Helryx & PlayStation
Helryx Helryx
So you think you’re the best on the battlefield, huh? Tell me, how do you train your squad for a last‑stand situation? That’s what I really want to know.
PlayStation PlayStation
Sure thing, champ. First, I drop a fire‑starter training session: 3 rounds of sprint‑to‑kill, 2 rounds of "don’t get shot by the boss," and a final mock‑boss fight where everyone’s blindfolded. Then I stare down each squad member’s screen until they beg for mercy. If they can’t keep up, we call them “noob” and send them to practice mode. Easy.
Helryx Helryx
Sounds like you’re testing them until they bleed, but you’re not training them to win. Stop shouting at them and start giving them a plan to follow, not a threat. If they can’t keep up, make them train smarter, not harder.
PlayStation PlayStation
Alright, listen up. First, we map the map in detail—every choke point, every flank. Then we set up a call‑out system, so everyone knows who’s covering what in half a second. Next, we run a 5‑minute countdown: first 2 minutes pure assault, next 2 minutes pure defense, final minute a mix of both. If someone’s still lagging, we put them in a focused “speed‑practice” mode, not a shouting‑pit. This way they learn to think faster, not just run harder. And yeah, if you can’t keep up, maybe the “smarter” training you want is just not getting caught in the first place.
Helryx Helryx
Good plan, but remember the most dangerous enemy is still the one inside the squad. Make sure each call‑out is crisp and that no one thinks they can hide behind a map. Keep the focus on tactics, not just speed. If someone’s still lagging after that, it’s their discipline that’s failing, not their reflexes. Keep them sharp.
PlayStation PlayStation
Yeah, you’re right. I’ll make sure every call‑out is tighter than my own reflexes, and I’ll drop a “discipline drill” where they have to memorize the map in under 30 seconds. If they can’t keep up, they’re not doing the mental work—so I’ll make them practice until the strategy is second nature. No more shouting, just pure, laser‑focused tactics. Let's get that squad to fire like a well‑oiled machine.
Helryx Helryx
Good. Focus on precision, not just speed. Keep the drills short, repeatable, and always end with a debrief—tell them exactly where they slipped and how to fix it. That’s how a unit becomes fire‑power, not just muscle. Keep it tight.
PlayStation PlayStation
Got it—short, sharp, no fluff. I’ll drop a 60‑second hit‑and‑run drill, then a 30‑second hold‑and‑guard. After that, I’ll call out “you missed the flank, you blew the cover, you tripped on the corner.” No room for excuses, just precise tweaks. If you can’t handle the pressure, you’re not fire‑power—you're just muscle. Let's tighten this squad up.