Speedkick's video is an eye opening video. Other than the KBD, it teaches you about the right mind set to have while learning anything execution heavy.
One little tip I can give to people who're starting this method: put the opponent in "stand and approach mode". This way they'll follow you and you can keep practicing for longer before you need to reset/run back to them.
Also change the restart setting "Restart Position" to "Wall" so that when you restart it takes you to the right/left side of the map (depending on player side). A long map like Yakushima is perfect for this.
As a major Tekken casual who learned from Speed kicks and PhiDX’s original T7 KBD guide, I can confirm that this is TRULY THE WAY TO GO. Slow and steady my friends!
Damn Phi you really are becoming a tekken guru at this point. The amount of knowledge you share with the public giving all of us the skills and tools we need is truly a blessing.
It's cool seeing more people talk about keyboard as a controller. It's often forgotten wgich is kind of sad since it's pretty much a hitbox with a bunvh more buttons.
for everyone saying that it's slightly faster, remember its one second gaster than the orininal from 3.4 or 2.5 LET ME REMIND YOU This is around 30% faster than the original dash
I press the dpad inputs in the left side with other part of my thumb, not the tip like you do, maybe that's my issue. I move around with the tip of my thumb when pressing the right part of the dpad, and when pressing the left part I rotate the tip of my thumb up and press with the down side / middle part of my thumb, that way I don't have to move the thumb out of place too much, but like I say, maybe that's why I cant do it properly
Hi, it's my first time playing tekken, and I play victor, I'm hard stuck Garyu in rank and I don't know if it's just hard to rank up with victor at this level or I just suck. I find victor really cool, i tried to practice other characters but Idk if I should commit the time or just stick with victor, since I'm new, I'm not sure what is the most efficient way to be better in this game. Great video btw, hope you could help. Cheers!
Man I dunno how you got your neutral input on the lever less backlash without socd to be around 3 frames. When I do it that neutral input is around 8, making the whole kbd end up being slow
Stick player here but im on a square gate with the Hori Alpha SF6 wonder if switching to Octagonal gate might help some too. Use stick for SF6 and TK8 but for MK1 I still prefer Pad lol
No. Square gate is infinitely better for tekken. Oct gate ruins your free back input because it's harder to "accidentally" hit back when you release to neutral.
in the first part is it: back, release, back, downback, back release back release etc or is it back release, back, downback, back and repeat the back,downback, back part?
Taking breaks is great advice when it comes to Tekken and learning movements. There have been many times trying to learn juggles and getting frustrated always hitting the wrong commands after a few hours. Take a break, get some sleep, come back, and you'll find yourself executing these moves no problem.
READ THIS: when you sleep, memory is transferred between regions of the brain (hippocampus & cortex). This is how this phenomenon works. You need to practice, sleep (REM sleep) THEN expect results. We all know the frustration of spending an entire day practicing something, and feeling like you don't fully have it. You don't. You wont' fully have it until the next day. This is also why you always sleep before exams; never stay up all night studying, the night before- you physically haven't committed anything to memory.
I use pad. The epiphany that happened for me when it comes to learning KBD is that you can start a KBD from crouch. You don't actually need the first back dash (back, back) to perform a KBD. I found that if you hold B,D, then release to neutral then hit back (quickly) you will get a back dash and the notation will be correct, then just hit B,D again to cancel and repeat. I found this very helpful as I can practice the motions separately and consistently. Literally learned to KBD in less than an hour.
This is how I learned back in the day as well on pad , however my inputs weren’t clean (I actually didn’t know the proper notation). On pad, it’s easy to hit db, release, and get a free back input , so that you can just do a single back input for another backdash. I learned how to do backdash with Bryan using the up back version instead of the down back version…and I could never do it with Nina until the later games.
