With the release when StarCraft 2 was the release of a large number of strategy guides, some not so good as others. After purchasing a strategy guide is particularly bad, I took it myself, people write some of the great leaders for others, not make the same mistake I did.
I also noticed the lack of guidelines available for beginners who just start the game and can not understand the terminology and layout of some of the guides that were available. Since I played StarCraft 2 Beta, I am a big fan of StarCraft 1 was, I thought I'd write a series of beginners guide people to come StarCraft leaders can give.
For starters, here is an overview of the different breeds and their playing styles.
Terran
Terran is considered the easiest to learn and is the most popular by far, because the strategies they use are easily in a fight live. The ground force is capable of> Set partitioning and capacity to take bottlenecks, such as ramps and narrow corridors. Terran main weakness is the open battlefield, Protoss and Zerg as they both have the advantage over them.
Protoss
Protoss are learning the second hardest race, and sit in the middle of the two races. Protoss are a race with a flexible strength in basic defense and attack. The Protoss can not maintain a land base, yet can attack the most Zergbut can flex in both directions to adapt to what is the situation.
Zerg
Aggressive and fast are two words to describe Zerg. Zerg are the hardest race to master the three, because you need really good macro-management. Zerg is becoming an army twice as many units each side and that's what makes them so lethal on an open field, because it is just around the Zerg opponent, and numerically superior to them.
Strategies and Build Orders
StarCraft has repeatedlydescribed as a complicated game of chess. He shares many of the same mechanics, you should scout your opponents, and read all moved in and made a strategy against, all while he does the same thing.
This means that there is no perfect strategy, as a strategy against any strategy to combat it, but the strategies you know the easier it is to know what your opponent does and how to deal with. It 's always nice to go into a game from aStrategy for a formula to determine and apply until I know what your opponent does, and this is where to build orders back
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