Is Tekken 8 Easy to Learn?

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • Is Tekken 8 A Hard Game To Learn? Is Tekken 8 Easy to Learn? Let's discuss.
    TIMESTAMPS:
    00:00 Intro
    00:39 Arguments for Tekken 8 being easy:
    1:02 Training Mode Features
    1:49 Replay Takeover
    3:02 Best time to learn Fighting Games
    3:37 Heat System is good for Beginners to Tekken!
    3:59 You don't need to Korean Backdash (yet)
    4:14 Tekken 8 Characters are easier
    4:33 Arguments for Tekken 8 being hard
    5:39 Picking New Characters to the series
    6:15 Reina is similar to Heihachi
    6:44 Experience trumps all
    7:58 Enjoy being a Noob
    8:42 Final Thoughts
    Why Tekken 8 Is Easy To Learn But Hard To Master
    edited by @nugieboy | / nugieboy_
    Don't understand the terminology? Start here: glossary.infil.net/
    My goal is to grow a positive community with a focus at improving at fighting games If this is something that resonates with you - please consider following me on my social media links and subscribing:
    ⭐⭐Second YT Channel for Clips: / @diaphonetwo
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    ⭐⭐I also do replay review + coaching: metafy.gg/@diaphone
    #Tekken8 #Tekken #Diaphone
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Комментарии • 469

  • @CutieMcBooty-lg5yh
    @CutieMcBooty-lg5yh 5 месяцев назад +1117

    "Enjoy being a noob, it only happens once." is honestly some sage level insight. We all get caught up in getting good that we forget that a huge part of what makes games fun is learning how to play them.

    • @zato-1766
      @zato-1766 5 месяцев назад +52

      Idk man, it's frustrating to me to be losing by getting knowledge checked by gimmicks repeatedly. I'm definitetly having a better time when I know the matchup win or lose. Feels more like I'm playing my opponent than just the game.

    • @BGRecon
      @BGRecon 5 месяцев назад

      100% agreed to this​@@zato-1766

    • @DoggyP00
      @DoggyP00 5 месяцев назад +42

      That's something only veterans say, because it's only fun being a noob if either everyone else is a noob aka will never happen again unless a brand new genre comes out, or you are a veteran at the genre and are a "noob" at a new game in said genre, aka you're not a noob.

    • @chillinon3263
      @chillinon3263 5 месяцев назад +16

      I love this advice a lot honestly. When I was a little younger, I was so caught up in my own pride that I felt seriously discouraged if I tried something new and didn't immediately get it. Enjoying the process of discovery took a long time for me to reach, but nowadays I just let go of my ego when I pick up hobbies; the fun is found in the act of practice and celebrating each small improvement I notice.

    • @jesseperez4185
      @jesseperez4185 5 месяцев назад +9

      I have fun learning and improving because I don't have an ego at that point. Once you develop an ego, it becomes hard to improve or see your mistakes so it becomes tilting.

  • @AdamJorgensen
    @AdamJorgensen 5 месяцев назад +407

    Easy or hard, it's a hell of a lot of fun!

    • @bilbo_gamez6195
      @bilbo_gamez6195 5 месяцев назад +4

      100%. First tekken in like 15 years but it was only fitting it was the first fighting game I play on ps5 cos the original was my first ever fighting game. Anyway I've been doing pretty good but boy I definitely get my ass kicked regularly enough... still having a ball getting better though!

    • @data9594
      @data9594 5 месяцев назад +2

      I played tekken 7 on and off. Just got tekken 8 last night and immediately noticed how much better it was.Amazing

    • @bilbo_gamez6195
      @bilbo_gamez6195 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@data9594 I dont think I've ever wanted or had the tools to improve my skills as much as this before t8. It's at the point now where I'm watching back my RUclips videos at work to see where I can improve and watching opponents animations and how they affect my fighter

    • @kevindietrich5028
      @kevindietrich5028 5 месяцев назад

      @@bilbo_gamez6195 dude I wish I knew fighting games earlier. I started with sf5 and sf6 last year, jumped over to mk1 und pre purchased tekkie 8. it is a great game with lot of mechanics and techniques. I don't care about the negative comments cuz in my eyes... tekken 8 is just amazing

  • @FrankenSteinsGate
    @FrankenSteinsGate 5 месяцев назад +98

    The thing about Tekken is that the gap between the skill floor and skill ceiling is _so_ much wider than pretty much any other game. Like you hear all the veteran players say that the pros are playing a different game from the rest of us, and because of that sky-high skill ceiling, they're really not wrong.
    Point being, don't worry about being "good" at Tekken if you're just jumping in now, because getting _that_ good takes literal years, if not decades. For now, just have fun slowly but surely learning the game

    • @RexOedipus.
      @RexOedipus. 5 месяцев назад +2

      Unless you're knee. The man was born knowing every character

    • @kharismanando9051
      @kharismanando9051 4 месяца назад

      @@RexOedipus. is Knee really that good? i always see his name when i type every character gameplay on youtube

  • @Mooglewut
    @Mooglewut 5 месяцев назад +120

    I think, in a lot of ways, fundamentals from other games DO transfer to Tekken. Stuff being plus or minus on block, the idea of lows and overheads (mids here in Tekken), and footsies as a concept still apply. Yeah, maybe when you've been playing for 15 hours, you don't know that you need to block low for the 3rd hit of Raven's b2,1,2. But, guess what, no one else who is new knows that either. Learn, and be the best you can be, while others learn with you.

    • @Diaphone
      @Diaphone  5 месяцев назад +23

      Yea agreed. Obviously cut a lot out to make this short, but things def carry over (don’t think I’d be doing well if they didn’t) I think the consensus is they just carry over less cause the game is so knowledge heavy

    • @Mooglewut
      @Mooglewut 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@Diaphone For sure. Getting through the early to mid ranks is hardest because most people don't even know what their own character does, much less the other 31. Learning all that is what makes Tekken so great.

    • @wrcaiowr
      @wrcaiowr 5 месяцев назад

      Exactly. I'm trying to learn how to sidestep in tekken now, but the combos and setups I already know how to do are so fun that I don't feel like practing yet hahaha. Btw I guess the Raven's string you are talking about is b2,2,1+2 but not knowing the exact input to be able to block it proves your point

    • @Mooglewut
      @Mooglewut 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@wrcaiowrFunny enough, I play raven and just my brain forgot the input but my bands know it LOL

    • @MirridonOnslaught
      @MirridonOnslaught 5 месяцев назад +1

      2d fighters train you to crouch block. In tekken you need a very specific reason to crouch otherwise your getting blown up.

