Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Bronze league players, yes, it gets better!!! But....

...it really depends more on your attitude than anything else.  Let me explain why.

So you've been pwning face in Arena and Conquest and Assault and figure that this game is just too easy.  I'm going to hop in and try league, how hard can it be?  You then proceed to feed your lane and lose 8 of the 10 qualifying matches and find yourself in Bronze IV.  You rage at your jungle for not ganking, you rage at your support for not saving you, you rage at everyone for being bad, all in bold face type (because you aren't in Curse Voice).  If you've ever seen a soccer game of 7 year olds running after the ball in a big clump, well, that's you.  Ask any of those kids how well they played and they will tell you that they are going to grow up to be professional soccer players.  All they know is that they can kick the ball well, and that they feel that is all that is necessary to be an amazing soccer player.  By the time those kids hit 9 years old they start to realize that they need a whole lot more than just to kick the ball, there is positioning and teamwork and strategy.

I'm not saying you are 7 years old, just that the effect is the same.  There is actually a name for it, the Dunning-Kruger effect.  Its actually a psychological trick that gives us a whole lot of undeserved over-confidence when we first start learning something new.  If you've ever been in a game where you've been blamed for the loss, it may not have been you, it may just have been the others looking for a scapegoat because in their mind it sure wasn't them that lost the game.

When moving from casual to league many people have this confidence in their ability to play the game that is a bit inflated, due to the fact that casual play is generally more about landing abilities and hitting buttons and very little about teamwork and strategy.  To be successful in ranked it takes a lot of teamwork and strategy as well as hitting abilities.  The ability to get into Curse and work with 4 strangers that you have probably never worked with before is a skill in itself that often needs a whole lot of work at first.

So how do you make things easier on yourself and increase your chances when you first start?  Realize that ranked is a whole new ball game.  Realize that you will have a lot to learn and that there may be other players that aren't as good as you and many that are better than you.  Find the good ones and follow their lead.  Find the less experienced ones and instruct them politely instead of berating them.

Once you make it out of Bronze league you will start to see more people in curse, more people in the right place at the right time, and a whole lot less dc's and rage quits.  For every game that goes badly, focus on your own performance and what you could have done better.  Focusing on what other people could have done better, beyond a friendly reminder here and there, will not help you achieve your own goals of climbing the ranked ladder.

Thanks for reading and good luck!

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Wednesday, November 5, 2014

How have some of the new or refreshed gods changed the meta?

Since I made my first post about the current meta we've had a lot of new or refreshed gods enter the mix.  Let's take a look at each one, how they changed the casual scene, the ranked scene and then how they impacted the competitive scene and what adjustments have been made since their release. Its important to not that a when a god is released, whether it is a new god or a new kit for an old god, they are not available in ranked or competitive play, usually for about two weeks.  Hi-Rez is willing to let new gods and abilities affect the meta, but they don't want them to be mandatory or game breaking.

Nu Wa - August 5th, 2014

Nu Wa was always a split push specialist.  She was popular in ranked but never saw the light of day in the competitive scene.  The rework gave her a fairly reliable stun/cc/damage combo as well as the coveted global ultimate, joining other global ultimate gods like athena, apollo, and janus in the first pick first ban list.  She can be seen in all three conquest types (casual, ranked, competetive) very regularly as both a mid and solo.  She is not among the easier gods to play however as her combo relies on understanding minion AI and her ultimate can be wasted easily if used at the wrong time. Even with this being said, she remains popular in casual as she is a very fun god to play.

Cabrakan - August 19th, 2014

Released with much fanfare as having a very unique kit, Cabra was quickly relegated to the back seat in conquest. His kit isn't really a counter to any other god.  As a support he doesn't have the CC to compare to any of the other top guardians, and as a solo he doesn't really have the damage nor sustain.  He does see a fair amount of play in Seige and Arena, but without some sort of retooling he probably won't see play in conquest any time soon.  Oh, and this is after two rounds of buffs to his damage, animations and cooldowns.

