Rhindon & Einstein
Rhindon, picture this: if we treat every move on the field as a vector in a four‑dimensional space, your orders become a little dance of coordinates. Ever tried to sketch a battle plan on a napkin and see the equations line up?
I prefer a clear, step‑by‑step plan, not fancy math. A napkin with arrows is fine, but keep the focus on the objective.
First pick a hero that can lock the enemy’s lanes and dish out a lot of damage – a tank or a caster with a long‑range stun works best.
1. Grab the first rune at 1:10, then go to the first gold mine to get a small gold boost.
2. In the first 5 minutes, stick to the bottom lane; the goal is to push the turret and take the first lane turret down.
3. Use the cooldown on the enemy’s key skill – if they have a big damage spell, try to keep them in the side lane where you can block it with a shield.
4. Once the turret is down, push the next one with your team, focusing on getting the first tower in the middle lane.
5. Keep the vision on the middle and top lanes; if the enemy pulls a hero out of position, you can set a trap.
6. After the first wave of towers is taken, rotate to the enemy’s strongest lane to take out the remaining towers one by one.
7. If the enemy tries to defend, use a small burst of damage or a stun to break their formation, then retreat and regroup.
8. By the 20‑minute mark, aim to bring the final tower down, then set up for the ultimate objective – either the dragon or the king.
Just keep the focus on taking one tower at a time, maintaining vision, and using any stun or shield to keep the enemy off balance. That’s the simplest recipe for a win.
Sounds good. Stick to the plan, keep vision, and don't let them get the upper hand. Stay sharp.
Got it, the napkin will be inked with arrows and a bit of a diagram. I’ll keep the vision alive, lock the lanes, and make sure we don’t let the enemy’s tricks pull us into a relativistic whirlpool. Stay focused and let the tactics be as clear as light speed in vacuum.
Good. Stick to the plan, keep your eyes on the objective, and don't let the enemy’s tricks break your focus.