  • @PythonDelta
    @PythonDelta 5 месяцев назад +225

    I love love love the new blood tekken is picking up and how welcoming the players are. This is great

    • @scottiecurrie7927
      @scottiecurrie7927 5 месяцев назад +5

      I certainly love that new people are here, but I want them to quickly get mashing trained out of their minds because they're lowkey driving me crazy. I need them all humbled and ready to learn properly so we can go back to great and skillful matches

    • @axis8396
      @axis8396 5 месяцев назад +4

      I'm at assailant and literally like 3 people played "actual Tekken", offense is exponentially easier to learn than defense and I say this as a Jun where I have b32 and uf43 as evasive launchers. Tekken 7 had peaks of ~11k on steam in its lifetime, Tekken 8 has 32k with a peak of nearly 50k on launch, something tells me not everyone wants to play "honest fundamental Tekken"

    • @orbbb24
      @orbbb24 5 месяцев назад +35

      @@axis8396 You sound just like the Street Fighter community last year. "Actual Tekken". Please... It's a game.

    • @scottiecurrie7927
      @scottiecurrie7927 5 месяцев назад

      @axis8396 Oh absolutely. We're in a phase where we kind of have to sit here and deal with the scummy spammers who think they can pick up a character and just rapidly press buttons. I had to play a Devil Jin recently who was rapidly spamming his Fly dive attack Heat Engager and if it didn't work he would spam the living dogshit out of every grab in his arsenal. And I'm talking SPAM, he would grab me with the exact same grab after I earned it was a basic one and broke it twice into instantly grabbing me again with a 1+2 grab and then instantly grabbing me with a specific input grab. I'm not a bad player, having gotten to Tekken God Prime with Lei Wulong in Tekken 7, but the absolute culture shock of going from honest Tekken to Tekken 8 is driving me mentally insane. My friend who plays an extremely honest Kazuya has suggested that we just match their energy and spam them out so they either quit or learn to play honest Tekken, and I might just do it at this point, because trying to be honest and do punishes and combos when the enemy is just spamming strings nonstop has kept me in green and yellow ranks since launch day and it makes me feel like utter horseshit. I don't want to play like a scumbag but if it's what we need to do to condition the newcomers and make them respect the game, I'll do it

    • @badxgrass
      @badxgrass 5 месяцев назад +14

      ​@@scottiecurrie7927You reached TGP with a character in T7, you should have your defensive fundamentals covered. Strings are most definitely punishable, losing to button mashers just means that you don't know your character by heart YET. I'd rather play "boring" defensive tekken and WIN, than try to get my turn via a launcher and keep losing to the same move that has frame advantage.

  • @Wow4ik1
    @Wow4ik1 5 месяцев назад +23

    When I fight against the CPU, I always think that I'm really good, but the online matches bring me back down to earth😩

  • @axis8396
    @axis8396 5 месяцев назад +39

    It's also worth pointing out that early on you're going to get hit by tons of stuff you "shouldn't": snake edges(launching lows, usually homing) are generally in the 25-30f+ range, this is unseeable at lower levels because you have to think about it but once you're used to it it's a free launch punish. It's just something you'll get used to over time

    • @littlekale
      @littlekale 5 месяцев назад +4

      its funny how instinctive it will always be for you once you get it. I haven't played T7 for like 3 years and picked it up with T8 again and I am just subconsciously blocking snake edges and react blocking kazuya's mids after just a few days. Remember that what seems daunting today might just be second nature 2 days later.

    • @axis8396
      @axis8396 5 месяцев назад

      @@littlekale got my Jun to Vanquisher a little while ago, pretty happy with that since I haven't played in like 6 years. Prolly try Lili next, plus her cat is named Salt which is just perfect

    • @NYG5
      @NYG5 5 месяцев назад

      Most snake edges also have pretty limited range, if you keep the opponent from being on top of you is a bit of an option select.

    • @smugdarkly
      @smugdarkly 5 месяцев назад

      What in the world is a snake edge?

    • @NYG5
      @NYG5 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@smugdarkly it's a low sweep where they duck really low so it high crushes, it tracks both ways and launches. They also usually don't need to come out of a stance, they recover really low to the ground, and how much range they have varies a bit per character. They're usually a little slowish and are death on block, but they can fk you if they throw it out just as your doing a high. Called snake edge because Bryan had the first one on T3 and that's what it was called.

  • @pipehelix5776
    @pipehelix5776 5 месяцев назад +27

    Tekken is specially hard to learn how to learn. The go-to basics are very different from any other game, and you might not know what you really need for your level, like of learning all your moves, try what knee does on your matches, etc. You don't need to play the tekken you watch on tournaments right away, you can play your tekken on lower ranks just fine with a couple tools, and looking out for what you could do when you want to beat something

  • @IwatchTubiTrash
    @IwatchTubiTrash 5 месяцев назад +72

    This is my first Tekken game and it definitely feels like a lot. The tutorial/tools they give you are superb though, so while it is a lot it doesn't feel overwhelming.

    • @Methos_
      @Methos_ 5 месяцев назад +1

      its what makes it exciting though

    • @Banner18Secured
      @Banner18Secured 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Methos_having to break through a brick wall of info just to START to learn this encyclopedia of a game is fun to you? I returned this game after about two days its a chore to learn this shit.

    • @Methos_
      @Methos_ 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Banner18Secured I mean, I already know how to read people, space, punish, counterhit, etc from other fighting games.
      I'm not starting with 0 knowledge.

    • @Banner18Secured
      @Banner18Secured 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Methos_ I was referring to how it feels from someone in my shoes. Its not worth 70$ usd to pay for get my ass kicked 50 times in a row simulator. Not a fun experience.