Arachne - September 10th, 2014

This little spider launched strong, was toned down a little but still maintains the respect of many as a strong jungler.  She falls into the category of a Loki or Thor that are amazing if they are snowballing, but are tough to play from behind.  She does have more sustain than any of them and often is compared to Bakasura in how you want to jungle with her.

Odin - September 10th, 2014

Originally thought to be very strong this god saw a lot of play early on and still does in casual and somewhat as a counter-pick in competitive.  His new kit is now exciting and fun, but the leap is telegraphed enough that it is completely avoidable by any competent player.  He's fun to play and okay as a solo, jungle or support, but there are far better choices for each role.

Sylvanus - October 1st, 2014

Sylvanus is considered extremely strong even after some severe nerfs after the PTS testing and the initial testing in casual.  He is not an easy god to play however and hasn't really seen his full potential as this writing.  The guardian most played order goes Athena, Ymir, Geb, Sylvanus, Ares, then Bacchus. Sylvanus will likely find his footing soon though, once the supports start learning how to make full use of his heal.  Also, with the regional qualifiers coming up in competitive, I think more than a few teams are counting on Sylvanus as being their ace in the hole.

Nox - October 29th, 2014

Unfortunately, for how cool this god looks, she is currently considered very weak in general with not much going for her outside of as a debuff monkey, which in all honesty, He Bo could do better.

So there you have all the new gods.  The success stories can be seen in Nu Wa, Arachne, and Sylvanus, while Nox and Cabraken are pretty abysmal failures leaving only Odin as the fun but not good enough god.  Nu Wa is really the only one to make it to the first pick, first ban tier though.

Thanks for reading, have fun and remember to sign up for email alerts at the top of the page as well as to check out any of my other posts.

What are the advantages and disadvantages of playing a support role in Smite?

I often hear folks say that they don't want to play support in league because it is so much harder to carry a team to a win.  Don't believe it!  Any position can help carry a team to a win. There is a reason we track KDA and not just KD ratios.  The players that complain about not being able to carry a team as a support are the ones that play a guardian as if it were a carry and expect that it will work out to get them a high KDA and therefore a win.  Playing support is not just being a tank!  You obviously want to build as tanky as you can but you also want to play to keep your dps alive.

Here are some of the symptoms of a damage minded player trying to support:
  1. Chases fleeing players because he thinks one in hand attack will get the kill when in reality his low damage would require at least 3 hits that he will not get before the enemy team collapses on him.
  2. Lunges into a group of players and then engages the enemy tank while all of the dps players walk around him and kill the back line mages and hunters.
  3. Never seems to have any wards in inventory and there are none on his side of the map, nor on the Gold Fury or Fire Giant.
  4. He rotates to mids and then tries to gank and then failing that sticks around to leach a wave of minions instead of taking down the harpies and going back to duo lane for farming.
  5. He buys CDR boots instead of Midas Boots because "Damage!"
  6. 20 minutes into the game and he still doesn't have HoG 3, but he does have Blink 3.
  7. He seems to think picking a warrior is viable in league.
This player might be an amazing mid, adc, jungle and/or solo, but really needs to read up on what he should be doing as a support.  Support is unlike any of the other roles, and playing it like any of the other roles will not only not allow you to carry but it will get you the loss.

So let's form a priority list of what a support needs to do during the game.

