
The early game went somehat poorly, but we fought back into it come Mid game. We ended not being able to contest Elder Dragon. I told team to wait out and concede our turret and inhibitor because we were getting chunked out by



On Top of that bad decision, I made a stupid decision to go in when they were four man diving Bot and I just ended up giving them another kill.
Lessons learned. Let it go if you are at a disadvantage. If some dummy decides to go in and their is a chance you can keep the rest of your base at least somewhat together, let them die. 3 people might be able to defend, especially when you still have the rest of your turrets and inhibitors.

This was pretty much gg.


Not really finding a winning formula at the moment. Trying to play






I think we got one tower this game at the cost of a tower and inhibitor (woo hoo!) and we also nabbed two dragons.

Mah team. Well really










Aside from the




IIRC my two deaths were from getting objectives and putting a hurt on their team which let our team clean-up or walk away mostly intact. Those are the kinds of deaths that I don't mind.
Been kinda keeping up with this, do you do any replay review, or are these write ups the only reflective things done?
I used to have a spreadsheet with basic info like champ I'm playing, enemy champ, and any notes about that match up and game in general (similar to this actually) but I found that the best way to improve was to watch my replays and write down every single thing I did wrong, and choose a couple of those things to focus on.
I used to have a spreadsheet with basic info like champ I'm playing, enemy champ, and any notes about that match up and game in general (similar to this actually) but I found that the best way to improve was to watch my replays and write down every single thing I did wrong, and choose a couple of those things to focus on.

Thank you Jovy for this bomb *** sig!
FatelBlade wrote:
Been kinda keeping up with this, do you do any replay review, or are these write ups the only reflective things done?
I used to have a spreadsheet with basic info like champ I'm playing, enemy champ, and any notes about that match up and game in general (similar to this actually) but I found that the best way to improve was to watch my replays and write down every single thing I did wrong, and choose a couple of those things to focus on.
I used to have a spreadsheet with basic info like champ I'm playing, enemy champ, and any notes about that match up and game in general (similar to this actually) but I found that the best way to improve was to watch my replays and write down every single thing I did wrong, and choose a couple of those things to focus on.
I have always been skeptical and I found a **** Huap video (guy good at league, tons of followers) and he made a video to explain why it doesn't work.
Silver - plat don't know what they are doing wrong, so watching your own replay's isn't that useful because you either fail to see the mistakes or you misidentify the mistakes.
It is WAY better to have more experienced players give you feedback. And one might argue its actually a huge waste of your time to watch your own replays because it isn't helping might actively been hurting your improvement.
I used to care about KDA, now I care about CS and Objectives.
FatelBlade wrote:
Been kinda keeping up with this, do you do any replay review, or are these write ups the only reflective things done?
I used to have a spreadsheet with basic info like champ I'm playing, enemy champ, and any notes about that match up and game in general (similar to this actually) but I found that the best way to improve was to watch my replays and write down every single thing I did wrong, and choose a couple of those things to focus on.
I used to have a spreadsheet with basic info like champ I'm playing, enemy champ, and any notes about that match up and game in general (similar to this actually) but I found that the best way to improve was to watch my replays and write down every single thing I did wrong, and choose a couple of those things to focus on.
I've reviewed my video some. But its tricky as I only have time to play maybe 3 games per night except on weekends and that is pushing it. I've also had a couple of people on this site review some games and have received some decent feedback.
I think that can definitely help, but I'm also with Ixtellor to the degree that since I've got a birthday coming up, I'm strongly considering asking for some coaching sessions, because while I do feel like I'm getting incrementally better, it isn't at the rate that I would like.
general advice:
1. Play one champion
2. Play OP champions (well they get banned so you can't do #1 then)
3. What if your team has no tank and team has one or more?
4. Play who you enjoy
5. Play simple champions (I like

Its funny, because I feel like I'm reasonably good with


I've spent hours watching things like the LoLsoc videos, watching SRO to learn minion wave management, digging around in various reddit main and summonerschool sites, and here on Mobafire reading champion guides. And I've made it as far as S2. Which is better than were I started, which was so bad at ranked play that I created a completely new account just to practice ranked with people that were in the same boat at me -> just starting (as opposed to playing from an account that 700+ normal games).
To be clear, I appreciate the suggestion. It's kind of why I started this post (aside from logging my progress) - to let others see what the climb is like for people in a similar situation (trying to grind their way through soloqueue mostly by themselves). I also do a little blogging here that often goes into greater detail on things I've learned, trying out, or just thinking about. Writing about it helps me thing some things through.
I should watch my replays more than I do, so that will go on my list.
List:
-Watch my replays
-Use F keys to monitor my laners
-Always click on the enemy jungler to see their current health/mana/what buffs they have/watch which direction they are headed in when they move into the fog of war
-At the start watch the enemy laners come to lane. See who is late and check their mana to see if they leashed in order to know the enemy junglers likely path through the jungle.
-Invade more often when my laners are pushed if I don't have anything more important to do
-Get coaching
Updated champion pool as of 1-Feb-2017
I seem to be getting jungle about 95% of the time at the moment. Mid is very occasional and quite often there is a dodge, so I'm back to getting jungle. IIRC I've been autofilled three times this season. 2x as support and 1x as ADC.
Gragas for when we need an actual tank and/or some AP. (No tanks is actually rather frequent though. Everyone wants to play
Riven or
Yasuo or some other bruiser or carry Top lane), but most of the true tanks suck in the jungle...
Maokai,
Nautilus, and
Shen all have subpar clear speeds.
Zac is okay, but see my previous post about the 22% winrate on
Zac though to be fair I usually picked him when someone in Silver just had to play
Yasuo and I think that worked out for a win exactly once.
Both
Vi and
Hecarim are often banned, so I bounce between the two when one or the other isn't available.
Ahri for match-ups where
Vel'Koz struggles.
I seem to be getting jungle about 95% of the time at the moment. Mid is very occasional and quite often there is a dodge, so I'm back to getting jungle. IIRC I've been autofilled three times this season. 2x as support and 1x as ADC.
Role | Champion |
---|---|
Jungle |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
Mid |
![]() ![]() |









Both




Well my post got wrecked by MOBAFire and I'm too tired to retype it but the gist was:
Play Amumu
Ignore teammates
Watch high elo streams/replays and compare yourself to them. If they do something you wouldn't ask yourself why.
Play Amumu
Ignore teammates
Watch high elo streams/replays and compare yourself to them. If they do something you wouldn't ask yourself why.

Thanks to jhoijhoi for the awesome PsiGuard-loving sig!
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This one turned epic because we were having trouble cracking their base after we got their first inhibitor down. Thought we were fubared once I engaged on their team right as our
Things I learned. Finish fast if you an because you never know when someone might DC.
Ended up selling my