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Good job telling someone that he's ignorant because you can nitpick his statements, I guess?
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On September 20 2011 07:59 aisight wrote: Good job telling someone that he's ignorant because you can nitpick his statements, I guess?
His entire statement was
"I like how idra flames but can't win anything'
It's not nitpicking when you call someone ignorant for saying something ignorant.
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Hahaha this is so great, IdrA needs to stream more often.
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On September 19 2011 16:44 NowLookHere wrote:Show nested quote +On September 19 2011 16:39 SafeAsCheese wrote:On September 19 2011 16:37 NowLookHere wrote: Hahahaha... no wonder Idra hasn't won anything in forever. He's a mental midget. Yeah, I am sure every other pro is totally all like "That guy was awesome, totally outplayed me, I wish I could be like them." when they lose. Right or not doesn't matter, it's just not how the human mind works. Wrong, that's just not how Idra's mind works. Watch a post-match interview of truly elite athletes like Tom Brady, Rafael Nadal, etc, they will always admit there are things they can do better (after a big win and ESPECIALLY after a big loss). The greats know there's always room to improve and that they can only control their own play, that's why they focus on their mistakes and ways to improve. The players who are busy complaining about external factors or failing to take responsibility for their own mistakes are the ones who never achieve their potential.
Those guys don't play a game where they're expected to play against average joes for practice. They're in a community where everyone (to a certain extent) is elite. You cannot compare the two without being utterly and hopelessly biased. (Which you are.)
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On September 20 2011 06:54 BigBoss99 wrote: Im french canadian, and as much as I like you IdrA, you can't put every french canadian in one bag and classify it! I guess you were refering to Kiwikaki? I think that has something to do with me and TT1
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I don't know whats more hilarious.
That fucking monotone voice idra always has, even when clearly annoyed by something in game he's like an emotionless robot.....or the fact that he pisses off some people so much that they rage more than he does.
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lolol make a part 2 :D. I saw most of those live but it is funny how many times he says certain phrases ^_^
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Does idrA every say someone is actually good? O_o
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On September 20 2011 08:14 Lomak wrote: I don't know whats more hilarious.
That fucking monotone voice idra always has, even when clearly annoyed by something in game he's like an emotionless robot.....or the fact that he pisses off some people so much that they rage more than he does.
It's hilarious people try to engage him in some conversation and you hope that Idra says something either 1) neutral or 2) positive and he crushes all our nerd hopes and rips into the poor guy ):
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On September 20 2011 08:28 RezChi wrote: Does idrA every say someone is actually good? O_o
Protoss units apparently are quite good...
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On September 20 2011 08:28 RezChi wrote: Does idrA every say someone is actually good? O_o
Mostly Koreans. He has a very low opinion of the NA scene.
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On September 20 2011 08:30 Calliopee wrote:Show nested quote +On September 20 2011 08:28 RezChi wrote: Does idrA every say someone is actually good? O_o Protoss units apparently are quite good...
heehee. omfg i watch this thrice and its not old
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rofl so fucking funny
i was waiting for someone to do this.
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On September 20 2011 08:11 AutomatonOmega wrote:Show nested quote +On September 19 2011 16:44 NowLookHere wrote:On September 19 2011 16:39 SafeAsCheese wrote:On September 19 2011 16:37 NowLookHere wrote: Hahahaha... no wonder Idra hasn't won anything in forever. He's a mental midget. Yeah, I am sure every other pro is totally all like "That guy was awesome, totally outplayed me, I wish I could be like them." when they lose. Right or not doesn't matter, it's just not how the human mind works. Wrong, that's just not how Idra's mind works. Watch a post-match interview of truly elite athletes like Tom Brady, Rafael Nadal, etc, they will always admit there are things they can do better (after a big win and ESPECIALLY after a big loss). The greats know there's always room to improve and that they can only control their own play, that's why they focus on their mistakes and ways to improve. The players who are busy complaining about external factors or failing to take responsibility for their own mistakes are the ones who never achieve their potential. Those guys don't play a game where they're expected to play against average joes for practice. They're in a community where everyone (to a certain extent) is elite. You cannot compare the two without being utterly and hopelessly biased. (Which you are.)
When an athlete in any sports loses to someone who is considered a lot weaker or an underdog they certainly dont say that he is bad after they lose. Nobody ever does that in real sports...
