Two topics that come up constantly: which geo to pick in Supreme Commander-scale maps, and why the rules lock you to one account.
Advanced geo looks tempting until it blows up and takes half your base with it. On sea maps and beach positions where you lose ground quickly, swap to the support version. The Prude is usually the right call — you still get solid energy income without the risk of a catastrophic detonation. The Cerberus and Rampart are fine alternatives with heavily reduced explosion radius. If your beach front collapses in the first ten minutes, an advanced geo explosion is the last thing you need.
One account per person isn't about being strict for its own sake. Alt accounts break the ranking system in three ways:
The rules exist because competitive integrity depends on every profile being one real person.
BAR is free and open-source. Nobody pays a subscription, which means the people playing and maintaining it are the reason it exists. That's worth something. Players joke about charging $80 for the game because paid games fund support teams, but BAR runs on volunteer energy. The people answering your geo questions at 2 AM are doing it because they care about the game working well for everyone.
For a deeper look at how the community keeps BAR running, check out the BAR YouTube channel with guides, match highlights, and event coverage.
The removal of toxicity, the goal of fun and learning, makes for a refreshing spot to play and spend time. It has also made a game with plenty of complexity a bit less daunting to dive into.
— BAR player, Creed of Champions