Glossary

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Revision as of 14:45, 20 May 2017 by 78.181.163.83 (talk) (Fixed every single term.)
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Combat terms

Airburst / Airdet

When a Demoman mast'urbates and hits a soldier in the air..

Amby

Another name for the An'ussador.

Airpipe / Airpill

When a Demoman kills himself by overdosing.

Airshot

When a player rap'es someone while in the air. Created by Muselk and STAR_.

Baiting

When a player sucks the other players di'ck and kills him afterwards.

Buff

When a Medic eats his teammates nippl'es, giving her teammate extra health.

Bomb

Allahu Akbar.

Clutch

When a player decides to make a 1 Guy 6 Girls out of the enemy team.

Crit Heals

When a player mastu'rbates for 10 seconds, they get healed faster.

DH

Direct hit. Used when a Soldier does a perfect c'umshot.

Drop

A drop is when a Medic loses their boob milk.

Focusing, Focus Damage

This term is used when 1 or more players decide to fu'ck a specific player.

Gun, SG, Mini, Mini SG, Level 1/2/3

No one cares about Engineer, forget about him.

Hardscope

When a Sniper stays scoped enough that his di'ck gets so hard that it can kill someone just with a handjob.

Hurt, Lit, Destroyed, Hit, Tagged, Wrecked

Used when a player breaks another players mind by fu'ckin em.

Juke

A cu'mshot dodge.

Kiting / To Kite

When a player is sucking your di'ck, pulling them into your di'ck and letting them suffocate.

Kritz

When a Medic uses their kritz, the healing target's di'ck grows 50 inches.

Meatshot

When a player cuts off their di'ck, loads it to their weapon and fires it to the enemy.

Milking

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Peeking

When someone peeks under the enemy's pan'ties.

Pill/Pipe

Demoman's dr'ug, mostly used for killing himself and other players.

Pop

The act of a Medic eja'culating on his teammates, giving them power. (and babies)

Quickscope

When a Sniper ejac'ulates in exactly 0.0000005 miliseconds.

Roller

A Demoman's cut off test'icles rolling and exploding.

Spam

A spam is when a player mast'urbates furiously to a choke, preventing other players from coming in.

Splash

When someone cu'ms so hard that it goes everywhere, damaging other players.

Trickstab

A term used when a Spy baits the enemy to An'al Hen'tai.

Über pop(ped)

When a Medic spams the chat to inform his team that he is cu'mming.

Über Force

When a player forces an enemy to mast'urbate.

Wipe

A wipe occurs when an entire team gets fu'cked like cheap prost'itutes.

Metagame terms

Backcap

When a player, typically a Scout, gets behind enemy lines and starts capping a point behind the front line thus forcing some members from the team to go back or, if the backcapped point is last, winning the round.

Called

The act of using the voice command "Ubercharge Ready!" This voice command is automatically called when a Medic gains full Ubercharge if another voice command is not already in use. This command can also be called manually by a Medic in an attempt to trick the enemy team into thinking that he has full Ubercharge. For this reason, it is important to differentiate between hearing the enemy Medic "Call" and seeing that the Medic has Ubercharge.

Callout

A term attributed to a particular area of a map to quickly communicate location.

Coast to Coast Push

The term referring to the process where the team that was pushed to their last point pushes all the way to the opposing team's last point, subsequently resulting in a capture and round win.

Combo

The Medic and the players that play near him. Their job is to use Uber to spearhead pushes and secure main areas to control objectives on offense and to deny access to the objectives and shut down Ubers on defense. In 6v6, the combo is usually a Medic, the Pocket Soldier, and the Demoman. In Highlander, the combo varies but is most often made up of the Medic, Heavy, Demoman, and sometimes Pyro. In 4v4, the combo usually consists of a Scout, a Soldier switching between Roamer and Pocket when needed, a Demoman and a Medic.

Dry Push

When a team pushes a point or an area with out an Ubercharge. Commonly used when there is not enough time to charge an uber, or when there are other factors that make the push viable (Player/ammo/health advantage, etc.)

Distraction

When one or more players openly present themselves to engage on the enemy in an attempt to draw their attention away from key targets, objectives or positions.

Domino Cap

When a point is lost because the previous point was taken with such force that a defense of the next could not be set up in time (ex. after a wipe on a 5CP map, a team is likely to lose two control points before they are spawned and ready to fight back).

Double Overtime

In King of the Hill, when both teams have dropped their timers to 0 and the attacking team has capture time on the point, triggering Overtime.