    • @Methos_
      @Methos_ 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Banner18Secured Just fight ghosts instead tbh. Also, if you haven't gone through arcade quest I 100% recommend it

  • @insygnia_
    @insygnia_ 5 месяцев назад +9

    One thing I would like to say to new Players about 2 Phases of observing the game by you.
    Recognize the distance your character moves to land a specific attack-input (phase1)
    then
    you blur the focus on looking at your own character and focus on the condition or actions your opponent's character is doing. (phase2)

  • @fighting1fefnir
    @fighting1fefnir 5 месяцев назад +58

    I feel like the movelist gets overlooked a little when talking about if Tekken is easy or hard to get into. People think having a hundred moves is a negative thing, but when you don't know how to play a fighting game yet and are just going to be pressing buttons with your friends and hoping to see cool stuff, having every direction and button combination be a move basically ensures you'll get to do at least one interesting attack most rounds even against someone better than you. Every person I've introduced to the series has started off being intimidated by it until they mash their way into hitting a cool move, and once they hit that cool move, the whole dynamic changes. Now it's all about learning to do the cool thing effectively, and before you know it you've got a Tekken player with a main and 30 moves in their arsenal so they can keep doing that cool move they liked.

    • @GameScrub-Raff
      @GameScrub-Raff 5 месяцев назад +2

      Eddie Gordo did this on TTT back in the day. Anyone could jump in, mash kicks and have a good time.

    • @NYG5
      @NYG5 5 месяцев назад

      It's much much harder to fight against somebody who has hundreds of moves that aren't just juggle fillers. Defense is so much harder than offense in this game.

    • @pd9551
      @pd9551 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@NYG5defense is way harder then offense, completely right. Other then that, you never get to use all moves, in the end you play around with 15-25 moves, that are really essential for your gameplay, everything else is just bonus (usually bad moves) which you can use to surprise your opponent or die for it ;)

    • @johnsonjunior547
      @johnsonjunior547 5 месяцев назад +1

      Well, there aren't actually a lot of moves. Its kind of fake in a sense. Ofc when you're learning 30 characters it can be daunting but when you actually look at the movelist, a lot of them are throws, some are copied in the heat section. Some of them are just strings but continued, so it'll be 2,2,3. Then 2,2,3,4. Or its 2,2,4. So, its the same string but it ends differently or extends into a different move. Then theres other moves that should only be used in combos because they don't mixup, they don't heat engage, they don't mixup, they're just bad and only useable in combos. I think the actual movelist complexity comes when you look at stance changes. So, it'd be like 2,2,f, into a stance. Or you can do 2,2,d, into a different stance. Or you just continue the string or stop the string. So, for new players, not only is it hard to smoothly use these stance transitions but its also hard to predict the enemy when you have that. Then add on top the stance complexities like how Reina's heaven's wrath stance will parry while heat is active. But the actual raw numbers of moves, I don't think is a big deal.

  • @JonArbuckle066
    @JonArbuckle066 5 месяцев назад

    Heard you talking about making this video. Was looking forward to it, thank you 👍

  • @rabbyd542
    @rabbyd542 5 месяцев назад +2

    I like that the button inputs make logical sense. It makes it easy for me to learn them. If I'm pressing LK+RK it does some kind of attack with both feet. If I press forward and punch, it's probably an advancing move to get pressure started ect.

  • @ZWakeup
    @ZWakeup 5 месяцев назад +5

    Tekken 8 is my first fighting game that I would love to try this series but not have a chance for 10+ years, now is the time and got stomped for like 30+ game with only 2-3 wins. Thank you for wise suggestion, Enjoy being a noob is my journey now but not the end of the road. Keep fighting!

  • @TheFlyingChungus
    @TheFlyingChungus 5 месяцев назад +3

    As a long time Tekken player and just got into GBVSR as a side game, 100% agree with your insight.

  • @PureOctarine
    @PureOctarine 5 месяцев назад +28

    As a new player, it's so hard and I have no idea what I'm doing. It was hard getting into guilty gear strive and Street fighter 6 too but not as hard as tekken

    • @miketzartzalis906
      @miketzartzalis906 5 месяцев назад +10

      u learn more about the game by blocking and observing instead of attacking and u also need to practise alot

    • @bagasagung1097
      @bagasagung1097 5 месяцев назад +9

      try learning a few key moves
      2 mixup strings (that also led to counter hit)
      2 punishment (10frame punish and 13-15frame punish)
      2 launcher
      2 combo (1 for wall carry, 1 for wall splat)
      learn it one by one and you will notice that your game started to improve a lot. DONT try to remember all the strings, its just useless

    • @savage-stan0729
      @savage-stan0729 5 месяцев назад

      Coming from Mortal Kombat here, I can say I spent time in practice and now I’m a serious trouble all the way to eliminator rank

  • @DevilRising
    @DevilRising 5 месяцев назад +10

    Bamco games are always easy to mash buttons in, but optimizing your gameplay in them is an endless amount of work.

  • @Ningushi
    @Ningushi 5 месяцев назад

    Awesome video thanks for important info :)

  • @mustang12345
    @mustang12345 5 месяцев назад +2

    Very good video and sum up about Tekken difficulty ! I really like your conclusion. If you just want to play to have fun (whatever the level), Tekken is not more difficult than other fighting games. However if you want to try to compete and expect to beat the best players of this game and win the next Tekken World Tour, it will be extremely hard. The legacy knowledge is huge in this game, but again, just care about that if you want to compete seriously.
    I would add that with the awesome features in the replay mode (taking control, suggested punish etc.), it is the best time to learn this game. They really put the effort to help people learn the different match-up and be better, without the hassle of learning the opponent character and finding the exact move and trying to reproduce the exact setup. This feature was first implemented in Guilty Gear accent core, and I really hope that with Tekken it will set a standard.

  • @deepseaminingsyndicate
    @deepseaminingsyndicate 5 месяцев назад

    Vibing with Diaphone getting off his villain arc and going for the clean shave! Looking good man!

  • @riffcrypt8438
    @riffcrypt8438 5 месяцев назад +1

    Tekken is unique in how it is immediately fun and enjoyable to play just hitting buttons and getting a feeling and then opens up into near endless possibility and complexity when you decide to dive in. It was what got me into it as a 5 year old playing Yoshi on T2 and what keeps me playing 30 years later.

  • @chucklos391
    @chucklos391 5 месяцев назад

    Diaphone your Tekken content is awesome! This video was S tier.

  • @willfarmer9873
    @willfarmer9873 5 месяцев назад

    This is my first Tekken game BUT there are so many tools to get better!! I’ve played a lot of 2d fighters, but I feel like this game gives you what you need to get good really quickly! Loving it so far!

