at some point it felt like you stopped talking about beginner things which i was looking for and more about how you were playing the game at the time. for example i never got an explanation on what them items did like the chainmail looking stuff or those things on the left side did.
to clarify i still enjoyed the video and did learn a lot but there definitely things you missed, which in fairness, you said would happen because its hard to teach and play! Im not trying to be mean i just was left with questions about some of the early topics in the video
@@JuicyYusi I'd recommend writing a script with a list of key gameplay features you want to talk through. Allow for a free flowing element to what you say, for example: Items are essential to boosting the damage of your champions, you can attach 3 items to each champion and in general you should expect to not be able to change them. 2 basic items can be combined into a more advanced item which is significantly increase their power, but you must be careful to strike a balance between combining items to increase your power now, vs holding items to combine them later in a way that helps your target composition more. For example, I have these items: *** list items *** *** describe a powerful item combination *** A script can help your videos look a lot more slick, but take an investment of effort to pre-planning, and can be hard to read when you're playing the game and feel forced. Bullet points instead of a script can make the speech feel more natural, but require more on the fly adaptation. The easiest methodology would be to add the commentary to your video after the fact with a script you read, plus some editing to, for example, zoom in on things you are discussing. It's a lot of effort, but you'll notice a significant improvement in your video performance with a bit of polish, and once you've done a few commentary videos with prepped scripts you'll find it gets a lot easier to record live.
Three star Kayn is my favorite.
That is a whole lot of 3 stars!
you're just a little 2 patch too late
at some point it felt like you stopped talking about beginner things which i was looking for and more about how you were playing the game at the time. for example i never got an explanation on what them items did like the chainmail looking stuff or those things on the left side did.
to clarify i still enjoyed the video and did learn a lot but there definitely things you missed, which in fairness, you said would happen because its hard to teach and play! Im not trying to be mean i just was left with questions about some of the early topics in the video
@@anonuser4207 ill keep that in mind when i make another one of these. It is harder to think, play and teach than i thought.
@@JuicyYusi for sure, i understand, just wanted to voice how it felt when watching. Cant wait for the next one :)
@@JuicyYusi I'd recommend writing a script with a list of key gameplay features you want to talk through. Allow for a free flowing element to what you say, for example:
Items are essential to boosting the damage of your champions, you can attach 3 items to each champion and in general you should expect to not be able to change them. 2 basic items can be combined into a more advanced item which is significantly increase their power, but you must be careful to strike a balance between combining items to increase your power now, vs holding items to combine them later in a way that helps your target composition more. For example, I have these items:
*** list items ***
*** describe a powerful item combination ***
A script can help your videos look a lot more slick, but take an investment of effort to pre-planning, and can be hard to read when you're playing the game and feel forced. Bullet points instead of a script can make the speech feel more natural, but require more on the fly adaptation.
The easiest methodology would be to add the commentary to your video after the fact with a script you read, plus some editing to, for example, zoom in on things you are discussing. It's a lot of effort, but you'll notice a significant improvement in your video performance with a bit of polish, and once you've done a few commentary videos with prepped scripts you'll find it gets a lot easier to record live.