Sentences with phrase «nice role player»

Covington is a nice role player and Fultz is a pretty big question mark given he terrified of shooting from the perimeter.

Not exact matches

Pretty nice luxury of having some solid 4th line players / role players like Archibald / Kuhnhackl as your «band - aid» type guys.
He is a solid role player who has made tremendous strides in Indiana and carved out a nice role in Nate McMillan's rotation.
It would be nice to see Wilshere play as a deep plying playmaker and Ramskey being the tough tackling all action B2B player, Wilshere has done well for England in that deeper role and if Wilshere and Ramsey can get a good understanding... It could be so beautiful
He decided not to re-sign with the Pats because, while a championship was nice, he's still acutely aware that he won as a role player.
He has some nice traits and looks like a potentially useful role player, but it has been difficult for teams to get eyes on him given his current team situation.
Prior to that season, all the role players were getting nice looks because Parker / Manu were still drive threats.
I understand what your saying but Ozil is no Bergkamp he doesn't have the aggression strength and nasty streak that Dennis had and he doesn't obviously have the finishing ability of Dennis in the 10 role Ozil is a nice tidy player who coasts through games and has great vision and an eye for a pass but there isn't much else to his game in my opinion defensively he is really poor although our team as a whole collectively are at times.
Unlike when some players get the armband, Giroud didn't seem to view as just a nice reward for good service for the club, he took the leadership role on with relish.
There are certain role players in the dating industry and it would be nice to stand above the crowd by having that differentiation and that distinguishing factor», said Mark Brooks.
Michael Cera is identified only as Player X, but it's quite obvious he is playing the noted green screen actor, and he does a nice job in a small, but vital role.
So many RPGs opt for mute protagonists and a first - person view in order to allow the player to transport themselves into the world, which is nice in its own way but I've long been a fan of actually taking on a mostly predefined role, and Geralt fits the bill nicely.
You'll have to know a vague idea of each character's «role» in a group (which is fairly obvious once you're at the 50 + hour time mark), you probably need to know how to level artes (which the game does a very nice job of explaining), and knowing how to gem (even only on a very basic level) would probably be helpful, but you by no means have to go into the world of affinity coins to complete the main story assuming you are a player of average skill and ability level, nor do you have to feel the innate need to update your character's equipment every 5 minutes (unless if you're preparing for a boss encounter).
The inclusion of co-op is a nice touch, but as the second player being in charge of Igniculus isn't all that fun as his role is fairly limited.
Both games feature a «Commander» unit, a giant mecha, which uses atomic - level manufacturing to build an entire economy on far - off planets literally from the ground up, which is an interesting inversion on how mecha usually are used in games: the «Commander» is more or less the player character, and while their large mecha is by no means weak, it's a central unit because of its production capabilities, and not because of its arsenal, which as a mecha fan I always thought was a nice way to work the idea of a «hero mecha» into an RTS, because you can relate to the Commander mecha's role as, well, a Commander on the battlefield rather than as simply a powerful named «hero» unit as exist in most other RTSes.
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