  1. Rotate to mid harpies every 3 minutes
    • Uncontested mid harpies will allow the enemy team to snowball quickly, it is not just your team losing the xp/gold but their team gaining the xp/gold.
  2. Sentry ward on Gold Fury at the 6 minute mark and ongoing.
  3. Sentry ward on the Fire Giant at the 15 minute mark and ongoing
  4. Be sure to not use your HoG 3 if there is even a chance that someone will call for GF/FG
  5. Call for GF/FG at appropriate times:
    • Opponent's Support and any HoG 3 players are dead
    • Support is seen backing when 3 or more of your allies are around GF
    • You Sentry GF/FG and see that it is unwarded and all players are out of line of sight of the enemy.
    • More that 3 of the enemy team are dead.
  6. In group/team fights, prioritize your CC to set up your team for big damage or to save a teammate's life, do not use CC to set up for your own weak damaging abilities.
  7. If all of your abilities are on CD, body block!  If one of your squishy dps is getting hit the best thing you can do is try to stand in between them and the opponent.
Build tips:
  1. If you have a mage/assassin in solo lane and your team seems to be doing well in the damage department:
    • Watcher's Gift, Midas Boots, HoG 3, Sovereignty, Stone of Gaia, Hide of the Urchin, either Voidstone or Witchblade and then the other.
  2. If you have a player building tanky in solo lane, usually a warrior like Chaac or Vamana, you can go a little more damaging/CC:
    • Watcher's Gift, Midas Boots, HoG 3, Breastplate of Valor, Voidstone, Hide of the Urchin, Witchblade and then either Soul Reaper or Bancroft's Talon.
Alright, so now to the task at hand, carrying a mediocre/bad team to a win.  First off, your team's ELO is going to be close to your own, generally, so no matter how bad they seem, they have earned the right to be in this game with you; and even if they haven't, it will do your blood pressure good to just assume they have.  That being said, you may end up with a person who mostly jungles playing adc or a player that only plays solo attempting mid.  The best thing you can do as a support is to figure out the weakest link and protect them, while ensuring that the best player is getting fed.

Let's take a look at the advantages of playing a support over any other role:
  1. You aren't expected to land auto-attacks
  2. Support favors intelligence over reflexes (though good reflexes don't hurt)
  3. Support favors teamwork over individual skill
  4. Building tanky will give you a larger margin for error
The disadvantage are:
  1. You won't do much damage, so if everyone else dies, you are pretty useless unless you have blink and HoG3 and they are pushing GF/FG
  2. You don't have your "own" farm, so you will always be leaching off of the adc/mid/jungle.
  3. Even though you are expected to roam, your ability to gank is heavily reliant on dps following up on your initiation.

So that's the jist of it.  Don't assume players are bad.  Let your dps get the last hit on everything.  On the rare occasion you do go to gank, be sneaky: hide behind walls, avoid walking through common ward locations, use sentries at common ward locations.  And lastly, check out streamers like Incontinentia, Eonic, and ShadowQ for support tips and tricks.  I don't think any of them are particularly great casters, but they are clearly great supports, and you can learn a ton from just watching a game or two.

Have fun!



Tuesday, October 21, 2014

How to move up and out of Bronze league....

This is for all the folks out there that feel that they are stuck in Bronze league and that it is everyone else's fault that they can't get promoted out of Bronze league.  Guess what?  You are probably wrong, and it is probably, at least in part, your fault that you are stuck in Bronze league.  There are many things that you can do that affect the outcome of a match that have absolutely nothing to do with pushing buttons at the right time.

So let's start with the first list of Do's and Don't's.  This list is things you need to do before going into league.

Do:

  1. Pick two roles that you enjoy and have a 3rd ready just in case, one of these 3 should be support, someone will always get "stuck" as support and have no idea how to do it.
  2. Pick two gods for each role and practice them in casual until you get them to at least mastery III.  If you aren't sure which gods are your best you can look up your win rate per god in casual or league here:  http://smite.guru/
  3. Understand each of your chosen six gods abilities and passives.  Passives are extremely important and will affect how you play the god!
  4. Have a build ready for each of your six chosen gods complete with optional items for situational use.
  5. Have an understanding of your roles responsibilities, mid needs to rotate, adc/solo need to farm lane, support needs to ward, jungle needs to drop buffs then gank, etc.
  6. Install curse, set up keybinding for push to talk, test with friends to make sure you aren't too quiet or loud.
  7. Make sure your computer is clean of viruses using free tools like AVG Antivirus and Malwarebytes.  If your internet cuts out on you regularly reset your modem/router before beginning a play session.  Make sure that no one on the network is running torrents or if they are they have the max connections/upload speed set appropriately.
Don't:
  1. Join league queue when you know your internet/computer is unstable.
  2. Join league queue without Curse, a microphone is not necessary, but it is helpful.
  3. Join league queue if you know you will be interrupted by real world concerns or you don't have an hour to devote to a game.
  4. Assume you will always get to play your favorite role.
  5. Join league queue if you don't work well with others. ;)
Here's a list of Do's and Don'ts for the Lobby:

