

Lesson #3: Communicate with your teammates. Other times it's smarter to support the offensive flank, so they can quickly kill the few ships they are fighting, and move over to help the defending flank. It's your job to judge what flank to prioritise, sometimes it's best to help the defending flank.

And for most players, they only look at their own challenges, and don't consider what is going on at the other flank. The problem is, you can only be one place at a time these days (so much easier back in RTS days lol). Fighter cover, spotting, hunting dd's infront of them, finnishing off that fleeing cruiser, killing that bb who push into their area etc etc. Lesson #2: People expect you to help them when they need help. So learn to look into your own mistakes, and learn from them.

While some may have a point (even if they aren't polite about it). Lesson #1: Don't take it personally when people blame you, or ask you to go back to Lego or something :P A majority who complains have never played CV before (look up their stats afterwards) and talk out of their. Sometimes you do, and othertimes it can be very difficult (teammates dieing early, making a flank weak etc). You are that ONE ship on your team, and many expect you to carry. I have played CV since beta, and one thing that have not changed since then is people complaining about CV. If there is a beginner-friendly guide/explanation as to what is a good CV player, I'd like to know! People clearly have a very strong view as to what constitutes a "good" CV player and "bad" CV player. spotting), I get told off for not doing something else (e.g. I like to dip into CV every now and then, but I find that when I play CV, I get abuse and complaint no matter what I do.
