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initial fighter success or failure (in an org)


TheGreatBear

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I was wondering if the first few fights for a new fighter have a significant effect on their future within an org.

1.  Does losing (and dropping popularity) mean fewer fight opportunities because there are so many other fighters to book?

2.  If you are on a losing streak should you fight QFC to build popularity back or release the fighter and start over (fixing previous mistakes)?

Thank you for your help.  This game is awesome and the community is very helpful!

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1. No. You can always take another fight to get back on track. At beginning those fights dont really matter, because fighters have really differend styles. If you get taken down and dont have ground defence you will lose. Styles make big difference at beginning and you have to learn how to read that data. Sometimes its fighter skills, sometimes hiddens, sometimes sliders etc. I believe its more about how you as manager care about your fighter. If you want fight you will get fight even you would be at 10 fight losing streak.

 

2. You can do this as you want. If you believe on your fighter you definitely should try to get back on track. Organisations and quickfight are both good choices. Quickfight is booked fast, but can be totally random opponent. If you see that your fighter isnt worth to keep release him.

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4 hours ago, TheGreatBear said:

I was wondering if the first few fights for a new fighter have a significant effect on their future within an org.

1.  Does losing (and dropping popularity) mean fewer fight opportunities because there are so many other fighters to book?

2.  If you are on a losing streak should you fight QFC to build popularity back or release the fighter and start over (fixing previous mistakes)?

Thank you for your help.  This game is awesome and the community is very helpful!

 

Orlando Diggs started career 0-2. Signed with an org. Ups and downs. Was once 5-4. Ended his career achieving #1 P4P status with a record of 43-19-1.

Kajun Puno was 6-5, but more or less do to learning speed and opponents out-priming him by a significant advantage imo. Once his skills closed the gap a bit he climbed to EVO champ, Syn champ, #1 P4P, stole all the glory. retired 32-9

Badr al Din was once 11-10 and riding a 4 fight losing streak. He's now #2 p4p fighter and syn champ (for now, he's still bum-ish).

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