Some exercises to practice for struggling or new players
Posted: Thu 15 Oct, 2015 2:28 am
I have been playing the game for many years and to be honest I have never been any good. Recently I decided to try and work on my micro skills and here are a few exercises that I came up with to work on my skills. I thought other players may find them helpful.
The aim is to forget about winning the match for one game and focus on only practicing these exercises. I suggest trying these out in 3v3s as no one will notice that you aren’t playing normally. To be honest my play has been better doing these exercises than when trying to win anyway!
Use cover in every engagement.
This is an extra exercise for really new players whereas the other exercises below are for players who know the basics but may have some bad habits. For a whole game, every movement order you make that is not a capping command must end with the squad in cover. In addition, every time your squads are shooting or being shot at move them into cover. Even if you think they will win the engagement you must move them into cover. Remember the aim of playing is to practice this exercise not to win the game. If moving into cover means moving too close then move back out of range to find cover. Even if it costs you the game, practice the exercise. You probably need to do this for 3 games till you get used to the idea of the importance of cover.
Queue up a movement command EVERY time you issue a capping command
Even after years of playing I have found this exercise helpful. This exercise is to get you in the habit of queuing up commands. The rule is that every time you issue a capping command you must queue up another command, either another cap or a movement to end in cover. Pick cover next to the point you are capping or bring the unit back across the map to rejoin your army. Do this for a whole game. (To queue commands simply hold down the shift key as you issue the second and subsequent commands.)
This is an easy exercise and once I tried it and saw how powerful it was I just made it a habit for every game. After that, new ways of positioning units started to come naturally.
Did you know you can queue up a retreat after capping? Did you know you can queue up an ability? Did you know that you can go back and queue up commands even after giving commands to a different unit?
Use grid keys for abilities and building units
You must be using grid keys for this exercise. You must be using grid keys period!
Using grid keys is much faster and more accurate than moving your mouse from the play area all the way across to click an ability and then all the way back again to select a target. Plus you can track much better. I always knew this but out of habit I persisted in mouse clicking. What a mistake!
For this exercise play the whole match only using grid keys to activate abilities even if you don’t know what they are. Slow down, look over, see which hot key to press and then use it, all the while tracking your target with your mouse. I was shocked to find that even though I had to slow down to look and find the hot key to do this, that the end result was still faster and more efficient. Even when I felt I was going reaaallly slow the final time to use an ability was never slower than using the mouse. And was always more accurate This exercise needs to be repeated 3-5 times until it becomes a new habit.
Play a whole game without over-extending a single squad or your hero
I frequently get a bit too aggressive and over-extend units result in squad losses. For this game try to play the whole game without over-extending. Be cautious, look at the mini map frequently and imagine that a banshee squad is trying to flank and get in behind your squads (best done on a laney 3v3 map). The result will be a much more defensive and cautious play style but the first time I did this was the first time I got halfway through tier 2 without losing a single model. Of course, then I got over-excited and threw my whole army away in a single showdown. Try to keep it up for the whole game, don’t forget you aren’t playing to win; you are playing to practice this exercise. Your allies won’t notice anything funny if you do this, they will just think you are preserving your units better than usual! This exercise needs to be repeated multiple times.
Dress your lines
Anyone who has played a Total War game will be familiar with the concept of having to keep your lines well organized even when marching across half the map and needing to dress the lines neatly before a fight. Leave a big gap in your lines and a cavalry unit will charge through and rout half your army.
Perform this exercise for a whole game every time you plan to advance your units or attack. For this exercise pause your units just out of combat range and organize them into neat lines before you advance. This means that as you advance you will be moving your units en masse instead of drip feeding your squads one at a time to your opponents. Show discipline and don’t select all then a-move but move your squads individually as you normally would. Just stop out of range and organize them first. This is a one-off exercise and you don’t need to repeat it once you can see the difference it makes.
Play off the mini-map not the main screen
The main screen is just a distraction! Try and watch the mini-map as much as possible. All the important strategic information is on the mini-map. This one is simple but hard to maintain for a whole game: every 5 seconds glace at the mini-map, even in the middle of a big engagement. It is helpful if you have a metronome or timer app that can give you a little signal to trigger you to look at the mini-map. In addition, every time there is a lull in the fighting stop and look at the mini-map. For the whole game plan your movements while looking at the mini-map not at the main screen (stop, look at mini-map, plan).
Use an ability or global you have never or rarely used
This one is easy, the aim of your whole game is to use an ability you are unfamiliar with. Do this for each ability you are unfamiliar with, even if you think it is useless, to find out how powerful it is and get an idea of how you might incorporate it in usual matches. Its amazing how much trying an ability once opens up the ability for you to use in future games.
As an alternative try combining abilities with different units. A nice easy one is to combine an inquisitor’s crossbow ability with a catachan barrage (or a manticore or hellfury strike). Pick a combo and see how many times you can pull it off for the game. Go for a triple if you feel like a laugh. Once you see how powerful ability combos are then you will want to try them all the time.
