We purposely don’t allow fleet premades in unless they want to participate as individuals willing to be teamed with other none fleeted members. You might be thinking why not just queue up for the Arenas? Simple answer to this is that in Tyler Durden (TD), the participants strive for every player to have an equal chance of winning and also try to ensure every participant has fun. I was personally glued to the computer from midnight to 8am. Just a few days ago, TD matches were randomly announced in the channels and went on for 11 hours straight with people leaving and joining. There are no fixed times for the matches but they occur randomly and regularly. Usually we do not need to make a request for participants as there are quite a few players ready to kick the hell out of each other on TeamSpeak. Match participation is announced in the OrganizedPvP channel and the Tyler Durden channel (No invitation required to either channel, join them if you feel up to it: /channel_join OrganizedPvP or /channel_join Tyler Durden ). The participants of Tyler Durden provide a TeamSpeak server which you can use at any time for Tyler Durden matches or just general get-togethers for all things PvP. I’ll leave it as a little bit of trivia and let you connect the dots so to speak. If you know who Tyler Durden is, it may give away what the aim of what TD is about. What can you do now? Well, Tyler Durden is one solution that allows you to play with likeminded people. You’re addicted to PvP by now, but most of your fleet can’t feed your habit because they don’t PvP. So now you’ve got the basics under your belt, and you are faring a lot better in the queues after PvP Bootcamp. It shows that you want to improve and are willing to do something about it. Don’t be scared to ask for help it’s definitely not a sign of weakness. You could always send a private message / tell to an opponent who caught your eye after the match and ask him or her for help. The STO PvP forum is also a good place to for vast amounts of basic PvP knowledge gathered since the beginning of STO. The link to the STO Bootcamp forum thread is here: Ever wonder how? Fear not, we have the PvP Bootcamp in full swing for the guys and gals who want to learn all things Space PvP. There are seasoned PvP players & PvP dedicated fleets roaming the queues that can appear to be unbeatable. However, it is very hard for newcomers to break into. I personally haven’t had much time to test and play this style of PvP yet, but I’m sure it’s really appreciated none the less by most of the PvP community.įor me personally, Arena 5 v 5 is where most of the fun is in Space PvP. 5 vs 5 where the first team to score 15 kills wins. 10 vs 10 (when possible if the queues allow) to capture and hold strategic points longer than the enemy team. Klingons – The old school neverending battle. A free for all zone where you just duke it out with each other whilst avoiding the dreaded Borg, Federation vs. There are various types of PvP in this game: It’s the obsession that keeps bringing me back to STO month after month, year after year. For me and a lot of others, it’s the Final Frontier for STO where one match is never the same as the next. Whatever floats your boat as the saying goes, have fun doing it.įor this guest blog, I’ve been given the opportunity to inform you about a small community of players who enjoy a specific part of this game: Player vs Player (PvP). A place you can go to once you’ve done the endgame content & got all the fleet gear you'd ever want or need.Īt this point, you might be thinking “ What else is there left to do in STO?” Some might say RPing, running record breaking STF runs, Foundry missions, Accolade Hunting, DOFF missions, or PvP. By going to let you guys and girls in on a little corner of the STO Universe where not many people seem to venture.
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