Analysis: Getting Better at Fighting Games【DaiGoまとめ】



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「Analysis: Getting Better at Fighting Games【DaiGoまとめ】」への32件のフィードバック

  1. より:

    Learning a fighting game is like learning a language~Me

  2. より:

    If you think Mika is cool then please self immolate

  3. より:

    Your cats are too cute

  4. より:

    Is there a japanese version of Daigo's book?

  5. より:

    Wow this helped my friend a lot

  6. より:

    So with this book, anyone can become the next Diego?

  7. より:

    I was new to fighting games when i started playing MK11. I was playing fighting games in arcade when i was a kid, that doesn't count. I can relate to a lot of things in this video. Eventually what led me to have a grasp on the game is strike/throw game. Once i discovered throws are op, i was able to play around it. I could always default to this behavior. And then the rest come and labbing countless hours to optimize my combos and solidify my response to certain situations.

  8. より:

    This video should be in educational institutions so that students understand the form and importance of a study plan, to be able to enjoy that plan as if we are talking about a habit, and thus trigger the levels of basic knowledge.
    Thank you very much for your work. This is incredible. (google translate)
    GO Kof 2002 XDD!!!

  9. より:

    I've been playing juri on sf5 for a few months now and I think rn I'm probably at intermediate level. I'm at that point where I don't feel like going online anymore bc I'm scared of getting washed. And I've got a lot of game knowledge since I've been following street fighter for a long time. This video gave me more motivation to keep pushing even 6 years later. What a timeless piece of content.

  10. より:

    I have totally suffered a win. My uncle was Mr. Unbeatable in my family. He always bragged about his skills in street fighter 2 turbo. Well one day I finally got a chance to play him after the first round I absolutely knew I was gonna wreck him, but I felt bad after each match as he was visibly pissed off, but he needed to be humbled so I begrudgingly whipped that ass lol . My family was mad at me for not going easy on him and he wouldn't talk to me for like a month because I pointed out how I'm not even that good and would get smoked at a tournament. This only added to the insult. in concussion I won but I wasn't happy about it.

  11. より:

    I JUST REALIZED I SUBCONSCIOUSLY USED UR VIDEO TO TEACH MY BROTHER GUILTY GEAR THANK YOU CORE A GAMING

  12. より:

    you make the best FGC content out there, period

  13. より:

    Highly recommend this book! It’s great advice given from raw experiences over time vs regurgitated generic info

  14. より:

    THANK YOU FOR YOUR VIDEOS!!! INCREDIBLE FGC TEACHING TOOLS!

  15. より:

    What's helped me get better, has been getting excited for SF6 & diving into FGC content after not having played since 3rd Strike as a casual, picking up SFV to prepare, & learning about HitBox while not having a pad for PC. It's forcing me to mechanically learn from scratch. I'm playing SFV on normal difficulty using characters going to SF6, learning to jump again & using mostly normal attacks to anti-air instead of specials. I'm forced to consider all these distances, angles, & recovery times of normal attacks. Before I used to mostly shoto fireball uppercut.

  16. より:

    I think personally it's teaching my friend who knows nothing about fighting games is what's giving me the motivation to get better at figthing games

  17. より:

    I’m 36 years old and haven’t played a fighting game seriously since MK 3….I’ve recently tried to get into Mk11 but man it is tough starting out with all the different counters breaks and combos I don’t know how to do yet….I’ll keep playing though.

  18. より:

    Easily the single most valuable thing is the encouragement to focus on Improvement rather than whether I'm winning or losing.

  19. より:

    STEP ONE: BE A GROWER
    STEP TWO: BE A SHOWER
    STEP THREE: KILL GOD

  20. より:

    2:30 sweeps & throws idea for Tekken?
    Snake edges and throws ?

  21. より:

    Wow what a useless video

  22. より:

    holy fucking shit bruh this shit be BU$$IN fr ong best video I've seen in a long time

  23. より:

    Ryu is arguably the perfect fighting game character in that the journey to become a successful player means adopting his mindset. Victory means nothing, the fight, and self-improvement through it, is everything.

  24. より:

    ive been playing games so long that overcoming challenge is the only thing i find gratifying for some reason it took me untill now to get involved in the fgc and im hooked. soo much room for growth im drooling.

  25. より:

    i think the greatest tool in learning a fighting game is to stop seeing it as game. but a sport, if you think about your progress the same way an ambitious sportsman see's their craft you will stop allowing your ego to ruin the experience. of coarse you are losing, you haven't put in the time the other guy has. it's not a mark against you as a person or what you are capable of, but a mark against your attitude and the importance you've given to practice. when you think of something in terms of a "game" it's inherently unimportant, because fundamentally you know it's just a game. which is why losing hurts so much, because you've convinced yourself that this unimportant thing should be something you can succeed at by virtue of it "just being a game". instead of seeing it as a competition of skill that it rightly should be. as humans things are only as important as we make them, pretty much everything is objectively unimportant, but subjectively it's that importance we assign to things that makes them fulfilling.
    it's all about mentality, I'm not saying this as seasoned veteran. but as someone that has enjoyed fighting games there entire life but have never given them the respect they deserved. which lead me to avoiding the process to increasing my enjoyment and fulfillment. learning a these games is genuinely hard, and most people will want to quit after not to long, but that's exactly why they are such a valued staple in competitive gaming. nothing worth anything was ever made easy or given away.

  26. より:

    Usf4 zangief losses taught me how not to go all crazy 360 motion. This also taught me control and footsie. Control spacing and to inch closer. Excellent video. Learn, think, evolve.

  27. より:

    2:04 Imagine to lose to just 2 types of attacks? This speaks volunes about how good Gerald is in comparison to them and how glaring the mistakes they were making were and yet they were ignoring them completely, the only thing in their head was "i want to smash that guy".

    G was an excellent teacher by having the creativity to do a game that teaches solid basic concepts that are fundamental in high level, such as movement (footsies), range, positioning, timing and defense.

  28. より:

    excelente video saludos!

  29. より:

    Thank you 🙂

  30. より:

    1:57 That's what happen when your so eager to win that YOU ARE NOT SEEING YOUR OPPONENT. Something that basically all low level players in all sports do, they always think on how they want to beat their opponent but not how the opponent wants to beat them. Why? Because it's hard as fuck! You're already with so much stuff in your head that thinking how the opponent wants to win takes a lot of mental energy.

  31. より:

    Amen

  32. より:

    Bullies help me get better. In life there is only winners and losers no in between. Being bullied help me get better bc I was tired of losing. But at the same time knowing you can't win all the time.

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