Do:
  1. Say hi to your new teammates.
  2. Declare your two favorite roles and god preferences, "Mid/Supp pref, Janus/Ymir"
  3. Be willing to work with others that may only have one role they can play.  Putting someone in a position to fail will not increase your win rate.
  4. Realize that the further towards the top of the pick order you are, gives you more choice, the closer to the bottom you are the more you have to work with others to figure out roles.
  5. Realize that there will be trolls, practice patience.
Don't:
  1. Rage/troll/bm when you don't get your favorite role.
  2. Confuse people by trolling.  This can be amusing but can also lead to double adc's or double supports by accident.
  3. Insult people.
  4. Rage at people you recognize from previous losses.  Each game is different and sometimes a bad start in a game will just snowball and make someone seem much worse of a player than they actually are.
List of in-game Do's and Don't's:

Do:  
  1. Call missing over VGS or Curse.
  2. Do call movements, especially if you see a jungle or support in your lane.
  3. Call for help if you are being focused.
  4. Call when you are invading buffs so that your team can back you up.
  5. Share XP with support and jungle at every opportunity.
  6. Get wards and use them.  No role is immune to getting wards, you should never leave base without at least 1 ward in your inventory.
  7. Be willing to cover for other people.
  8. Call for retreat if you feel your teammates are overextended.
  9. Call for Gold Fury/Fire Giant/Tower Rush if you feel you have a numbers advantage.
  10. Pay attention the the map, and the health/mana bars of your teammates.
Don't;
  1. Feed the other team.
  2. Rage at your team.
  3. Tell people how to play their characters in the heat of the moment.  You can certainly offer advise or discuss during farming phases.
  4. Surrender.  This is league, grow a pair.
  5. Wander looking for fights, this is league, players are just obstacles in the way of objectives, not targets.  If they aren't in your way, you shouldn't be chasing.
  6. Hate.  You can certainly dislike someone, but try to keep it to yourselves, letting them know you don't like them will not increase your win rate, at all, ever.
  7. Rage back at ragers.  It just gets ugly, and you'll just have to wash the spit off your monitor later.
You may have read all of this and been, "This has almost nothing to do with playing the game."  Very true, a lot of it is just tricks to working with others, optimizing your computer/attitude for success, focusing your talents on a small god pool, and mitigating the damage bad players will do.  The more people that you can work with, the more stable your computer, the more less experienced players that you can help, the more wins you will get and the faster you will be out of Bronze league.

Good luck and don't feed!

Thursday, October 16, 2014

General Build Guide for a Mage in Mid Lane

So you want to be a wizard...

So in order of build diversity from most standard to least standard you have:  Adc, Support, Jungle, Mage, and then finally Solo.  Solo is the most diverse because you can play it as a warrior, assassin, and mage.  So if you had to pick a build for mid, not knowing which mage you would be playing and not knowing either team's comp, what would it be?  You need a little bit of survivability and whole lot of magic power with a little pen on your 2nd to last or last item.  Hence:
  • Vampiric Shroud, Bancroft's Talon (1st tier to start then skip upgrading until later) CDR Boots, Warlock Sash, Book of Thoth, Bancroft's Talon (Finish), Obsidian Shard, Rod of Tahuti
This is a high damage build for just about any mage.  Warlock Sash gives you some health, and you will do a ton of damage.  If you are new to league and need a little more "wiggle room" you can go with Hide of the Urchin or Magi's Blessing instead of Book of Thoth.  This will however greatly reduce your damage during midgame and slightly reduce it at the end, but has the added advantage of you not feeding the enemy team.  Some times playing mid is just not dying and saving your jungler/solo from your opponent's mid's rotations.