Thanks, this is a list of exercises to practice not a strategy guide. And remember you are playing the match to practice the exercise, not to win.
The aim is to forget about winning the match for one game and focus on only practicing these exercises. I suggest trying these out in 3v3s as no one will notice that you aren’t playing normally. To be honest my play has been better doing these exercises than when trying to win anyway!
Use cover in every engagement.
This is an extra exercise for really new players whereas the other exercises below are for players who know the basics but may have some bad habits. For a whole game, every movement order you make that is not a capping command must end with the squad in cover. In addition, every time your squads are shooting or being shot at move them into cover. Even if you think they will win the engagement you must move them into cover. Remember the aim of playing is to practice this exercise not to win the game. If moving into cover means moving too close then move back out of range to find cover. Even if it costs you the game, practice the exercise. You probably need to do this for 3 games till you get used to the idea of the importance of cover.
Queue up a movement command EVERY time you issue a capping command
Even after years of playing I have found this exercise helpful. This exercise is to get you in the habit of queuing up commands. The rule is that every time you issue a capping command you must queue up another command, either another cap or a movement to end in cover. Pick cover next to the point you are capping or bring the unit back across the map to rejoin your army. Do this for a whole game. (To queue commands simply hold down the shift key as you issue the second and subsequent commands.)
This is an easy exercise and once I tried it and saw how powerful it was I just made it a habit for every game. After that, new ways of positioning units started to come naturally.
Did you know you can queue up a retreat after capping? Did you know you can queue up an ability? Did you know that you can go back and queue up commands even after giving commands to a different unit?
Use grid keys for abilities and building units
You must be using grid keys for this exercise. You must be using grid keys period!
Using grid keys is much faster and more accurate than moving your mouse from the play area all the way across to click an ability and then all the way back again to select a target. Plus you can track much better. I always knew this but out of habit I persisted in mouse clicking. What a mistake!
For this exercise play the whole match only using grid keys to activate abilities even if you don’t know what they are. Slow down, look over, see which hot key to press and then use it, all the while tracking your target with your mouse. I was shocked to find that even though I had to slow down to look and find the hot key to do this, that the end result was still faster and more efficient. Even when I felt I was going reaaallly slow the final time to use an ability was never slower than using the mouse. And was always more accurate This exercise needs to be repeated 3-5 times until it becomes a new habit.
Play a whole game without over-extending a single squad or your hero
I frequently get a bit too aggressive and over-extend units result in squad losses. For this game try to play the whole game without over-extending. Be cautious, look at the mini map frequently and imagine that a banshee squad is trying to flank and get in behind your squads (best done on a laney 3v3 map). The result will be a much more defensive and cautious play style but the first time I did this was the first time I got halfway through tier 2 without losing a single model. Of course, then I got over-excited and threw my whole army away in a single showdown. Try to keep it up for the whole game, don’t forget you aren’t playing to win; you are playing to practice this exercise. Your allies won’t notice anything funny if you do this, they will just think you are preserving your units better than usual! This exercise needs to be repeated multiple times.
Dress your lines
Anyone who has played a Total War game will be familiar with the concept of having to keep your lines well organized even when marching across half the map and needing to dress the lines neatly before a fight. Leave a big gap in your lines and a cavalry unit will charge through and rout half your army.
Perform this exercise for a whole game every time you plan to advance your units or attack. For this exercise pause your units just out of combat range and organize them into neat lines before you advance. This means that as you advance you will be moving your units en masse instead of drip feeding your squads one at a time to your opponents. Show discipline and don’t select all then a-move but move your squads individually as you normally would. Just stop out of range and organize them first. This is a one-off exercise and you don’t need to repeat it once you can see the difference it makes.
Play off the mini-map not the main screen
The main screen is just a distraction! Try and watch the mini-map as much as possible. All the important strategic information is on the mini-map. This one is simple but hard to maintain for a whole game: every 5 seconds glace at the mini-map, even in the middle of a big engagement. It is helpful if you have a metronome or timer app that can give you a little signal to trigger you to look at the mini-map. In addition, every time there is a lull in the fighting stop and look at the mini-map. For the whole game plan your movements while looking at the mini-map not at the main screen (stop, look at mini-map, plan).
Use an ability or global you have never or rarely used
This one is easy, the aim of your whole game is to use an ability you are unfamiliar with. Do this for each ability you are unfamiliar with, even if you think it is useless, to find out how powerful it is and get an idea of how you might incorporate it in usual matches. Its amazing how much trying an ability once opens up the ability for you to use in future games.
As an alternative try combining abilities with different units. A nice easy one is to combine an inquisitor’s crossbow ability with a catachan barrage (or a manticore or hellfury strike). Pick a combo and see how many times you can pull it off for the game. Go for a triple if you feel like a laugh. Once you see how powerful ability combos are then you will want to try them all the time.
Thanks, this is a list of exercises to practice not a strategy guide. And remember you are playing the match to practice the exercise, not to win.


