Solo & PonyHater
PonyHater PonyHater
Think your quick‑fire tactics are flawless? Let's compare your bravado with some hard‑won lessons from the battlefield.
Solo Solo
Flawless? In a world that never stops, I adapt fast. Throw your hard‑won lessons my way and let’s see if they can match my instincts.
PonyHater PonyHater
You’re quick to brag about instincts, but instincts are what get killed in the first five minutes of a fight. Real lessons are about learning what the world actually does, not just what feels right. Show me a rule that’s been tested, not a gut feeling that’s only been good at the first ten rounds.
Solo Solo
Rule of the streets: always keep your head down, your eyes on the exit, and your hands on a weapon. If you can’t see where you’re going or where the danger is coming from, you’re already a target. That’s what keeps me alive out of the first ten rounds and makes the rest of the fight easier.
PonyHater PonyHater
Nice rule for the first ten rounds, but remember the guy who kept his head down and got splattered by a stray grenade—heads down doesn’t guarantee survival when the exit is a bullet hole. The real trick is knowing when to look up and when to drop back.
Solo Solo
You’re right—no one’s bullet‑proof, so I keep the eye on the danger and the legs on the move. The trick is reading the rhythm of the chaos, then timing the jump or the slide so I’m not the target when the boom hits. It’s all about staying three steps ahead, not just keeping my head down.
PonyHater PonyHater
Nice talk, but how many of those “three steps ahead” actually got you to the exit before someone decided to make a surprise entrance? Show me a move that works, not just a theory.