How Does Push Work? |
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Q:
How does Push work exactly? Obviously, a higher push rating increases the
chances of victory in a given unbooked match. What I'm wondering is how
it does this. What exactly does it effect?
Does it make a wrestler's moves and/or finishers do more damage? |
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A: All you mentioned actually takes place. But - this might throw you off - the wrestler's absolute push isn't what is used. It's the ratio of the wrestlers' pushes that is used to calculate multipliers etc. For instance, if you have wrestler A with a push of 100 and wrestler B with a push of 75, A has a 100/75 ratio over B (133%) while wrestler B has a ratio of 75/100 (75%). That doesn't automatically mean that if wrestler A does the move X to wrestler B, his move will do 33 percent more damage than usual - nor does it mean that if it's the other way round, 25 percent of the damage are deducted. We're talking about potentials here. If a move has a damage rating of 100, with wrestler A it has a maximum damage potential of 133 while with wrestler B it has a maximum damage potential of 75. In a nutshell, it's still possible for one particular instance of this move done by wrestler A will generate a damage of 30 while the same move by wrestler B MAY cause a damage of 70, however it's not very likely to happen. Push ratios affect everything from countering to pinning, making submit, getting countouts (albeit pushes don't play a major role here) and even getting the nod if a match is tight. |
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As an added note, most people seem to use a more narrow range of pushes than is intended - usually 50 to 100. The intended values for Pushes is this:
Gaps are for those in between. Basically, if you don't want Wrestler A to beat Wrestler B, 20 is almost a guarantee he never will. Fifteen points will make it very rare. This is only with strict pushes on. It works pretty seamlessly. Everyone between 75-100 is perfectly fine if you want a circuit that "anyone can beat anyone" in theory. |