L’association « Reims Dés Jeux » a déménagé dans de nouveaux locaux (plus grands et flambant neufs) et se trouve désormais en centre ville, au sein même de « La Grande Malle » (au 12-14 Avenue de Laon, 51100 Reims) !!!
(cliquez sur ce lien pour visualiser l'emplacement de nos nouveaux locaux))


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L’association ouvre à nouveau ses portes pour une nouvelle année ludique en compagnie de toute son équipe de bénévoles.
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Définition : Qu’est-ce que le « jeu de société moderne » ?

Winning in Ranked Head-to-Head Play: MLB The Show 26 Tips and Tricks

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dreamkeeper
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Inscription : 07 août 2025, 11:19

Winning in Ranked Head-to-Head Play: MLB The Show 26 Tips and Tricks

#1

Message par dreamkeeper » 22 mai 2026, 07:58

In MLB The Show 26 Ranked Head-to-Head, winning consistently is less about raw mechanics and more about discipline, settings, and decision-making under pressure. When you move from offline modes into online ranked games, the pace changes immediately. Opponents adapt faster, punish mistakes harder, and rarely give free outs.

To stay competitive, you need to build habits that mirror high-level players: optimized settings, controlled hitting approaches, and pitching strategies that force hesitation.

Essential Gameplay Settings

One of the biggest mistakes new ranked players make is sticking with default settings. The default setup is designed for accessibility, not competitive advantage.

Hitting Interface: Zone is Non-Negotiable

Switch your hitting interface to Zone. This gives you full control over the Plate Coverage Indicator (PCI), which is the foundation of hitting in ranked play. Instead of relying on timing alone, you actively track and place your PCI on pitches.

This one change instantly raises your ceiling, especially against players who rely on predictable fastball sequences.

Camera Angle: Strike Zone or Strike Zone High

Camera choice matters more than most players realize. Strike Zone or Strike Zone High brings the pitch closer visually, making it easier to read movement and distinguish balls from strikes early.

The closer perspective also improves your ability to pick up spin changes on breaking balls, which is crucial in higher-ranked matches where pitch variety increases.

PCI Sensitivity Adjustments

The new PCI sensitivity slider should not be ignored. Many players keep it too high, which causes overcorrection—especially on low pitches.

Lowering sensitivity slightly helps stabilize your input, preventing the common mistake of “snapping” the PCI too far downward on breaking balls in the dirt.

Background Blur for Better Focus

If you are playing in stadiums with distracting backgrounds or poor batter’s eye visibility, enable background blur. It reduces visual clutter behind the pitcher, allowing you to focus strictly on the ball’s release and trajectory.

In tight ranked games, this small clarity boost can be the difference between a checked swing and a strikeout.

Complete Competitive Plate Approach

Good hitters in ranked play are not the ones who swing the most—they are the ones who swing the least but at the right time.

Start With a Fastball Read

A strong approach is to position your PCI slightly high and inside before the pitch. This is because inside fastballs are the hardest to react to in real time.

By starting there, you give yourself a structured reaction path: you can drop down for low pitches or move outward for off-speed pitches. It keeps your reactions controlled instead of chaotic.

Early-Game Pitch Recognition

Do not swing at everything early in the game. The first few pitches are valuable information.

Use them to study:

The pitcher’s release point
How their breaking balls behave out of hand
Whether their fastball has late or early movement

Players who rush their swings lose this information advantage and end up guessing for the rest of the game.

Read Tempo and Hitter Load

A subtle but important detail is your hitter’s load timing. The leg kick and pre-swing movement naturally adjust depending on pitch speed.

Over time, you can use this rhythm visually to help distinguish between fastballs and changeups, especially when the pitch is borderline in speed.

Shrink Your Strike Zone Mentally

Until you reach two strikes, treat the strike zone as smaller than it actually is. Only swing at pitches you are confident you can drive in your preferred zones.

This forces your opponent to throw more strikes and reduces your chances of chasing pitches outside the zone. In ranked play, walks are not failures—they are pressure tools.

High-Tier Pitching Strategies

Winning ranked games is not just about hitting—it is about making your opponent uncomfortable at the plate.

Pitch Backwards to Disrupt Expectations

Most players expect a fastball early in the count. Breaking this expectation immediately gives you an advantage.

Start at-bats with low sliders, changeups, or sinkers. This forces your opponent to adjust their timing from pitch one instead of sitting on fastballs.

Tunnel Your Pitches

One of the most effective competitive pitching techniques is tunneling. The idea is to make different pitches look identical out of the hand, then diverge late.

For example:

A sinker and slider starting on the same path
A fastball and changeup sharing similar early movement

When executed correctly, the hitter commits early and reacts too late to the break.



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