Silvaitos
Inkster Jr.
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2015
- Messages
- 22
- NNID
- Silvaitos
I recently discovered a new technique while trying to figure out how to remain efficient at sneaking in plain sight without ninja squid. If you're like me, you like to sneak around in the ink, but without ninja squid have a hard time controlling the gentle tilting of the control stick well enough to accelerate quickly, maintain a decent clip, and reliably refrain from going so fast that you make waves. You'd love to make use of the stealth swim, but making it reliable and fast under pressure with stick tilting is nearly impossible. I'm here to talk about a new technique I developed which makes it easy.
How fast can the manual stealth swim be? How does that compare to ninja squid?
About 70% of whatever your maximum swim speed is, provided perfect control--or good use of this new technique.
Ninja squid is 90%, at the cost of not having the option to swim at 100%. So, ninja squid is 28.5% faster than the manual stealth swim's highest potential, which might be essential for things like a carbon roller. For someone who might be just thinking about sneaking around with their .96 gal like me, 70% should be plenty. The problem is usually that the manual stealth swim is hard to do reliably at the correct speed and often has a slow acceleration due to the gentle control stick tilting.
What does this technique of yours do?
With squidtrotting, I can reliably, with high acceleration, and under pressure, maintain a stealth swim speed of around 65% (130% run speed) at my current practice level. I've successfully used it to vanish from view and flank people in firefights, quickly duck away from krakens, and efficiently stalk unsuspecting targets who I'd otherwise be in the view of--everything you'd normally use ninja squid for, just a little slower in terms of max speed--and just as strong in acceleration, often a vital point in high stress situations.
Okay, so what's the technique?
1. Press full tilt on the control stick. Your squid will begin to accelerate as fast as they can in the direction they're swimming, but not create ripples at first because they haven't accelerated up past 70% speed yet.
2. When you're approaching the ripple-causing threshhold (which you'll know by developing a sense of), let off the control stick for a split second.
3. Press fully forward on the control stick again, giving another brief full throttle.
4. Let off.
5. Repeat as long as needed.
Video:
This clip is meant to more clearly explain the execution but doesn't fully express the technique's potential.
The squidtrotting in this clip is slower than what you can expect. I normally squidtrot about 20% faster, but it was awkward to perform the technique as well as I can while filming with a cell phone. My hope is that this will nevertheless give a clearer idea of how the execution looks and feels. The sound is included so you can hear how I'm tapping the control stick.
Squidtrotting is something one of my best buddies I was showing it to dubbed it because I compared the input to super smash brothers foxtrotting. The only difference is that you might hold the control stick slightly before releasing, rather than just flicking it.
I've found it really gamechanging for making quick, usable stealth accessible for non-ninja-squid users without having to trifle with delicate, slow-accelerating control stick tilts. I hope you all, or a few of you, find it as rewarding as I did!
Extra notes
One person asked if the tech is affected by swim speed. Based on my tests: Yes! The threshhold is always 70% of whatever your maximum is, not the base swim speed.
I also find that practically speaking, it increases even my stealth swim max speed a ton. I think it's worth stressing. Since the tilt is so sensitive, without squidtrotting I have a hard time stealth swimming faster than about 40% with very low acceleration. Any faster than that and I find myself accidentally overthrottling and making ripples. But this technique lets me consistently and reliably use ~65% with maximum acceleration. In that sense I'm stealth swimming faster than ever with very little error.
How fast can the manual stealth swim be? How does that compare to ninja squid?
About 70% of whatever your maximum swim speed is, provided perfect control--or good use of this new technique.
Ninja squid is 90%, at the cost of not having the option to swim at 100%. So, ninja squid is 28.5% faster than the manual stealth swim's highest potential, which might be essential for things like a carbon roller. For someone who might be just thinking about sneaking around with their .96 gal like me, 70% should be plenty. The problem is usually that the manual stealth swim is hard to do reliably at the correct speed and often has a slow acceleration due to the gentle control stick tilting.
What does this technique of yours do?
With squidtrotting, I can reliably, with high acceleration, and under pressure, maintain a stealth swim speed of around 65% (130% run speed) at my current practice level. I've successfully used it to vanish from view and flank people in firefights, quickly duck away from krakens, and efficiently stalk unsuspecting targets who I'd otherwise be in the view of--everything you'd normally use ninja squid for, just a little slower in terms of max speed--and just as strong in acceleration, often a vital point in high stress situations.
Okay, so what's the technique?
1. Press full tilt on the control stick. Your squid will begin to accelerate as fast as they can in the direction they're swimming, but not create ripples at first because they haven't accelerated up past 70% speed yet.
2. When you're approaching the ripple-causing threshhold (which you'll know by developing a sense of), let off the control stick for a split second.
3. Press fully forward on the control stick again, giving another brief full throttle.
4. Let off.
5. Repeat as long as needed.
Video:
This clip is meant to more clearly explain the execution but doesn't fully express the technique's potential.
The squidtrotting in this clip is slower than what you can expect. I normally squidtrot about 20% faster, but it was awkward to perform the technique as well as I can while filming with a cell phone. My hope is that this will nevertheless give a clearer idea of how the execution looks and feels. The sound is included so you can hear how I'm tapping the control stick.
Squidtrotting is something one of my best buddies I was showing it to dubbed it because I compared the input to super smash brothers foxtrotting. The only difference is that you might hold the control stick slightly before releasing, rather than just flicking it.
I've found it really gamechanging for making quick, usable stealth accessible for non-ninja-squid users without having to trifle with delicate, slow-accelerating control stick tilts. I hope you all, or a few of you, find it as rewarding as I did!
Extra notes
One person asked if the tech is affected by swim speed. Based on my tests: Yes! The threshhold is always 70% of whatever your maximum is, not the base swim speed.
I also find that practically speaking, it increases even my stealth swim max speed a ton. I think it's worth stressing. Since the tilt is so sensitive, without squidtrotting I have a hard time stealth swimming faster than about 40% with very low acceleration. Any faster than that and I find myself accidentally overthrottling and making ripples. But this technique lets me consistently and reliably use ~65% with maximum acceleration. In that sense I'm stealth swimming faster than ever with very little error.
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