Glenna Keble
@glennakeble757
Dealing with Toxicity in Tower Rush Games
The 'emote meta' is a fascinating study in how players can weaponize limited communication tools to infuriate, distract, and tilt their opponents.
While some players view it as harmless banter, others find it incredibly toxic, leading to massive losing streaks fueled purely by anger.
Psychological Warfare
'BMing' or Bad Manners is the practice of using emotes specifically to mock an opponent after they make a mistake or lose a match.

Some top players are infamous for their relentless BM, using it to rattle their opponents even in high-stakes esports tournaments.
- If you laugh at them and then proceed to lose, you look like an absolute fool.
- Use it with caution.
- If they are spamming emotes, they are likely overconfident.
Silence is Golden
For players prone to anger, muting the opponent at the very beginning of every single match is absolutely mandatory.
When you play muted, the opponent is reduced to nothing more than a silent, predictable AI; they lose their human ability to annoy you.
| Type of Emote | How Developers Meant It | Actual Use |
|---|
| The Laughing King | To celebrate a funny, chaotic moment where both players made silly mistakes | Spammed relentlessly when destroying a tower to mock the opponent's defensive failure |
| The Crying Emote | To express genuine sadness when you make a bad play or realize you are going to lose | Used sarcastically after you easily defend a massive push to say "Aww, are you sad your attack failed?" |
The True Test of Skill
If a simple animation can ruin your day, you need to step back and reevaluate why you are playing the game.
The best revenge is winning the game.
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