Dealing with Toxicity in Tower Rush Games

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Some players use emotes to fake their emotions. It shows respect for a hard-fought battle.

In a game devoid of text or voice chat during live matches, communication between players is restricted to a carefully curated selection of animated emotes.


While some players view it as harmless banter, others find it incredibly toxic, leading to massive losing streaks fueled purely by anger.


Psychological Warfare


The goal is to force the opponent into a state of 'tilt', causing them to abandon their careful strategy and start playing aggressively out of spite.


A tilted player will often overcommit elixir trying to instantly destroy your tower in revenge, leaving them completely vulnerable to a simple counter-attack.


  • Some players use emotes to fake their emotions.
  • It shows respect for a hard-fought battle.
  • Don't buy expensive emotes just to be toxic.

Protecting Your Sanity


Fortunately, developers eventually realized the massive toxicity problem and implemented the single most powerful defensive tool in the game: the Mute button.


Many professional players play entirely muted during major tournaments to ensure they maintain absolute, zen-like focus.


Emote CategoryIntended UseThe Reality
Joyful EmoteTo celebrate a funny, chaotic moment where both players made silly mistakesSpammed relentlessly when destroying a tower to mock the opponent's defensive failure
Sad EmoteTo express genuine sadness when you make a bad play or realize you are going to loseUsed sarcastically after you easily defend a massive push to say "Aww, are you sad your attack failed?"

Mastering Your Emotions


Ultimately, how you react to a dancing cartoon goblin says more about your emotional control than your gaming ability.


The best revenge is winning the game.



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