Category: Champions (Page 16 of 43)

Champ of the Week: Kog’Maw wrapup

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I usually save this post for Monday (though depending on my workload it has occasionally been later than that), but I think I’m ready to wrap the week of Kog’Maw and look ahead to my next champion.

Playing Kog’Maw this week served as a reminder of why I liked him so much at launch. He has a lot of flavor and a solid laning kit. He also scales well into late game but with enough weaknesses that he feels balanced. He performs well against a variety of champions, though I would suggest picking someone like Ashe or possibly Caitlyn if you’re up against a CC-heavy team comp.

I tried a few different builds over the course of the week, most of which relied on Bloodrazor for maximum damage output. Bloodrazor is ultimately a good item for Kog, but I think he’s actually more fun if you run with a Wit’s End/Malady build early in the game. The cost is only marginally higher and I felt like I gained better defensive stats from the Wit’s End stacks than just the cloth armor in Madred’s. Also, the build was just more fun. When I run Bloodrazor I feel like I have to max W first, and I don’t think that’s always the best option. Running Void Ooze and Caustic Spittle gives Kog’Maw a lot of early burst, though it is a bit mana intensive. It’s great when you’re laned up against a squishy opponent.

I think it’s tough to overstate the utility of Kog’Maw’s ultimate, too. If you’ve done a good job harassing your opponents you can shackle them to the lane by repeatedly breaking their recalls. I’m not usually one to break recalls but with Kog it feels like effort well spent.

If I could change one thing about Kog’Maw, I think I would change his W from magic damage to true damage. I know that sounds a little nutty – I’m not much of an advocate for true damage in most cases, but a little magic resistance goes a long way against Kog’Maw. The percentages on his W aren’t as high as Vayne’s, and they might need to drop a bit since it’s an activated skill. I don’t really think Kog’Maw needs much, and that would probably be enough to push him over the edge.

Ranked Champion Challenge is complete!

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It’s done, folks – I now have wins with 76/76 champions in ranked games, the vast majority of which came in 5v5. In fact, all 11 of the champions I had remaining when I started attempting this achieved victory on Summoner’s Rift. Exciting stuff. You can see my top 10 ranked champions in the image below.

Ryze was the holdout champion, and in all honesty I thought I might be stuck on him for a week. He’s a tough champ to play against tanky teams because after a certain point he just stops scaling all together and you’re stuck with a defensive build against a bunch guys who can soak everything you throw at them. After six attempts, though, I managed to pull a win (went godlike in that game, no less). I think it was really our Eve that pulled us through. She did a great job ganking lanes early and keeping their Vayne down.

This was a really enjoyable challenge. It makes me wish Riot would get serious about getting some achievements into the game. Achievements are a tough thing for a MOBA because it can encourage some unconventional and sloppy play from players who should probably be learning the game, but it could be very cool to tie some kind of IP bonuses to achievements. At the very least it could encourage champion diversity from more players, which I think would be a great thing.

Ranked Champion update

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In between my Vayne testing and the occasional Kog’Maw game, I’ve been keeping up with my quest to get the 76/76 ranked champion wins. There have been some tedious games and I’ve had more than one Ryze win snatched out from under me by leavers or sheer foolishness. After picking up my Karma win this afternoon, I’m up to 74/76 champion wins, with just Ryze and Vayne left on the list.

My hardest won victory has definitely been Jarvan. I know he’s strong but I just couldn’t seem to get him to work with my team comps. I’m not really sure what it was, but since I first made the post about this little challenge I had to try six times before I finally managed a win.

Here’s a look at the champion list I started with. The crossed out names have been accomplished and the number denotes the attempts made, including the victory game.

Alistar: 3
Eve: 1
Jarvan: 6
Karma: 3
Karthus: 1
Lee Sin: 3, but I fed hard in the win game. Totally got carried.
Maokai: 1
Rumble: 1
Ryze: 4
Soraka: 2
Vayne: 1

My one Vayne attempt was nothing short of infuriating. I was up against Soraka and Alistar, with Tryndamere, Kassadin, and Rumble to support them. It was utterly impossible to get a kill. At one point in the game – mind you we surrendered at like 23 minutes so this was early – I think I counted 17 turret hits on Alistar in a row. All the same, this has been a lot of fun, even with its frustrating moments.

