Poll: How long do you practice?
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Poll: How long do you practice?
Hope this isn't one of those polls that appears very few weeks or so. Anyway I was wondering how long does the average Marper practice to get a 1st place score in a game. I realize this is a VERY variable question so I'm only looking for ballpark averages and also I am EXCLUDING games where there is already a 1st place score that is insanely high or that you need mad skills to beat. I'm talking about beating an average 1st place score on a game that is not hyper popular.
- Francois Daniel
- MARP Seer
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Re: Poll: How long do you practice?
Really. I don't know, because its very variable. On games where I'm good I'm not sure I can beat the first place. Be sides I've some first place in games I don't know before I see them on mame.Locut0s wrote:Hope this isn't one of those polls that appears very few weeks or so. Anyway I was wondering how long does the average Marper practice to get a 1st place score in a game. I realize this is a VERY variable question so I'm only looking for ballpark averages and also I am EXCLUDING games where there is already a 1st place score that is insanely high or that you need mad skills to beat. I'm talking about beating an average 1st place score on a game that is not hyper popular.
Francois
If you think about it...20 hours of play, is playing 10 days each day 2 hours, which is quite much by my standards. Many games can be mastered in 20 hours of play, that's about amount I played Scramble(stern).
Best I've done to get quite decent 1:st beaten is between 1 - 2 hours, but that's at couple of sports games -which genre is strong for me.
Some games though...hard to tell how many hours I've played Track&Field or Tron. Some games take several weeks to fully master, depending on how awesome scores at marp are....some can take several months maybe.
Took me several months of play at arcade to get really good at T&F, or hypersports. Some games take very long time...think about Arkanoid, have played little with mame, improvement very slow. Have played some Robotron...I could see improvement after one week etc...but to make 100million! ...that must take long time to learn.
Just my one emulated credit
Best I've done to get quite decent 1:st beaten is between 1 - 2 hours, but that's at couple of sports games -which genre is strong for me.
Some games though...hard to tell how many hours I've played Track&Field or Tron. Some games take several weeks to fully master, depending on how awesome scores at marp are....some can take several months maybe.
Took me several months of play at arcade to get really good at T&F, or hypersports. Some games take very long time...think about Arkanoid, have played little with mame, improvement very slow. Have played some Robotron...I could see improvement after one week etc...but to make 100million! ...that must take long time to learn.
Just my one emulated credit
When I play, my goal isn't to beat a 1st place score. It is usually to finish the game on one credit (if it has an ending). If I like the game, I might keep playing it. My latest project is trying to finish donpachi on one credit. So far I have put in about 110 hours of practice. I think once I have played for 1110 hours, maybe I will finish it. But probably not....
As was said before, there is no defined time involving playing for a 1st place.
Anyone who's played a lot of the actual arcade game before moving onto MAME isn't going to have to spend much time at all getting used to playing on an emulator, unless it has a funky control scheme.
And sometimes a player that's good at a certain type of game can probably have a lot of that skill carry over to a game in the same genre.
There's no proper answer to this question I think...
Anyone who's played a lot of the actual arcade game before moving onto MAME isn't going to have to spend much time at all getting used to playing on an emulator, unless it has a funky control scheme.
And sometimes a player that's good at a certain type of game can probably have a lot of that skill carry over to a game in the same genre.
There's no proper answer to this question I think...
Lets make it more specific then. How long did you BBH play, if you can remember, before getting your 1st place score on "Bad Dudes vs Dragonninja" of 999k? I'd say that I've played it about 5-8 hours and the highest I've gotten so far is 412k. My biggest problem with scoring on games has always been consistancy, sometimes I can get a really high score but then I can play like 30 times before I match it and those 30 times I usually only get about 1/4-1/2 of my top score, if only I can consistantly improve instead of stuttering up and down a lot.BBH wrote:As was said before, there is no defined time involving playing for a 1st place.
Anyone who's played a lot of the actual arcade game before moving onto MAME isn't going to have to spend much time at all getting used to playing on an emulator, unless it has a funky control scheme.
And sometimes a player that's good at a certain type of game can probably have a lot of that skill carry over to a game in the same genre.
There's no proper answer to this question I think...
I don't know how much I had played it in the arcades or had messed around with it previously before concentrating on finishing it on one credit...Locut0s wrote:Lets make it more specific then. How long did you BBH play, if you can remember, before getting your 1st place score on "Bad Dudes vs Dragonninja" of 999k? I'd say that I've played it about 5-8 hours and the highest I've gotten so far is 412k. My biggest problem with scoring on games has always been consistancy, sometimes I can get a really high score but then I can play like 30 times before I match it and those 30 times I usually only get about 1/4-1/2 of my top score, if only I can consistantly improve instead of stuttering up and down a lot.BBH wrote:As was said before, there is no defined time involving playing for a 1st place.
Anyone who's played a lot of the actual arcade game before moving onto MAME isn't going to have to spend much time at all getting used to playing on an emulator, unless it has a funky control scheme.
And sometimes a player that's good at a certain type of game can probably have a lot of that skill carry over to a game in the same genre.
There's no proper answer to this question I think...
but once I started playing it "seriously" it took... I dunno, 3, maybe 4 hours at most? I honestly wasn't keeping track and it was a few years ago. When I started working for the one-credit finish, the first thing I did was play through with a lot of continues to figure out the most effective ways for taking out bosses, or getting through any trouble spots in levels. Gotta learn all these things and keep them in mind when you're playing for real.
The biggest problem that can kill any sort of consistency in Bad Dudes is the power-up items. They're completely random, so you have to hope that the red ninja is going to be dropping the Coke can when your life is low, but there's no way to guarantee it.
Another reason may be the controller I'm playing with, I'm using a an elcheapo genesis clone 6 button game pad from radioshack. The D-pad is not the best, it can be hard at times to isolate one direction without accidentally pressing others. *Locut0s hungrily eyes the XGamer & Hotrod controllersLocut0s wrote:My biggest problem with scoring on games has always been consistancy, sometimes I can get a really high score but then I can play like 30 times before I match it and those 30 times I usually only get about 1/4-1/2 of my top score, if only I can consistantly improve instead of stuttering up and down a lot.

- mike_myers
- Button Masher
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The controller I use is keyboard.Another reason may be the controller I'm playing with...
You can configure keyboard to press two or more buttons at once, this can be useful in Mortal Kombat (bonus stages), Vampire Savior (to activate "Dark Force"), Crazy Kong (the 'warp level' trick is easier) and more games. -the list is too long-.

Unfortunately that trick doesn't work in Track'n Field and Hypersports.

PD: The poll is hours in a month or week? (150 hours is too high if it's hours in a week -and impossible if you say hours in a day-).


- mike_myers
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