Before I get into alternate builds or items for situations, let's take a look at the viable mid mages.  We have, in no particular order:  Kukulkan, Poseidon, Janus, Chronos, Scylla, Isis, He Bo, Agne, Ra, and Nu Wa.  These gods in particular, as opposed to other mages, all have one thing in common, some manner of speed boost, teleport, or lunge.  Mobility is key in mid as you need to rotate around to the mid harpies and to help the jungle with back harpies as well as potentially helping with speed and damage buffs, not to mention rotating to either duo or solo lanes occasionally.  The mobility also helps when the jungle and or support suddenly crash your lane to gank every 3 minutes when the harpies come up.  The other advantage many of these gods have are the area denial abilities.  These are persistent fields that can be put down that essentially box the enemy into an area.  Kukulkan has the tornado, Poseidon the whirlpool, Janus the speed bump, Scylla the red glowy circle, He Bo the wet paper, Agne the oil slick/bombs/dash fire, and Nu Wa the fog.  Many of these gods also have roots or slows, which can then be countered by Isis's wing gusts and Chronos speed booster.

So which ogds will you get yelled at for picking in mid and why?  Anubis, Aphrodite, Chang'e, Freya, Hel, Vulcan, Zeus, and Zhong Kui are all poor mid's because they have no or next to no mobility abilities.  Anubis, Vulcan, and Zeus are somewhat viable due to still having zoning abilities.  Aphro, Hel, Chang'e,Ahong Kui and Freya are all decent solo's duo to their sustain but their lack of mobility and zoning make them poor mid's.  I want to point out that Vulcan has made a resurgence of late, people still don't like seeing him, but he does have a very high win percentage with a decent play rate.  He defies the general mid strategy of mobility but you can't really argue with his burst.  One of his main drawbacks was that his ult was hard to hit, but the resurgence of Ymir, the new Nu Wa, and the bug fixed Serqet, the combo potential has really made the ult much easier to hit.

Let's take a look at items, as this is a build guide, that are commonly found in the mid lane:  Vampiric Shroud, Bancroft's Talon, Chronos Pendent, Warlock Sash, Book of Thoth, Obsidian Shard, Rod of Tahuti and either the Pen or CDR boots.  Then you have items that are situational to certain gods or certain situations.  Demonic Grip on more in hand based gods like Chronos.  Spear of the Magus on gods with high ability uptime like Isis, He Bo, and Poseidon.  Polynomicon and Soul Reaver on burst mages like Scylla, Janus, Agne and Poseidon.  Some situational items are Breastplate of Valor which would replace a Chronos Pendant and is good if you keep getting ganked by a Loki or Serqet and is best when teamed with a Book of Thoth.  Magi's blessing if you have a high amount of cc coming at you like Khumba, Ymir, Artemis.

So a CDR rush build looks like:

Vampiric Shroud, Lost Artifact (Chronos Pendant 1), CDR boots, Chronos Pendant (Finish) Warlock Sash, Obsidian Shard, Rod of Tahuti, Polynomicon.

A more defensive CDR rush will leave Lost Artifact until its time to build Rod of Tahuti and instead get Breastplate of Valor before Warlock Sash.  This delays stacking the Sash for a bit but well worth it if you have a Loki jumping down your throat.  Also you can start with Tiny trinket instead of Lost Artifact for a 5 magical power increase in initial laning phase and just leave it at rank 1 until its time to build Poly.  Poly works well with CDR for obvious reasons.

You never want to go too tanky in mid as your team will absolutely need your damage the longer the game goes on.  The most you would want to do, if you are really getting hurt in mid is to get Sash, Breastplate and either Magi's Blessing or Hide of the Urchin.  If you try to build any more defense than that then you become pretty much useless to your team.

Alright lets talk about actives.  Its pretty straightforward here as most of the time you will want beads and aegis.  If you are on Ra you can swap one for heavenly agility.  If you are on Nu Wa you can swap one for Girdle of Inner Strenth and combine with damage buff to do a lot of damage during Ult.  Pretty simple really.  For consumables, some mana pots early and then just get wards and sentries.  Its ok if that sentry just stays in your inventory all game, its better to have it, and never need it, than to need it, and no one has one.

So, as I've said before there is a lot of options for mid lane mages and these are only two very general builds.  There are a lot of custom build guides created around specific gods and as you find the 2 or 3 gods you want to specialize in, it is worthwhile to look at those guides  Also, it is really dependent on how much cc the other team has, how much spike damage the other team has, how mobile is the other team, which god are you laning against, which god are you using, and finally are you going to need to function as a hyper carry in end game given your team comp.  I've outlined some of the major things to think about when you are buiding, so good luck!


