Tennis Clash Drop Serve [How to Swipe To Play Fast Drop Serves Tutorial]

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Tennis Clash Drop Serve [How to Swipe To Play Fast Drop Serves Tutorial]
Tennis Clash Drop Serve [How to Swipe To Play Fast Drop Serves Tutorial]
Let me show you how to hit the fast drop serve (with my finger visible on my phone screen) in Tennis Clash, a sports game published by Wildlife Studios.

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I’m going to show this fast drop serve directly in real matches because you can’t practice serving in the Practice section of Tennis Clash.

In Tennis Clash, a drop serve is a semi-slow short swipe going longer and higher (when you execute the final forward swipe motion before releasing your finger) than the drop shot.

If you haven’t mastered the drop shot yet, I invite you to watch my tutorial showing how to hit a drop shot in Tennis Clash.

And if you haven’t mastered the swipe yet, I remind you that there is also a tutorial on GamePlays365 showing how I swipe. You should master the swipe moves and the drop shot before trying to hit drop serves.

In the real world, the drop serve is the worst serve you can hit on a good tennis player, it’ll get smashed back to you very fast, unless your opponent is way too far from the net and is not very focused on the match or is very tired and can’t run anymore.

Again, in the real world, pro players very rarely hit drop serves or underarm serves. Because firstly, even if this service is entirely within the rules, it is considered very disrespectful. Secondly, it would be extremely embarrasing for the server if his drop serve doesn’t work.

There are exceptions of course. Michael Chang did that kind of underhand serve when he was 17 years old versus the world n1 Ivan Lendl in a round of sixteen at Roland Garros back in 1989. It was an underhand serve, not a drop serve, but it was the same kind of disrecpectful serve for the opponent. And it worked, Michael Chang was suffering from severe cramping and very young. So everybody was understanding why he was serving that way, because they knew that was not him disrespecting Ivan Lendl, it was the best serve he could do at this very moment to avoid being broken.

It’s a bit too bad you don’t see the underarm serve move in Tennis Clash, but a soft serve using the same technique than the soft drop shot would look pretty much like the underhand serve in the real world.

In Tennis Clash, drop serves rarely get smashed back because only power servers use it and their serve attribute is generally high enough for the ball to drop dead on the opponent’s court, provided they do the drop serve correctly. However, they won’t work if the opponent has anticipated it and/or has tremendous agility and is using the Joker Cord.

So, to sum up, you can and should play drop serves only when you have a big serve attribute. In my video, I’m going to make the drop serve using a modified /”All-Rounder/” Style then a /”Power Serve Strong Forehand/” build with a serve attribute of 74. Obviously, it’s easier to achieve the drop dead ball effect with this stat, than if I was trying to do that with a 20 or 30 of serve.

I will show you by the end of the video that with a very low serve, you can’t hit the drop serve the way to make the ball drop dead on the court instead of bouncing a lot. The best you can do with a low serve is to make a soft drop serve but it will be very slow so is super easy for your opponent to smash the ball back.

Don’t overdo the drop serve even if you had a powerful serve attribute because your serve pattern would be read very quickly. So use them on special occasions only, to disturb your opponent while alternating with big serves going to the 2 angles of the service boxes that are far from the net. The purpose is to make your pattern less easy to read by the opponent.

The idea is then to hit 1 or 2 powerful serves right into the corners of the service boxes or towards the center mark. Then now and then hit a drop serve now and then because your opponent would position himself or herself quite far from the net hoping to better receive your power serve. At that moment, because your opponent is too far from the net, you could use the drop serve.

In short, use drop serves against players having not too high agility, only when you have high serve attribute (if possible higher than the agility attribute of your opponent), and when the match is not too important as the failure risk will be greatly reduced at that moment.

Tennis Clash: 3D Sports – Free Multiplayer Games is a game of Wildlife Studios:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?idcom.tfgco.games.sports.free.tennis.clash

Portions of the materials used are trademarks and/or copyrighted works of Wildlife Studios. All rights reserved by Wildlife Studios. This material is not official. This content is not affiliated with, endorsed, sponsored, or specifically approved by Wildlife Studios and Wildlife Studios is not responsible for it.

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