  • @jpeg.jordaan
    @jpeg.jordaan 5 месяцев назад +1

    The replay system is so good with the tips. i watched a replay vs a guy to show friend and suddenly saw tips pop up like holy shit thats crazy. Also ghosts is hella cool.

  • @requiem418
    @requiem418 5 месяцев назад +5

    Ever heard of a term called knowledge check? You can even beat good players with it. Prime SF example is doing a minus move that is out of range to punish into an EX headbutt like a bot.

    • @zundra616
      @zundra616 5 месяцев назад

      I am pretty sure diaphone knows what a knowledge check is lol

  • @pif5023
    @pif5023 5 месяцев назад

    I used to play a ton of Tekken 4 when I was young, perhaps I will pick it up again when it goes on sale. I got back into fighting games last year with GGST and I have just found SF6 on sale and I am on it of course. My brain is hurting a bit from all the tech and mechanics already. Two fire years for fighting games, I wish I had found the online community when I was younger.

  • @ScoopsMayCry
    @ScoopsMayCry 5 месяцев назад

    Wholeheartedly agree with the last part I feel like people misunderstand the game being really hard when it depends on your perspective and goals

  • @surveyor1515
    @surveyor1515 5 месяцев назад

    New to Tekken and I’m starting with Law, I love his moveset and nunchucks so far, going to play him for several hours before trying another character for several hours 😁

  • @BLU3W0LFx
    @BLU3W0LFx 5 месяцев назад

    Great vid Diaphone!

  • @PaperTigerLive
    @PaperTigerLive 5 месяцев назад +2

    This is the most fun I’ve had with a fighting game since SF4

  • @soullikesouls
    @soullikesouls 5 месяцев назад

    It depends on if u ever played a fighting game before i think. I played older tekken games by just doing strings whithout any knowledge about real combos or footsies 15 years ago. But when i really put the time to learn sf4 back in the day i developed an understanding in combos and punishment options. So when i picked up t7 or any other fighting game i had a pretty easy learning experience. I think no matter what fighting game u start with it is gonna be hard. But if u played any other fg before i think tekken is managable just like street fighter especially nowadays. I think its harder to enjoy the learning progress of fighting games and keep playing than to just to play occacionally with friends. Im glad i got stuck otherwise i would have never picked up any other fighting games

  • @komikop
    @komikop 5 месяцев назад

    Last tekken i played was tekken 5 on ps2 love this one lots of offline content fun to play arcade mode

  • @HashimeYT
    @HashimeYT 5 месяцев назад

    I agree with that enjoy being a noob part! I just picked up the game 4 days ago (my first genuine fighting game) and there's a real joy in learning the ropes! I lost like 15 matches before getting my first win in ranked, but it was a fun journey nonetheless!

  • @Pepsimanv2
    @Pepsimanv2 5 месяцев назад +1

    4:25 What I like about Tekken 8 is that certain moves are nearly always the same for nearly all characters.
    Most chars have an df2 launcher, etc.
    The changes to laws dss is probably to maintain consistency with entering your stance.
    What I experienced so far is that most characters can enter their stance with >>combo

    • @NYG5
      @NYG5 5 месяцев назад +1

      There are quite a few tekken universals, like you said, a standing 15f-ish df2 launcher, 13f df1, a 15f ws launcher, snake edges, high crush moves, your heavy swing +f on block downward chopping moves or WR forward charging moves, df1,4 mid high strings, etc. Some characters can have particularly good versions or bad versions of all these kinds of tools, so that aids in recognizing things right off the bat, and moves oftentimes have similar properties. If you block a move but then the opponent interrupts your 14f follow up move, it usually means that move was a high since mids are balanced by usually having your turn end by being around -6 of block.
      Once you understand the core of what the game tries to offer and balance, you can adjust faster and faster to everything. Almost no move is god tier, so once you stop panicking you can figure out the counter measure one way or another.

  • @s.b.e._9692
    @s.b.e._9692 5 месяцев назад

    I played only tekken 7 but this new combo system is so cool! I dont know why but the loops in combo are so sleek and i dont know why they work here but it takes practice. Good that i like doing combos in lab(they are much worse when i do them online)

  • @Pinstripedood
    @Pinstripedood 5 месяцев назад

    That replay mode is so cool!

  • @TonyTheTGR
    @TonyTheTGR 5 месяцев назад

    A large factor is matchup variety. I typically recommend starting with T3, then T5, then 7 or 8... and maybe Tag 2 if you're going more galaxy brain than that.

  • @monkadude15
    @monkadude15 5 месяцев назад

    I can definitely feel the difference going to Blazblue CrossTag battle (my first fighting game in 2022) to this lol

  • @Slimjim8345
    @Slimjim8345 5 месяцев назад

    I've only been playing anime fighters for about a year now, and I picked up Tekken 5 like a month before release just to get the feel of it.
    I'd say Tekken isn't really that hard to get decent at. I still have a lot of "I thought that was a high!" or "What in the world is the grab break for that!!!", but besides that its not bad.
    I'm playing Xiaoyu who as shown, has 140 moves, but I probably use 25 of them and have gotten to orange rank. Figuring out some of her Okizeme options has really helped me out big time.

  • @jasonr6954
    @jasonr6954 5 месяцев назад

    my biggest issue coming from MK to tekken was crouching doesnt block mids. so my first few games i was always wondering why everything was an "overhead" lol

  • @LiangHuBBB
    @LiangHuBBB 5 месяцев назад +1

    the game is so hard for new players because every character has so many moves, it takes so long to understand whats + whats safe or not, is it punishable, what range all the moves have etc. for a new player its rly hard.
    in mk1 or sf6 each character only has a few moves to remember
    !

  • @Jaedon1981
    @Jaedon1981 5 месяцев назад

    I definitely remember how many of the fgc said that DOA was hard to play. It's all according to how well you can take directions.

  • @Cutthroat__
    @Cutthroat__ 5 месяцев назад

    Hard to pickup hard to master imo but the tools in this game make it much easier to pickup then previous tekkens.. but they definitely catered more towards new players with the heat system

  • @LeVolture
    @LeVolture 5 месяцев назад

    It's insanely hard to learn, having trouble figuring out when it's save to attack :P

  • @CosmicRPG
    @CosmicRPG 5 месяцев назад

    The replay mode is a.big boost to help new players

  • @iwhoplays7904
    @iwhoplays7904 5 месяцев назад +2

    My only real complaint is simple controls being available in ranked, the competitive game mode, where you can have someone play Reina and spam perfect electrics with it.

