When he first got hired onto blast pro series, he asked ME for advice because I was actually in school for broadcast at the time and there were certain parts of the run of show or the hardware he was using he didnt understand. He also really really hates doing cable runs because he just isn't engineering oriented. I'm sure that many people from blast could probably tell you that he's a mediocre EVS replay operator and only really shines because his main role is producing the replays. From working with him, his main strength is and always has been his ability as a director and creative mind to put together a show and keep targeted on a central focus.
With lots of technical knowledge myself, Arch also having a decent amount of technical knowledge and experience, and seeing how well executed the majority of i65 was on his back, there should be no doubt that a stream with at least a semblance of professionalism and quality can be produced, given the event continues on.