Yea, agreed. Granted I only watched the JackFrags video but it seems like there is a lot of elitism in here that there is only one right way to play the game and that is constantly moving and using the parkour movement to maximum effect. I think for most players, unless you are extremely skilled at the game, you're actually better off playing a little more conservatively and taking advantage of all the other players running around like chickens with their heads cut off. I mean, that is if you are playing to win, playing to get more kills than deaths, etc. I got into TF1 over 2 years after it came out because I only had a PS4 for quite a while, expecting to get my ass handed to me by diehards who had been playing since launch and knew the ins and outs of every map. So I played cautiously and was pleasantly surprised how well I did almost right away. I'm a decent / pretty good FPS player but far from great. I'll usually wind up with a 1.5 - 2.5 K/D in most FPS games. And then I pick up this game 2 years late and after a few months I'm sitting on a 3.3 (against players, not players + grunts) and winning a lot more games than I lose. I'm using the wall running, etc. when I think I can use it to my advantage, not just for the sake of doing it because I can. I pick my spots and try not to be exposed as a pilot where I'm an easy kill for a titan. As a titan I try to avoid being outnumbered and even try to avoid the fair fights. I want more than 1 kill when I get my titan and a fair fight is likely to leave me, at best, heavily damaged for the next encounter. So I'd rather ambush an unsuspecting titan, or gang up on an outnumbered titan, or even better go on a rampage killing pilots. Again, I'm not an amazing player but I usually finish in the top 3 or so and get MVP maybe 1 out of 6 games. Anyway, if you are truly great at the game, maybe the frantic always moving approach works and you absolutely dominate that way. For the not as amazing player, I'd give dialing it down a notch a try, especially if you find yourself getting frustrated by the game.