Golden Cap

In 5CP, when the time limit has expired and both teams have the same number of rounds, a Golden Cap is when one final round is played to determine the winner.

Flank

In 6's, the flank consists of the roaming Soldier and the aggressive Scout. In many situations, the roamer uses his Scouts as bait to lure the enemy into the roamer's hiding spot for an easy pick. If plays are made on the flank and the team secures a positional or number advantage (in 6s and Highlander) the flank classes can push forward to hold territory and create a buffer for the combo classes to push in and capture points.

In Highlander, the flank composition can vary between teams, but generally consists of the Soldier, Scout, Engineer, Pyro and Sniper (both occasionally) and the Spy. Soldier plays a roaming role to distract the enemy and secure picks. Spy attacks with the help of a distraction, such as a bombing Soldier or Über push. When the Scout is not pushing the Payload cart, he watches the flanks and ensures no one flanks his own team, by putting out damage and/or getting key picks, for instance, shutting down the enemy Sniper. Ocassionally, Pyro may choose to make flanking plays if he does not stick to the combo, and the Engineer can choose to patrol a flank on maps with his sentry guns. In addition, the Sniper normally hangs far back behind friendly lines to get picks (or with the combo) but if he chooses, he may roam around on the flank to secure better sightlines on enemy players, especially the enemy Medic who is building Über.

In 4s, the flank is consisted of a Scout and a Soldier/Pyro. The roles of the Scout and the Soldier are the same as in 6s, but because the teams are smaller than in 6s, flanks are easier to control and as such, allow for a more fast-paced gameplay.

Flank classes assist the combo classes by watching the entrances that the combo isn't during holds and stalemates, and create openings and advantages via bombs, picks and off-pushes.

Focus

Focus, or also known as Focus-Fire, is when most classes on a team all attack the same player, usually a target of high value, or a target that is very aggressive.

Leapfrogging

When the two Medics have übers out of sync, the medic who has full über first can get a free push into the other Medic without much risk since the enemy doesn't have full charge. However, if the push doesn't result in an enemy Medic pick, then the other team will have advantage and can push back in the same manner. This is called Leapfrogging. The occurs commonly on midpoints of 5CP maps when the team that loses their Medic wins the Midfight.

Pick(s)

Kill on a player who is on the other team. Generally used to indicate the kill obtained when the enemy team was off guard.

Main

The Class somebody almost always plays in a competitive team (e.g. Roamer Soldier, Scout, Medic, Sniper). The class one mainly plays in public servers and other non-competitive formats does not contribute towards the concept of a main, although PUGs and Matches that one has merced/rung for would.

Main Caller

The person who decides, communicates, and organizes, or calls, all the team's plays. In lower levels, the task is often delegated to the Medic but higher level play usually is the Pocket or Demoman.

Medigun Checking

When one player on a team changes class to Spy and disguises as the enemy Medic to determine whether the Medic is running the Kritzkrieg or the stock Medi Gun. Many Medics now rename their secondary weapons making it harder to tell, but using 3D disguise viewmodels will circumvent this.

Midfight

The initial battle that takes place on the central control point in a 5CP or King of the Hill match at the start of each round.

Offclass

In 6v6, an offclass is a player of any class apart from the standard line-up of Scout, Soldier, Medic, and Demoman. These are situational classes, most often switched to by a Scout or Roamer when holding, pushing last, or in stalemate situations that often occur in 5CP to acquire a pick.

Overtime

Overtime is the period of time where one team has successfully capped all the points and is waiting for any remaining semi-captures to die down. If the opposing team successfully captures the point, overtime ends and that team must capture every point.

Pocket

As a noun, it's the player (usually a Soldier in 6v6 or a Heavy / Demoman in Highlander) who protects the Medic and gets the most heals. However the role of pocket can be applied to most classes depending on the situation.

As a verb, it's the act of taking lots of heals from the medic and protecting him from any threats.

Push

The act of a team moving forward onto the enemy team.

Sac

Short for sacrifice, when you purposely get yourself killed to help your team (ie. killing yourself to touch payload cart)

Stock

Stock weapons are the vanilla weapons available in the game, which were present in the game at launch. The opposite of unlocks.

Trade

When one person from each team kills each other; also when an offclass such as a Spy or Sniper kill a class of equal value like a Scout or Soldier.