    • @lucastonoli3256
      @lucastonoli3256 5 месяцев назад +2

      You won't get anywhere with that, it limits your options once you enable it and the other player can see you have it on. Not to mention they do less damage too.

    • @killswitch6361
      @killswitch6361 5 месяцев назад +1

      Also if they are spamming electrics you can just duck and punish.

    • @ViperDivinity
      @ViperDivinity 5 месяцев назад

      It is often easier to play against people who only spam one move than a unga bunga player.
      You can sidestep to the left, bait and whiff punish or duck to punish it, it is high remember it. It is a strong move but it has weakness too

    • @iwhoplays7904
      @iwhoplays7904 5 месяцев назад

      @@ViperDivinity Lol yeah, I know that. Reina and her electric were just my examples. Something that removes the competitiveness of a ranked ladder.

  • @RobotronSage
    @RobotronSage 5 месяцев назад +1

    Also worth noting if you're playing ranked and struggling just remember it's not your fault a lot of players are extremely good at the game and have been playing for like 10 years now

    • @RobotronSage
      @RobotronSage 5 месяцев назад

      The meta in 8 is actually very similar to League of Legends it requires a lot of knowledge of for example the movelist and timings and also skill techniques such as parrying
      Heat crush is useful as it's good for counterattacks
      Anyway

  • @imgonnawinwin3451
    @imgonnawinwin3451 4 месяца назад

    Picking up tekken during the tekken 8 hype was the best decision ever. I played tekken 4 & 6 when i was a kid but only button mashing, but getting into it properly it’s so much fun even if it’s all confusing. It’s definitely a game that has the biggest gap between new, veterans, and pros. I will say the entry level learning curve is super difficult, the terminology and notation is like learning another language, and my brain wasn’t able to translate 1, 2, 3, 4 on my fingers. Plus slowly conditioning and building up fundamentals like the korean dash makes me feel like I’m learning piano all over again - and this is only touching the mechanical aspect

  • @jalyn1551
    @jalyn1551 5 месяцев назад +1

    Im still playing the demo since i was going to play paul anyway
    But i cannot do quarter circles for some reason i keep getting WS 2 does anyone know what im doing wrong ?

    • @TheSoufiane
      @TheSoufiane 5 месяцев назад

      Practice sway motions

    • @Wuzzy-qp9kn
      @Wuzzy-qp9kn 5 месяцев назад

      You're either holding down too long or you're pressing down forward. It all needs to be in a light motion where you can see the character do a forward sway.

  • @ELFUICHE
    @ELFUICHE 5 месяцев назад

    2:35 How do you enable control?

  • @hotdog5927
    @hotdog5927 5 месяцев назад +13

    its very easy to learn your best offensive tools and run someone down with offense, but defending against said things? good luck. its nearly impossible to be ready for 50+ moves from 30+ characters beyond a basic level, so if your goal is offense you can pick it up pretty quick but if your goal is defense then I hope you have an incredible memory

    • @AdamJorgensen
      @AdamJorgensen 5 месяцев назад

      Probably part of why they decided to move the game balance from defence towards offence.

    • @tousawa808
      @tousawa808 5 месяцев назад +2

      Most players don't use 30 moves, important part is knowing the strong moves which takes time, that's the whole point if you want to get good at the game. You gonna need to study for it

    • @hotdog5927
      @hotdog5927 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@tousawa808 right most wont use 30 moves but you might fight 5 different people using the same character and all 5 might have different preferences for which of their 100 moves they want to use

    • @ZyletaSF4
      @ZyletaSF4 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@tousawa808 If a good player notices that you haven't done your homework, he will knowledge checks you to death until you learn, the greater the number of moves we use, the more difficult it is for the opponent to to get used to it, even the weakest blow used rarely creates surprise because the opponent does not expect it,
      and in many cases he has no knowledge of this move, this is the beauty of tekken 👍

    • @TheHankScorpio
      @TheHankScorpio 5 месяцев назад

      "I fear not the man who has practiced 100 moves once, but I fear the man who has practiced one move 100 times." - Marshall Law

  • @ZANTETSUKEV
    @ZANTETSUKEV 5 месяцев назад

    Learn to time and read opponents movements, most have their own unique play of style making them predictable. And be relentless when they are on the floor, you dont even need to know per se the juggle/sample combos

  • @mercurexi
    @mercurexi 5 месяцев назад

    Tons of moves with tons of characters in day one, in an iterative series (unlike SF / MK / etc : Tekken copy/pastes most of its base movelists and animations etc) = huge knowledge check for noobs, with veterans being, as a result, SUPER veterans that will crush you 1000 harder than in any other fighting game on week 1.

  • @cairomiravity
    @cairomiravity 5 месяцев назад

    4:34 So true and I've been in the Tekken series since 3

  • @Dirtgut
    @Dirtgut 5 месяцев назад

    This vid is great

  • @sayasatpol6084
    @sayasatpol6084 5 месяцев назад

    i'm having a blast playing tekken 8, trying out new character and stuff. But as someone who's rarely played fighting games before it is so frustrating to improve in this game. Everytime i practice moves, combos, etc offline and then try ranked for some time, i get wrecked multiple times by people who's rank is 5+ mine. A while ago i even fought a guy with the same rank as me which was 1st dan, but he was way ahead of me in terms of skill. Did 2 sets with this guy and lost every single round, i thought he was the same level as me but he was far from it. And that's pretty much every single ranked game that i've played since release, 2 sets, 6 rounds lost not even a single round won.
    It's difficult for me to even learn the basics of the game if other people just won't let me play the game to begin with. It's hard and i want to cry, not because the game is difficult but im having a tough time improving.

  • @JonTalbain777
    @JonTalbain777 5 месяцев назад

    I started Tekken at T3, having grown up on SF. In terms of picking it up from scratch, I always found the game fairly intuitive. The big move lists are daunting, but everything always made sense to me, and if a main speaks to you, it just feels right. Some of the execution is tough, but the hard stuff is usually not necessary when you’re starting out. Mastery is another story, but that takes investment in every game. Fighters I found far less intuitive: VF, Blazblue and some Guilty Gear. Even the Neversoft games though maybe they are just not for me. Characters that require negative edging or puppets always baffle me, though I love watching them.

