Something I've learned from coaching and watching folks play over the years: there are few things as hurtful to one's growth as attaching yourself as a player to an archetype umbrella.
Some of the best combo pilots out there are self-labeled "control players" and so on.
Some of the best combo pilots out there are self-labeled "control players" and so on.
Play how you wanna play, obv, but generally speaking I think the people who are "aggro players" are frequently just people who have put the most time into aggro, and not folks with an innate finger to their opponent's pulse that only works when playing Savannah Lions
Obv there are places people feel more comfortable, but for folks looking to get better, it's going to be more productive in the long run to actively seek out what you're unfamiliar with, and avoid defining yourself by what you familiarized yourself with first.
(obligatory disclaimer that there's a certain threshold where people are likely more capable of unlocking the Level 100 Mastery of some pillars than they are others, but that's so far down the line that it's a different conversation than this, even if the words are similar)