Tunnel Vision

Originally a reference to camping Snipers who look down their scope too much and have no peripheral vision (as if looking through a tunnel), in Team Fortress 2 it usually just refers to a player who focuses too much on an objective or player and fails to notice other players around him, which usually results in death to ambushers or flankers.

Über Advantage

When a Medic is significantly closer (usually ~20% or more) to having a full uber or gets his uber before the other team's Medic.

Über fight

When both medics pop Uber at the same time or close to.

Unlocks

Unlocks are the non-vanilla weapons available in the game, which were added to the game after its launch. The opposite of stock weapons.

Map terms

Cart Path

The part of the map on which the cart runs, and tracks are visible on the ground.

Choke

General term applied to several maps referring to narrow hallways, rooms, or entrances.

Flank(ers)

The Flank is any area where the combo isn't. The Flank can also refer to the players who watch those areas. They are the players that don't rely on their Medic for heals and who prevent enemy flankers from getting into any positional advantage from which they can ambush the Medic. They tend to spark pushes by forcing Über or securing significant picks. In 6v6, the flank typically consists out of the roamer and both scouts.

Last

The final control point. Used to refer to the 1st control point on either side of a 5CP map, or the bomb site in payload.

Mid

The 3rd (or center) point. Usually where the fighting begins at the start of a round after players complete their rollouts. Can also refer to the point in KOTH.

Rollout

The sequence of jumps and paths each class takes to the mid point. While there are many different strategies and rollouts employed for each map, the general objective is for each team to have the fastest rollout to the middle point that leaves everyone with a full buff, as that gives immediate point presence and area advantage to the faster team.

Shutter

General term applied to several maps referring to areas with grey doors that open when players are near them.

Spire

A control point with a large height advantage (ex. Process 2nd). Gives jumping classes an advantage and is usually the second control point on a 5cp map. Spire is also a callout referring to the second and fourth points of badlands respectively.

General Terms and Abbreviations

DM

Short for "deathmatch", a term used to describe a player's individual ability to kill enemy players.

Demo

A persons perspective from a game. Demos are recorded in a few different ways. The most common and hassle free is PREC, a plugin used by many players. This program records demos automatically, and has many features such as bookmarks. Demos can also be recorded manually through the console commands "record <demo name>". You can stop recording with the command "Stop".

Recording demos are also known to fix some glitches, such as invisible player models.

Fatkidded

Commonly used term to describe not being picked in a PUG, referring to playground pickup sports, where the fat kid is always picked last (or not at all).

GG

"Good Game".

GH

"Good Half."

GL HF

"Good Luck, Have Fun".

GR

"Good Round".

LAN dodger

A term referring to someone who is unable to attend their team's LAN matches.

LFT

An abbreviation for Looking For Team. A person who wishes to join a currently active team.

LFP

An abbreviation for Looking For Players. A person whose team is in need of players.

LFS

An abbreviation for Looking For Scrims. A person who wishes to find another team to scrim with.


Lobby

A lobby is a semi-competitive game played on a matchmaking website such as tf2center. Lobbies are often not taken seriously, and PUG's are generally better for practicing. The most famous lobby site, tf2lobby, stopped being maintained in early 2013, and continued to run without any maintenance until late 2013. Stats from TF2lobby can still be seen on the website.

MGE

A gameplay mod which allows for 1v1 matches, typically on 6v6 classes, often used to practice DM.

Mix

A match in which the teams consist of friends.

RUP

"Ready Up"

PCW

An initialism for Practice Clan War. A practice match between two teams. A European term; see Scrim.

P-REC

A demo recording plugin for TF2.

Pub

Commonly used term to describe public games and/or servers.

PUG, Pickup

An abbreviation for Pick-Up Game. Usually employed as a way to practice in a competitive environment as close as possible to an official competitive game, in which players sign up for classes they wish to play. Some pickup systems/sites also have a captain system in which two players are then assigned as "Captains" and pick their teams.

Scrim

An abbreviation for scrimmage match. A practice match between two teams or two people.

STV

Source Television. A server plugin that can be used by casters to watch a game with a default 90 second delay. STVs make watching matches possible, as a caster or viewer does not have to be connected to the game server to watch, just the stv server.

Solly

Commonly used term referring the Soldier.

VOD

An abbreviation for Video-On-Demand. An uploaded recording of a match. Also sometimes used as a term referencing the archiving of a live stream.

Ringer / Merc / Sub

A name used to describe players who are playing as a substitute for a team due to missing players, while not actually being on that teams roster.