Forum Discussion
The pre-wind input rotates 45 degrees from down on the left stick—so the initial input starts from down.
But for stalls (getting onto a ledge/curb), you also input down on the left stick. That means the inputs for pre-wind and stalls overlap.
Are you even playing half-pipe under the same conditions as me? Because that completely changes how inputs behave.
I’m playing on the hardest settings with fully technical control: all assists off, no semi-auto pump—everything is fully manual. I don’t push at all.
Can you score 260K in 5 minutes in half-pipe slowdown under these conditions?
Honestly, I’ve rarely seen anyone better than me at half-pipe. I have over 15 years of experience with EA Skate. In Skate 2, I was ranked near the top globally in Spot Battle.
I’ve taught more than 10 players, and they’re all experiencing the same issue.
So please don’t give me vague or uninformed answers.
- Oppaii-_-Senpaii21 hours agoRising Traveler
He’s not giving vague information, he’s very much right. And so are you but you fail to realise where you are wrong though, which is funny considering your response to him, which comes off arrogant.
Yes you are right about how the pre-wind activates and that at the start it’s input overlaps with the stall/powerslide.
But looking at your video it’s because you initiate the pre-wind input too late; doing so right at the top of the coping. When you’re supposed to do it, before you even reach the vert or at the very least midway through the vert. Doing it like this (activating prewind inputs way before reaching coping) will stop the clashing of inputs colliding with each other.
For visual context you know you hit the prewind correctly when your skater has fully swinged/swayed both their arms in the direction you put the input towards. So use this visual cue to know if you hit the prewind correctly. In the video you don’t see this visual cue, so more than likely you did the prewind input too late (just before coping, which activates the stall/grind) or did the prewind incorrectly/not at all (both scenarios are user error as the originally replier said).