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On September 20 2011 08:36 AntiGrav1ty wrote:Show nested quote +On September 20 2011 08:11 AutomatonOmega wrote:On September 19 2011 16:44 NowLookHere wrote:On September 19 2011 16:39 SafeAsCheese wrote:On September 19 2011 16:37 NowLookHere wrote: Hahahaha... no wonder Idra hasn't won anything in forever. He's a mental midget. Yeah, I am sure every other pro is totally all like "That guy was awesome, totally outplayed me, I wish I could be like them." when they lose. Right or not doesn't matter, it's just not how the human mind works. Wrong, that's just not how Idra's mind works. Watch a post-match interview of truly elite athletes like Tom Brady, Rafael Nadal, etc, they will always admit there are things they can do better (after a big win and ESPECIALLY after a big loss). The greats know there's always room to improve and that they can only control their own play, that's why they focus on their mistakes and ways to improve. The players who are busy complaining about external factors or failing to take responsibility for their own mistakes are the ones who never achieve their potential. Those guys don't play a game where they're expected to play against average joes for practice. They're in a community where everyone (to a certain extent) is elite. You cannot compare the two without being utterly and hopelessly biased. (Which you are.) When an athlete in any sports loses to someone who is considered a lot weaker or an underdog they certainly dont say that he is bad after they lose. Nobody ever does that in real sports... those underdogs are still full time professional players in fields with much deeper and more developed talent pools than a 1 year old esport.
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On September 20 2011 08:39 IdrA wrote:Show nested quote +On September 20 2011 08:36 AntiGrav1ty wrote:On September 20 2011 08:11 AutomatonOmega wrote:On September 19 2011 16:44 NowLookHere wrote:On September 19 2011 16:39 SafeAsCheese wrote:On September 19 2011 16:37 NowLookHere wrote: Hahahaha... no wonder Idra hasn't won anything in forever. He's a mental midget. Yeah, I am sure every other pro is totally all like "That guy was awesome, totally outplayed me, I wish I could be like them." when they lose. Right or not doesn't matter, it's just not how the human mind works. Wrong, that's just not how Idra's mind works. Watch a post-match interview of truly elite athletes like Tom Brady, Rafael Nadal, etc, they will always admit there are things they can do better (after a big win and ESPECIALLY after a big loss). The greats know there's always room to improve and that they can only control their own play, that's why they focus on their mistakes and ways to improve. The players who are busy complaining about external factors or failing to take responsibility for their own mistakes are the ones who never achieve their potential. Those guys don't play a game where they're expected to play against average joes for practice. They're in a community where everyone (to a certain extent) is elite. You cannot compare the two without being utterly and hopelessly biased. (Which you are.) When an athlete in any sports loses to someone who is considered a lot weaker or an underdog they certainly dont say that he is bad after they lose. Nobody ever does that in real sports... those underdogs are still full time professional players in fields with much deeper and more developed talent pools than a 1 year old esport. meh come on it's irrelevent, you'd do this even if SC2 had been around for 10 years
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On September 20 2011 08:47 ReignFayth wrote:Show nested quote +On September 20 2011 08:39 IdrA wrote:On September 20 2011 08:36 AntiGrav1ty wrote:On September 20 2011 08:11 AutomatonOmega wrote:On September 19 2011 16:44 NowLookHere wrote:On September 19 2011 16:39 SafeAsCheese wrote:On September 19 2011 16:37 NowLookHere wrote: Hahahaha... no wonder Idra hasn't won anything in forever. He's a mental midget. Yeah, I am sure every other pro is totally all like "That guy was awesome, totally outplayed me, I wish I could be like them." when they lose. Right or not doesn't matter, it's just not how the human mind works. Wrong, that's just not how Idra's mind works. Watch a post-match interview of truly elite athletes like Tom Brady, Rafael Nadal, etc, they will always admit there are things they can do better (after a big win and ESPECIALLY after a big loss). The greats know there's always room to improve and that they can only control their own play, that's why they focus on their mistakes and ways to improve. The players who are busy complaining about external factors or failing to take responsibility for their own mistakes are the ones who never achieve their potential. Those guys don't play a game where they're expected to play against average joes for practice. They're in a community where everyone (to a certain extent) is elite. You cannot compare the two without being utterly and hopelessly biased. (Which you are.) When an athlete in any sports loses to someone who is considered a lot weaker or an underdog they certainly dont say that he is bad after they lose. Nobody ever does that in real sports... those underdogs are still full time professional players in fields with much deeper and more developed talent pools than a 1 year old esport. meh come on it's irrelevent, you'd do this even if SC2 had been around for 10 years how many top flight bw pros did i legitimately call bad? i say legitimately because someone will point out how i said free's micro wasnt actually micro, but on the whole ive always respected good players. the structure of esports and particularly sc2 means that im playing with and occasionally competing with people who are actually bad by objective standards. and the design of sc2 means its possible for them to beat me through no merit of their own.