Unexpected changes planned for tomorrow’s patch

Tomorrow’s patch includes some very welcome changes to CC-reduction, which I’ve covered in another post, but also some unexpected changes to champions. Shen’s getting a damage tweak, Karthus is getting a small nerf, as are Jarvan and Nocturne, while Gangplank is getting a buff. Along with the champion changes, Sunfire is getting a nerf and Wit’s End is catching what I can only consider a buff.

I’m not sure why Riot thinks Shen, or any tank for that matter, needs to be able to carry games, but that’s the context given for Shen’s upcoming damage tweak. Vorpal Blade and Ki Strike are getting an initial nerf but will now scale better to “let Shen carry but not deal a ton of damage without trying.” I get that with the Vorpal Blade change, but Ki Strike scales with his HP, something he’s likely to itemize for in most any situation. Like I said, I don’t get the change, but I’m hoping the Vorpal reduction will be enough to counterbalance what could be a very strong late game Ki Strike.

Karthus is getting a basic AP ratio nerf to his ult and a duration nerf on his passive. Essentially, killing him will actually reduce some of the damage he does, though not by a ton. I don’t see Karthus much these days, but I know he’s made it into a few high-level matches recently. I’m guessing the changes are coming as a result of his presence there.

Jarvan’s getting a much needed damage nerf to hopefully force him to build for damage before dishing out crazy burst. I’m curious to see how the numbers will work on this one, so I’m not gonna say too much about it. Nocturne is getting the same treatment – damage nerfs to his highest ranks of Duskbringer and Paranoia, which will hopefully tone him down a bit.

Gangplank is getting stat per level buffs to both his attack speed and armor along with an attack range buff. His Remove Scurvy and his Ultimate are getting cooldown reductions, and his ult will now have a better slow at early ranks. All of this is good news, but I wonder if it will really be enough to make him enjoyable to play. He still has low base health and his ult’s radius is too small for the way the cannonballs hit. It’s still unclear why Riot hasn’t just made it a larger version of MF’s Make It Rain at this point. I’ve seen a couple people say they don’t want it to be a global snipe, but making it unpredictable isn’t necessarily a more favorable situation. The guy who gets sniped by it won’t be consoled knowing that Gangplank’s next two ults didn’t work in other games.

Sunfire and Wit’s End are both getting some tweaks, though the Wit’s End changes are much more significant than Sunfire. Sunfire remains the same, just with a 5 damage per second reduction on the burn. Wit’s End has lost the mana burn, though it still deals the 42 magic damage per hit. In place of the burn, the item also grants the bearer 5 magic resistance on attack for 5 seconds, stacking up to 4 times. I think we’ll start to see Wit’s End much more often with the change.

I’m looking forward to testing the changes tomorrow. Check back for impressions and, as always, you can add me at “The Wiggin Boy” if you’re looking for some games.

Captain, there’s an anomaly in the system!

My attempt to get a ranked win with all 75 champions is going well, at least for what I expected. I’ve managed to pick up a few first-attempt wins, which feels really good. Karthus was a one shot, as were Eve and Rumble. I expected the latter two to be easy, but the Karthus win was a pleasant surprise.

Ryze and Alistar continue to give me trouble. I’ve had solid starts with both champions in several games, but my teammates just can’t find a way to work with another. It’s painful.

I also had one extremely frustrating game last night in which I was paired with an unranked Malphite, even though he hadn’t duo queued with anyone. You can see the teams in the screenshot above. My own team’s rankings, in order from top to bottom, is as follows:

1324
1321
1337
1320
Unranked

The enemy team, again from top to bottom, was:

1356
1353
1350
1376
1315

The last two players on the enemy team also duo queued together, which I’ve always seen as an advantage, especially when the two players are so close in ELO. This sort of thing just shouldn’t happen in the matchmaking system. Even if that unranked player was lying for some reason and actually did duo with another player, we were outmatched as far as ELO is concerned. I know ELO isn’t a very good gauge of player skill, but when a player is dumped into a match 120 points above his ELO, against higher-rated duo queue to boot, well, I expect about the outcome I got. He bought Ninja Tabi against a very limited physical team and “initiated” by ulting one of the enemy players at a time, most often Xin Zhao. It was a mess.

Like I said, though, this is going better than expected. I just lost another with Ryze, bringing my total attempts with him to three. We’ll see if I have more tim this afternoon to try again.

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