  • @sorasatoshi7833
    @sorasatoshi7833 5 месяцев назад

    Idk , in my opinion this is a huge learning curve compare to other fighting games I played. And here I thought sf combos were complicated XD but said to myself I will give it this game a try and if doesn’t work I just go back to gbvsr n sf6 .
    I wish the sample combos actually displayed input of the combo in training so I could tell if I’m doing sequence correct and not guess if I did it right . As far rank match I just been avoid playing online as each time I go in I just get destroyed .

  • @KingofStrength
    @KingofStrength 5 месяцев назад

    I haven’t played Tekken since 3 & I went into Tekken 8 after just recently playing Mk1(Braindead). Obviously I was hoping the best for this Tekken & it was a huge success. Not only am I having the most fun playing King I’m actually beating people who have been playing Tekken for years. This is a TRUE Fighting game forsure 👍

  • @jontaii152
    @jontaii152 5 месяцев назад

    My first tekken game.
    Somehow I landed on Kazuya.
    I’ve practiced for a couple hours getting basics down and can do electric maybe like 70% of the time.
    It’s honestly so fun and rewarding to execute hard stuff

    • @emodojo7692
      @emodojo7692 5 месяцев назад

      I can do the normal wind god fist but not the electric one. I'm on a ps5 controller and do have a fight stick, do you have any advice or eureka moment when you figure out the timing? I'm just doing it by accident like 5% of the time.

    • @killswitch6361
      @killswitch6361 5 месяцев назад

      @@emodojo7692 You have to input the 2 earlier than you'd think. What worked for me is trying to press 2 when I feel I hit down rather than df, and of course practice makes perfect.

    • @ViperDivinity
      @ViperDivinity 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@emodojo7692 Df and 2 has to be inputted at the exact same frame. It is gonna be challenging to learn your timing.
      You can get electrics more consistently if you try pressing 2 before inputting d and df during crouch dash (cd)

  • @ZyletaSF4
    @ZyletaSF4 5 месяцев назад

    jumping from 2d fighting games to tekken 7 , i get to ovelord in tekken 7 after 2 week playing with claudio, I beat my brother 10 4 who has been playing regularly since tekken 3 after 3 months because I focused on specified metchup, so summary I took the easiest character and focused on learning the metchups only of the characters my brother plays, yes, this game is difficult, it depends on how high we want to set the bar, I think that if we set ourselves the goal of achieving an average level, it is not difficult, but if we want to achieve something more, it will be like hitting a wall until we go to training and figure it out 👍

  • @michaeldietz2648
    @michaeldietz2648 5 месяцев назад

    The answer to this is complicated from my experience, thats if your only playing rank matches. In the beginning it’s more about being more skilled and able to outthink your opponent. But once you get to orange rank it becomes a matter of who understands the air juggling better (it’s really not about skill at that point anymore) finally when you get to red rank and above it’s really just about can you out cheese the other guy faster. As much as I love this game and I’m having a lot of fun with it it’s really not a skill-based game. You will find out when you get a higher rank it’s all about air juggling which is way over powered. There are definitely some balance issues, I know it’s been patched but I’ve been at work and haven’t been able to play it since the patch hopefully they fixed it. But overall just played this game for fun it’s really good

  • @moon5472
    @moon5472 5 месяцев назад +2

    Newish player, I played 4, 6, and 7 without ever trying to improve so I never learned how to really play. As someone who improved quite a bit in about a week, my advice to other beginners. Sometimes pressing nothing is more beneficial to do than pressing anything. Auto standing block is a thing.

    • @StramSaturdayDBDBDIB
      @StramSaturdayDBDBDIB 5 месяцев назад

      After they figure that out and start grabbing 😂

    • @ViperDivinity
      @ViperDivinity 5 месяцев назад

      You all should try holding backing button... Auto Guard has a weird interaction with string inputs.

  • @Guccibear100
    @Guccibear100 5 месяцев назад

    I'm learning Tekken alongside leverless, so its a bit more challenging for me. The only other 3D fighters, including Tekken, I just mashed with friends while partying, so yeah... I'm basically new, and I have too many 2D habits that are gonna take time to work around.

  • @BunBun_Velvet
    @BunBun_Velvet 5 месяцев назад

    I thought SF6 had good beginner tools and stuff but Tekken8 might take the cake 👀I might need to get it when I get some spending money

  • @ericsimonson8002
    @ericsimonson8002 5 месяцев назад

    Legacy knowledge can be daunting but if a game sells as well as Tekken and you buy it for the first time there is a strong chance that your opponent is learning the same lessons you are. Yes, if you get to a high rank you will need to up your game but there is definitely a high number of new players who will be in your your peer group. Just have fun right? It's an amazing series of games that is worth the money and worth your time.

  • @NYG5
    @NYG5 5 месяцев назад

    It's hard to learn but to Namco's credit T8 is the easiest to learn due to the playable replay and deep practice mode. I only miss unlimited rematch functions from T7 so you can keep playing that obscure character to figure them out

  • @Ricrogue
    @Ricrogue 5 месяцев назад

    Me and my discord are all picking up tekken 8, is keyboard viable? Ive been learning and doing fairly well but i dont want to invest time into a flawed input

    • @Diaphone
      @Diaphone  5 месяцев назад

      Yea, and it transitions well to leverless controller down the road

  • @mono666
    @mono666 5 месяцев назад

    As someone who has well over thousands of hours in Mortal Kombat and just switched to Tekken 8 it's just weird switching games and learning all the different things, on top of the hundreds of moves each character can do. I can totally see this game being very challenging for a new fighting game player

  • @GenocideLv
    @GenocideLv 5 месяцев назад

    its extremely hard. I attended a couple tournaments of DOA as a mere highschool freshman, but in tekken... this is my first tekken game and i have yet to win 2 consecutive matches a couple hours into the game.

  • @bobxbaker
    @bobxbaker 5 месяцев назад

    my advice is just mash, you won't know what the properties of your moves are or their moves are or what they look like until you see what happens and gradually you will find out and later you will have to learn how to play defense and get around others block either by discovering for yourself or look at a character guide having someone point out which of the moves is good for what. but there's no point into grinding those things before you get a general sense of the buttons and what the moves looks like, so initially it's just about soaking up the game by feeling it out.
    visual library and muscle memory are 2 things you don't have and it's gonna suck if you expect too much out of yourself early on.