Friday, October 3, 2014

Changes to the Meta, popular gods.

So for the last week, I've been keeping an eye on a little site called SmiteRepo.com.  It doesn't seem to be maintained any longer, however, it doesn't really need to be.  All it does is pull data directly from HiRez's API and parse it into neat charts.  One of these charts shows the data for the last 1000 matches of the top 500 players in league, which comes out to about the last 12 hours.  You can even sort by most wins, by god, and click right on the gods to see the builds that are popular.

Using that I've modified my first meta list with the following update based on this site and the win ratio of the most played gods:

First pick supports: Geb, Athena
First pick junglers:  Loki, Arachne
First pick adcs:  Apollo, Rama
First pick mids:  Janus, Nu Wa, Vulcan, Ra
First pick solos:  Nu Wa, Zhong Kui, Ra

First pick Multi Role: Freya (Jungle, Solo, ADC)

Second pick supports:  Odin, Ares
Second pick junglers:  Thor, Mercury, Nemesis, Thanatos
Second pick adcs:  Ullr, Neith, An hur, Loki
Second pick mids:  Poseidon, Scylla, Kukulkan
Second pick solos:  Hercules, Vamana, He Bo, Chaac, Guan Yu


So let's take a look at the changes from our last list and why each god seems to be becoming meta. With the nerf to mercury, Loki is being played more in the adc and solo land as well as jungle.  He is the king of burst and retreat and his kit really says it all.  You build him full glass and never engage in the middle of a team fight.  Patience is key with this god.

Arachne has come back strong after her re-kit.  I actually haven't seen her much in league as she has been banned out consistently.  The few times I have seen her, her ultimate was really scary.  She's the new hotness and people don't know the counter picks and plays yet so she will be strong probably through to the next patch.

Rama.  Rama has great lane clear, and great boxing potential with the slow, and he can kill secure with his ultimate.  Nothing not to love here.  Works well against Apollo which is by far the winningest god.

Vulcan.  I must confess to being confused as to why this god has such a high win rate.  He's usually found in mid and of all the mid laners, he's the least mobile.  My thought is here that he combos well off of Ymir, Ares, Thor, and Thanatos.  It could also be that he's been out of the meta so long that people aren't that familiar with the counter picks and plays.  That and the mini raid-boss turret.

Odin has been found to be strong after his rebuild.  Most of the downsides to his ring ultimate were removed and generally is being used in the support role, and he just barely edges out Ymir in plays and win percentage.

Ares is seeing a resurgence as he and his chains are strong against Apollo, Rama and Athena, all top picks.  An Ares pick also forces beads as the second item for your opponents.  He also is the top damage guardian besides Hades, which is usually found in the solo lane building for damage.

Thanatos has also made it to the list with the heavy hammer build.  With the nerf to heavy hammer, people are still playing Thanatos as he can be dominating in the beginning, but it is important to understand that his damage does fall off in late game.

An hur is strong versus Apollo as his knockback negates the aggressive dash, and Apollo is see a high amount of play.

He Bo is seeing a resurgence due to a lot of play in the SPL, but his win ratio really doesn't support him being used.  I think his win ratio is only bad because some are trying to use him in mid and he's really a solo god.

Guan Yu is seeing more play with his buffs and some good showings in SPL but he also belongs in solo lane, not the support role.  Again I believe this is bringing down his win ratio.

So, to finish up.  This is my interpretation of the data from SmiteRepo which I've been watching intently since the patch.  I would love to see some longer periods or a little more granular control on the periods that you want to look at, but already I've found a few things that were really surprising, A few things are the really high win ratio of Freya and Ares and the cementing of Apollo as the first pick hunter by a large margin.

Thanks for reading, I'm still working on the mid mage guide, but I keep getting distracted.

Remember, don't feed!


Wednesday, September 24, 2014

What is this ELO hell you speak of?

What is this ELO hell? Or alternatively, "Help, I'm stuck in Bronze league and I can't get out!"