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On September 20 2011 08:47 ReignFayth wrote:Show nested quote +On September 20 2011 08:39 IdrA wrote:On September 20 2011 08:36 AntiGrav1ty wrote:On September 20 2011 08:11 AutomatonOmega wrote:On September 19 2011 16:44 NowLookHere wrote:On September 19 2011 16:39 SafeAsCheese wrote:On September 19 2011 16:37 NowLookHere wrote: Hahahaha... no wonder Idra hasn't won anything in forever. He's a mental midget. Yeah, I am sure every other pro is totally all like "That guy was awesome, totally outplayed me, I wish I could be like them." when they lose. Right or not doesn't matter, it's just not how the human mind works. Wrong, that's just not how Idra's mind works. Watch a post-match interview of truly elite athletes like Tom Brady, Rafael Nadal, etc, they will always admit there are things they can do better (after a big win and ESPECIALLY after a big loss). The greats know there's always room to improve and that they can only control their own play, that's why they focus on their mistakes and ways to improve. The players who are busy complaining about external factors or failing to take responsibility for their own mistakes are the ones who never achieve their potential. Those guys don't play a game where they're expected to play against average joes for practice. They're in a community where everyone (to a certain extent) is elite. You cannot compare the two without being utterly and hopelessly biased. (Which you are.) When an athlete in any sports loses to someone who is considered a lot weaker or an underdog they certainly dont say that he is bad after they lose. Nobody ever does that in real sports... those underdogs are still full time professional players in fields with much deeper and more developed talent pools than a 1 year old esport. meh come on it's irrelevent, you'd do this even if SC2 had been around for 10 years
Can't really compare the dynamics of an athletic team sport to that of 2 uber nerds battling it out head to head in a science fiction based war zone over the internet.
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On September 20 2011 08:39 IdrA wrote:Show nested quote +On September 20 2011 08:36 AntiGrav1ty wrote:On September 20 2011 08:11 AutomatonOmega wrote:On September 19 2011 16:44 NowLookHere wrote:On September 19 2011 16:39 SafeAsCheese wrote:On September 19 2011 16:37 NowLookHere wrote: Hahahaha... no wonder Idra hasn't won anything in forever. He's a mental midget. Yeah, I am sure every other pro is totally all like "That guy was awesome, totally outplayed me, I wish I could be like them." when they lose. Right or not doesn't matter, it's just not how the human mind works. Wrong, that's just not how Idra's mind works. Watch a post-match interview of truly elite athletes like Tom Brady, Rafael Nadal, etc, they will always admit there are things they can do better (after a big win and ESPECIALLY after a big loss). The greats know there's always room to improve and that they can only control their own play, that's why they focus on their mistakes and ways to improve. The players who are busy complaining about external factors or failing to take responsibility for their own mistakes are the ones who never achieve their potential. Those guys don't play a game where they're expected to play against average joes for practice. They're in a community where everyone (to a certain extent) is elite. You cannot compare the two without being utterly and hopelessly biased. (Which you are.) When an athlete in any sports loses to someone who is considered a lot weaker or an underdog they certainly dont say that he is bad after they lose. Nobody ever does that in real sports... those underdogs are still full time professional players in fields with much deeper and more developed talent pools than a 1 year old esport.
So you dont have to respect sc2 players because the talent pool isnt as deep. Then what makes Idra better than that lowly talent pool in sc2 which he is part of btw? That he is a fulltime player? He doesn't even respect all the other fulltime players.
There is no logical reasoning behind his BM. It's just BM and venting. Personally i don't even care about it, but dont make it out to be something it isnt.
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idra can say whatever he wants, its words, sticks and stones no biggie
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