  • @flannaz3769
    @flannaz3769 5 месяцев назад

    The comaprison to chess is true, if there were no input barriers - chess is a game of pure knowledge checks - fighting games while also are about out-thinking, you also need the execution to be able to play efficiently. If your opponent is smarter than you in chess, odds are you will lose, in a fighting game you can still win if you have the execution to capitalise on your wins - there's no 50/50s in chess. There's guesswork, traps and prediction - however there is nothing the opponent can throw that you cannot read on the board, there's no random baits or plays for the most part - at least at a mid-high level.

  • @KhyrisEidan
    @KhyrisEidan 5 месяцев назад

    I want the dummy be the mimicry character. Or they should bring back Mokujin or Combot.

  • @vincoonoo
    @vincoonoo 5 месяцев назад

    Now this is some good ass tekken

  • @MillyBitchell
    @MillyBitchell 5 месяцев назад +1

    It’s the first time I haven’t been intimidated by a Tekken game. I feel like I can pick up any character and do cool shit right off the bat.

  • @itzdcx7991
    @itzdcx7991 5 месяцев назад +3

    it depends on the character you play

  • @eh4372
    @eh4372 5 месяцев назад

    As a fighting game player but one who hasn’t touched tekken since tekken 3 I can attest that it’s hard. Most fighting games I play I generally get to a very solid rank and can usually get to the peak rank at least a few times. But tekken is very hard I’m struggling to get out every bracket. But very enjoyable game

  • @joshireyn
    @joshireyn 5 месяцев назад

    Dearest content creator Diaphone,
    I hope this comment finds you well. Admittedly, I really enjoy your Tekken videos, but unfortunately I am unable to get the game myself at this moment in time. Would you mind to stop posting more Tekken videos until I can get my hands on the game? I really want to play the game, and your vids hype me so much I started playing the demo excessively. I hope you take this to heart.
    Kind regards joshireyn
    (Now in all honesty the videos slap hard, and I cant wait to get the game myself, keep on cooking Diaphone)

  • @thebrownbaldy
    @thebrownbaldy 5 месяцев назад

    The backdash was a pain in the ass to learn. Glad the developers made it easier to execute this time around.

  • @kylehunter
    @kylehunter 5 месяцев назад

    Honestly my take on most fighting games is they are easy to learn at a base level. Learning enough to where you can play competently amongst people isn’t particularly difficult it’s when you want to go beyond that where it becomes actually difficult. Enjoy the game. Just have fun figuring it out and take your little victories and moments of progress. Being a noob is honestly such a fun experience and it’s taken me a while to truly appreciate it lol

  • @monocyte2210
    @monocyte2210 5 месяцев назад

    what I dont like about T8 is there is more emphasis on offense rather than defense. The pace is so fast now that its now like a guessing game both players would throw out moves and pray it connects to start a string. And yeah thew characters can combo with just button mashing

  • @wisdomcjs250
    @wisdomcjs250 5 месяцев назад +1

    I'm new but finding the game so much easier and more fun to learn than 2D games. Each of the huge amount of options is actually very intuitive and I'm feeling far less like it's me vs the game compared to 2D

  • @brandonrice1124
    @brandonrice1124 5 месяцев назад

    I am having trouble doing Devil jin launcher and that sweep move sometimes they come out other times they don't and i get destroyed Why is his party starters so hard to pull off makes no sense when victor exists😡

  • @nyrva2876
    @nyrva2876 5 месяцев назад

    There's definitely some characters I run into that I don't rematch no matter what.
    I just don't understand what they're doing and keep abusing it, then you go to replay and it says things like you can duck this hit.
    Well in Tekken, more often than not if you duck, you'll get hit for massive damage with how good mids are in this game. So this advice isn't a good one to me because they often mix you up with a mid that does more damage than taking the high in the face.

  • @swiftyxrd
    @swiftyxrd 5 месяцев назад

    I feel like learning Tekken is a bigger pain because there's just a lot of weird stuff like memorizing King's chain grab inputs or learning to do electrics (granted, kind of easy if you just blow money on a hitbox.)

    • @Kickinthescience
      @Kickinthescience 5 месяцев назад

      Ppl that only play Smash Bros and MK are in for a rude awakening

  • @tousawa808
    @tousawa808 5 месяцев назад +1

    From someone who played in the top ranks and in evo, this game is not hard to pick up but is very hard to master. If you want to get really good, you're going to invest alot of time into this game, it's well worth it. If people need advice just reply.

    • @blackdiamond097
      @blackdiamond097 5 месяцев назад

      I’m a beginner and I’ve used asuka and have 90% of her moves memorized but it’s difficult to use her effectively, i want to main xiaoyu but ofc learning her requires a lot what are some tips for using xiaoyu & learning how to use her if you have any?

    • @tousawa808
      @tousawa808 5 месяцев назад

      @@blackdiamond097 You should first focus on their strongest moves, their poke, launchers and the bread and butter combo's. If you learn the entire move list just to use them you won't know what's good or when to use them. For example her f1+2 is a good move, forces heat and is armored and safe on block, they have to duck it to dodge it.
      I don't play xiaoyu but she can be more demanding cuz of her stances, I recommend you go watch mr croft video, very good pro player, pretty much masters xioayu, he released a full 100% guide on her 1 day ago.

    • @killswitch6361
      @killswitch6361 5 месяцев назад

      @@blackdiamond097 Don't waste your time learning entire movesets from the beginning. Look up some guides on key moves to learn like your punishes, mixups, pokes. Limiting what you use will make your gameplan a lot simpler, and make it easier to learn. Then when you feel comfortable start studying the move list and throw in some more moves to refine your playstyle.

