Best for: Games with heavy camera management (Elden Ring, God of War). : Light Attack (Fast, low stamina cost). R2 / RT : Heavy Attack (Slow, high damage, break poise). L1 / LB : Block / Parry. L2 / LT : Special Skill / Weapon Art.

Ensure the game remembers the next input. If a player presses while the Light animation is 70% complete, the Heavy attack should trigger immediately after the first swing ends. 3. Button Combinations (Chords) To add depth without adding buttons, use "Chords": R1 + R2 : Signature Move. L1 + Square : Elemental Infusion. 📊 Attack Comparison Table Light Attack (R1/RB) Heavy Attack (R2/RT) Speed High (Instant startup) Low (Wind-up frames) Recovery Low (Easy to dodge after) High (Leaves player vulnerable) Stun Value High (Interrupts enemies) Combos Builds "Hit Counter" Finishes "Chain" 🧪 Testing the Layout When designing your write-up, evaluate the map based on: Ergonomics : Does the player have to "claw" the controller?

A "Separate Attacks" control map typically refers to a layout where and Heavy attacks (or physical vs. magical) are bound to distinct buttons rather than a single context-sensitive button . This is standard in "Souls-likes," character action games (DMC), and modern RPGs (God of War). 🎮 Core Philosophy

: Dedicated to mobility (Dodge, Jump, Interact). Option 2: The "Traditional Fighter" Layout

Separate attack buttons allow for , animation canceling , and rhythm-based combos . By moving attacks to the "Shoulder" buttons (bumpers/triggers), players keep their thumbs on the Right Analog Stick to maintain camera control during combat. 🗺️ Recommended Control Maps Option 1: The "Action-RPG" Layout (Standard)

If you are writing this for a , I can help you expand on: The frame data (Startup, Active, Recovery frames). Specific combo strings (e.g., Light -> Light -> Heavy).