So if you are new to Ranked play, there are a few things that are good to know.  First, let's explain what matchmaking is.  Coming from casuals you may assume that all of your matches were against completely random players.  Well they weren't.  As you win or lose, your stats and the stats of your opponents are weighed in a big algorithm, so that on your next queue the average matchmaking rating of your team is equal to that of your opponents team.  Also, if you queue as a party you are much more likely to run into other parties.  This is done so that either team has a chance to win and minimizes the chances of a blowout, close games are generally more fun than curbstomps.  You still run into player incompatibilities though.  Even with average matchmaking being the same, at the most basic level, you could run into 5 very aggressive individuals versus a team of half aggressive/half defensive.  The split team will often lose as the aggressive individuals will run in and the defensive minded folks won't go in to back them up.  There are other ways that players just won't get along and its next to impossible to try to develop an algorithm that can model and adjust for player's play style.

In casuals, your matchmaking rating is completely hidden.  It is not a number you can see or that has ever been available to see.  In Ranked however, this number is called ELO.  ELO is a system that was developed originally for Chess to determine, you guessed it, matchmaking.  Hi-Rez has kept their modifications to their ELO ratings quiet, and for good reason, as the system could be "gamed" if the specifics were made public.  ELO did need to be modified both in Smite and in other games, however, as it was originally designed for 1 on 1 matches not random groups of 5 on 5.  Many casters allow you to check your ELO on twitch with the !elo command.  Your rating is determined by your win and losses in Ranked only, and adjusted by the strength of your opponents ELOs.  This number is then compared against other players in queue to attempt to make the average ELO of both team roughly equal.

Ok, now that that is out of the way, we can finally get to the topic at hand.  The player coined term "ELO hell" is the state that you find yourself in when first entering league.  In bronze league, you will often find yourself teamed up with players with bad connections, that don't speak english, that don't use curse voice, and that generally don't understand how to play the game.  This will happen because your initial ELO is low enough that you are matched with other players with hardly any Ranked experience.  This situation can lead to unlucky streaks of large numbers of losses, leaving you to struggle in Bronze league until you get frustrated with your lack of upward movement and quit.


Now, here is the big question, is ELO hell a real thing?  Simple answer? No.  Technically, it could be if the algorithms are bad, but they are not.  If you play enough and continue to improve your game and communicate with your team you will rise out of Bronze league.  The trick here is to not get discouraged because one of your teammates is disconnected or just horrible.  The odds are that on average over many game, the other team will have just as many of these lagging, non-english speaking noobs as your team does.  The trick is to make the best plays possible and be where you are needed during the course of the match.  Know your role and be aware of what is happening across the map.

If you are on solo island, and your mid is losing lane and your jungle isn't ganking, you need to find a way to make a play for a kill in your lane so that you can rotate.  Also, if you see that others aren't rotating to mid harpies than you can clear your wave and head there and back before your next wave hits your tower.  Share as much xp with your jungler at jungle camps as you can.  One of the best ways to turn a losing game is to outfarm the other team.  Share as much farm with your jungler and support as possible as it will be a net gain of xp and gold every time.

If you are in mid, be sure to announce mid harpy timers, ask for your red buff from your jungler, share small harpy camps when ever you can.  If your opponent in mid is missing or rotating, call it and rotate after him or her.  These are called "high ELO plays," basically doing anything that increases your chance of winning.

If you have teammates that are failing, help them, don't berate them.  Don't assume your idea/plan is the best one.  If your teammates aren't communicating, try to figure out what they are doing and help them.  It is a far better strategy in ELO hell to simply help your teammates do whatever it is they think they should be doing, than to push in another direction.

The other thing you can do is to specialize.  Figure out which role/god wins you the most games.  Pick two gods for twos role and try to get them every time in the picking phase.  Get to know those gods like the back of your hand, and once you've successfully made it out of Bronze league you can start branching out.  You can even go take a look at your win percentages using Hi-Rez's tool, you may be surprised to find out that your favorite god to play only at a 30% win rate whereas the god you've only played 15 times is at 85%.

Remember to think, its not all pushing buttons at the right time, though, of course, that helps.

Have fun and don't feed the enemy!