    • @tousawa808
      @tousawa808 5 месяцев назад

      @@blackdiamond097Watch mr croft recent xioayu guide, he is one of the best with her. I wrote a different reply but that one got removed for some reason

  • @aaronbarlianta
    @aaronbarlianta 5 месяцев назад

    Been playing since T3 on and off with the franchise. I must say it’s easy to learn but hard to master

  • @CherrysGuy32
    @CherrysGuy32 5 месяцев назад

    Didnt expect to have a lot of newcomers on Tekken 8 😅

  • @AegisRick
    @AegisRick 5 месяцев назад

    Learning an effective strategy and combos for your character is very easy. Defense and counterplay is where all the infinite depth is. This is even more so in T8 where steamrolling is so prevalent. Unfortunately defense, and what people call "fundamentals" is learned only from experience, not knowledge from reading guides or doing tutorials. No amount of me warning people about Bryan's snake edge is going to make them block punish it on reaction. Ok, what about Lili's? Asuka? Fang? You need to eat a hell of a lot of snake edges before you can defend against them consistently. Even this I dont find as that hard, but trial by fire is a hard sell for people who just want to start improving.

  • @repstylegaming9730
    @repstylegaming9730 5 месяцев назад

    King with the forward 2 1, goodnight son.

  • @KarkySphere
    @KarkySphere 5 месяцев назад

    Tekken is really fun for me because juggling is easier for me than games like street fighter or marvel vs capcom. Guile's movelist for me is hella hard in street fighter specially in controller. Basically it's a skill issue 😅 for me.

  • @Kwisatz-Chaderach
    @Kwisatz-Chaderach 5 месяцев назад +51

    Tekken is easy to learn, but that doesn't mean you will gain all the legacy skill that people have built up from playing since tekken 5. It's ok. Things take time.

    • @assassinonprozac
      @assassinonprozac 5 месяцев назад

      Matchup knowledge is 100% the most important thing in Tekken. You can have the worst execution in the world and absolutely god awful movement and still get far as long as you know the matchup (just learning how to punish your opponents moves will probably get you to red ranks). Just to prove my point I’ve been playing Dragunov for nearly 15 years, (though I haven’t played him in this game yet, I’ve only played Lee) I know everything there is to know about that character and I still got absolutely massacred by a new Dragunov player on day one spamming his new stuff because I didn’t know the matchup (same thing with all the new characters). You don’t need to know every single nuance of every character but just being able to do things like block Snake Edges and low parry Junkyard on reaction will help immensely.

    • @DZ14783
      @DZ14783 5 месяцев назад +5

      I don't get how it's easy to learn - to be any decent at the game you need to know every character throughout AND what's the most efficient way to punish them

    • @christoffelsymbol1631
      @christoffelsymbol1631 5 месяцев назад

      learning anything in general isn't easy, it's always a hard work
      but in the end you're supposed to enjoy the process
      it's like getting better at chess

    • @christoffelsymbol1631
      @christoffelsymbol1631 5 месяцев назад

      but if you just autopilot matches without analyzing what's happening you will learn nothing even after 1000 wins in ranked

    • @acronyx991
      @acronyx991 5 месяцев назад

      Easy to learn. Hard to master. Any person can go into tekken and within a week could understand basic combos and juggles. They would have fun playing against others on their level. But if you want to master it then you would need to understand match ups and framedata.
      I got to red ranks and I don't know any match ups or how to punish lots of characters. I just have fundamental knowledge that I've had since tekken 6.
      People learn at their own pace and if they want to get to the next level it would just take extra effort.
      It's a good game for begginers with a welcoming community imo.

  • @epictcg4424
    @epictcg4424 5 месяцев назад

    Yea, I agree, I just play the game for fun. ANd when I see pro player like Knee or Arslan play. Its just like god damn.... Who would have thought tekken is this complex. Yea, the game is hard but rewarding once you become okay at the game. You dont need to be pro play level to enjoy the game. Once you find someone at your game level its the most satisfying fighting game to play.

  • @aweto5199
    @aweto5199 5 месяцев назад

    I really don’t care if it’s hard or not, I have been having a boss with this game, when ur learning something new for me it’s just always fun

  • @mykellederickpalad7883
    @mykellederickpalad7883 5 месяцев назад

    Tekken 8 is insanely easy to get into now because of the system changes and tutorials. If you started in like tekken 5dr or tag2, you'd be lost since game barely tells you nothing and the movement in those games is so strong that you'd die for whiffing a single jab. T8 is still a hard game but it's much more easier than the previous since the dev team decided to raise the skill floor with a lot of nerfs to the system and introducing beginner friendly mechanics like the heat system.
    Edit: Also I dunno if you guys noticed but they made the execution very lenient for hard inputs like instant running moves so much easier now. You'd have to practice those moves for awhile in the past games but now everyone can do them without sweat/

  • @fraven1801
    @fraven1801 5 месяцев назад

    Sometimes its funny to see beginners to pick up steve and trying to kick or hit someone who is laying on the ground, it makes me see myself when I first picked up steve.

  • @merrychristmasreaper
    @merrychristmasreaper 5 месяцев назад

    For what it's worth if there are fundamentals that carry over from fighting games, for me at least it comes down to managing myself. Like okay.
    I'm coming off of masters SF6 - I'm not a GOD at the game, clearing that shit up rn lmao. BUT. What I am good at because of what SF6 taught me was how to manage my own learning habits and styles. I know what characters I gravitate towards, I know what I wanna do, and I know that I also HATE. Hate hate hate. Having to go back and relearn fundamentals. So I'm way better at focusing on the things I want to learn and not putting myself under unnecessary pressure. I'll keep it a buck with yall I ain't fixing to hit an electric on purpose in match anytime soon lmao.
    But I know I can teach myself how to kbd if I ask around enough, I know how to ask about set ups and set play, I know how to assess moves and their value and how to create a sort of regimen I can work with. Enough that even though there's plenty of players that can body me if they ask for a match, I can always help THEM learn things too.

  • @stanleylee3329
    @stanleylee3329 5 месяцев назад

    Tekken is a game that for me personally-you have to pick a main. And you really have to learn that guy before you move on otherwise you’ll forget. It’s a hard ass game-but man it’s fun.

  • @bes12000
    @bes12000 5 месяцев назад +1

    YEah not really enjoyable when getting beat down repeatedly in vs matches as a newbie, lol also the weird input lag of like 5+ seconds is making it hard to play, I got a new controller to see if thats the problem..

  • @corpsecandy2076
    @corpsecandy2076 5 месяцев назад

    The true benefit of tekken for me, is after its execution learning curve, just because of the sheer amount of moves. It has made my execution in other games, far more consistent. SF6 feels "simpler" after.