Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
I just posted the same thing in another thread...and came to do it here.
Once again nem...GET OUT OF MY HEAD!
M.K.
Knight165All gave some. Some gave all. 343Comment
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“The saddest part of life is when someone who gave you your best memories becomes a memory”Comment
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
You two are made for each other.
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
“The saddest part of life is when someone who gave you your best memories becomes a memory”Comment
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
Yeah thats what I have been doing for the demo. I just leave it on No feedback. Thanks for the answer!!STEAM PROFILE: STEAM_0:1:39676753Comment
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
Haha, i saw that the other night when playing... Freaked me out, lol... I am sure it won't be in final build.PSN- JBoo2911Comment
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
I sure hope so though!
M.K.
Knight165All gave some. Some gave all. 343Comment
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All gave some. Some gave all. 343Comment
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Re: Community Preview Answer Discussion Thread.
Reading the signs from the catcher is a little difficult, at least as someone who was never a professional pitcher, but I think it works like this:
1. The catcher will issue a number, 1 for the X pitch, 2 for the O, and so on in counter-clockwise order.
2. The catcher will make a 'patting' motion downward, the speed and 'distance' of which determine the height of the ball in the strike zone. Short taps for up high, mid-level motions for mid-height, and decidedly downward motions (with at least 4-6 inches of 'throw) for pitches low in the strike zone. These motions are relative to each pitch type, so a very short fast ball tap means HIGH, while the same relative motion for a curve-ball will be for a pitch that ends more in the middle of the zone (because no one throws a curve that hangs intentionally).
3. The catcher will then tap his left thigh, right thigh or none to show the inside/outside/middle location of the pitch.
4. Finally, if he wants you to be sure to throw a strike, he'll tap his mitt against the ground, as a way of saying (we need this pitch to get ahead in the count etc.).
In my testing, this appears to be the meaning behind the signals, and I have checked my accuracy by turning off all aids and guessing pitch location, then hitting R2 which has the catcher repeat his signal, and temporarily displays the pitch target. I'm right about 90% of the time now.
Can anyone else comment/confirm if this interpretation seems accurate?
Thanks,Comment
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