Originally posted by cptafw163
But that means that the guy will be lower leveled by the time they start to decline...so the slow builds have a shorter shelf life.
By doing super slow, it makes a GREAT team after about 7 seasons, but they will never reach the levels that a regular "slow build" can reach by the 10th season.
Basically you sacrifice a whole season, lose about 6 levels and by the time you add all those saved XP, you are still 6 levels and 30 SP behind the guys who did it normally in the same timeframe.
So i just don;t get why its done so much.
This is the common misconception a lot of people are having a hard time dealing with.
Why stop with one guy? say I have a super slow built C.B. dominating for 7 seasons? the decline isn't really going to be as fast as people think.
then to top it off I have another super slow build right behind him ready to take over.
If you space your super slow build guys every 2 or 3 seasons, you will have endless premium built replacements.
But that means that the guy will be lower leveled by the time they start to decline...so the slow builds have a shorter shelf life.
By doing super slow, it makes a GREAT team after about 7 seasons, but they will never reach the levels that a regular "slow build" can reach by the 10th season.
Basically you sacrifice a whole season, lose about 6 levels and by the time you add all those saved XP, you are still 6 levels and 30 SP behind the guys who did it normally in the same timeframe.
So i just don;t get why its done so much.
This is the common misconception a lot of people are having a hard time dealing with.
Why stop with one guy? say I have a super slow built C.B. dominating for 7 seasons? the decline isn't really going to be as fast as people think.
then to top it off I have another super slow build right behind him ready to take over.
If you space your super slow build guys every 2 or 3 seasons, you will have endless premium built replacements.
Last edited Feb 11, 2009 04:26:30