Bitcoin Forum

Economy => Services => Topic started by: zz11 on June 14, 2015, 03:32:42 PM



Title: dota 2 mmr boosting
Post by: zz11 on June 14, 2015, 03:32:42 PM
will boost mmr on ur account

$5 per 100 mmr

anywhere between 0-4500 mmr

pme me or post here


Title: Re: dota 2 mmr boosting
Post by: letyouearn on June 14, 2015, 04:04:39 PM
will boost mmr on ur account

$5 per 100 mmr

anywhere between 0-4500 mmr

pme me or post here

What is mean by MMR ? Can you explain me more about your service.


Title: Re: dota 2 mmr boosting
Post by: ajareselde on June 14, 2015, 04:27:26 PM
What is mean by MMR ? Can you explain me more about your service.

mmr is "Match Making Rating", when you play dota2 it's 5 vs 5, and you always play vs the team with same average mmr (skill level - sort of)
You win a game, you get +25 mmr, and if you loose the game, you loose 25 mmr.
imho, anything below 3k mmr gets you terrible game matches, theres always some idiot that starts feeding after first death, 5 carry teams, no currier game, and so on..

5$ for 100 mmr is a reasonable price, even cheap, since 1 won match gets you only 25 mmr, and lasts about 45 minutes in average, but you should know that you are probably going to loose games you play on your own later with higher mmr if someone earned mmr instead of you.

cheers


Title: Re: dota 2 mmr boosting
Post by: TheButterZone on June 14, 2015, 07:12:24 PM
If you'd like to use the easiest script I could find with a stable accurate price index (that won't go to hell just because a single exchange goes down), try adding this to your OP so I can delete (and do not excessively bump to thank me for this post (bitcoin:1TBZ1VNaAbNXefjUHERgqMqF4qPzshroA)):

$5 = http://btc-priceimg.herokuapp.com/img/5

Just enter this line of code where you want the price to be:
Code:
[img]http://btc-priceimg.herokuapp.com/img/5[/img]

Script courtesy of http://btc-priceimg.herokuapp.com/ - donate to him if you hate me. Or use preev.com if you want to torture your customers with a script that wildly fluctuates spot prices, which is exactly what an average calculator SHOULDN'T do.