I think the only problem is if you start to learn it from a crouching position you will start to do it like that in real games which can lead to your defense suffering. Even if it just a small amount of frames you will be crouching right in your opponents face which can lead to you getting hit by mids frequently right at the start of you wanting to get some distance. If you start standing you will more likely block it
@@satanpixel not in the slightest. The idea is once you've gotten your rhythm down just start adding the bb at the beginning. For me getting to the "meat" of the KBD was the toughest part to practice because I was doing two different cancels. The b,b,d+b & d+b,*,b,d+b... Figuring out I can do them individually helped me learn the mechanics of them and I simply pieced them together like LEGOs ™️. If you really think about it I now have an unexpected advantage. I can now intuitively back dash when crouching or standing.
Well yes, that's a backdash. It two different types. The one you're doing is the normal backdash and the one PhiDx is doing, is the Korean BackDash. Most pad people just do it the way your doing as KBD on pad is really if your trying to incorporate a low parry with your movement
As a bit of a newcomer to Tekken, learning the game through your videos has been extremely enjoyable. Keen to continue improving and see what you have for us next :)
Old video, but I have to get this off of my chest. I've casually played Tekken since Tekken 2. I learned what KBD was in TTT2 and have been very casually practicing it off and on for years since I've never taken the game seriously (I was too busy competing in tournaments in the much more niche little sibling game Soul Calibur). In all of this time, I've never gotten past doing it slowly the legit way, and doing it decently the cheating way with the qcb. Last night, this video showed up in my recommended, the first time I'd seen a guide on how to do it since TTT2. After about ten minutes of practice, I've doubled my speed of the legit KBD. More importantly, I have a much better understanding of what I'm doing, increasing my mind and body connection so that I can see more clearly what I'm doing wrong and how I can improve. This was the most successful guide on any mechanic in a fighting game I have ever watched. Thank you so much for this video
Phi, I legit picked up this game less than a week ago. You're knowledge and teaching skills are insane. Thank you, I went from thinking fighting games were always out of my reach to now wrecking my friends and gaining ranks. I'm loving the game and community, lifelong subscriber bro for real.
As a Korean...wtf...I haven't seen people play this game since elementary school...not sure why youtube recommended it. but it seems to have some following still going on. Enjoy the game gents
I’ve played tekken as a kid on arcades but never really got deeper than surface level on the game. This is the first tekken I’ve bought since then and am not sure if I should just spend time practicing and not even playing so I don’t build bad habits or practice some and play here and there
Sitting here holding my napping baby daughter, repeating the KBD motions on my PS5 controller. I feel like I'm back in high school practicing picking with 3 fingers and slapping my thumb for my bass guitar while I sit in class (22 years ago). What a game, so glad I'm finally dipping into some Tekken, and I'm so glad there are such detailed tutorials.
A moment of silence for the 10 top players who are angry that they made korean backdash easier...... Anyway, big ups to the developers improving the controls.
This somehow clicked with me so goddamn quick, i'm literally getting perfect kbds after never having known how to get them before lol, thankyou Phidx! very based
You were not kidding about this practice taking hours. I've been practicing the cancel on each side for a few hours now, but I can feel the muscle memory forming. Thanks for the video!
The timing of this video couldn't have been more perfect. I just got an Etokki Omni after years of playing on pad. I know arcade sticks won't make you automatically good at Tekken but I'm in it for the fun factor! Great video as always and can't wait to see more!! 👏
I started playing 1 year ago (seriously at least, been playing on and off since T3) and I developed a very sloppy and messy backdash because my main isn't a backsway character. With this method I'm really really improving a lot and in just a couple days I've been able to really speed up consistently and even use KBD effectively in matches to bait whiffs Now that you've released this video it will make it so much easier for everyone to find and understand this method. Really well done
I'am about to get crazy My SOCD Backdash is fine if i am %75 speed. But if i go to as fast full speed SOCD, i can not chain anything.. It NEVER feels and looks that fast. And as a bushin rank that start to make me really annoyed. İ use second forward as a kb player ( o for p1 side u for p2 side) and my notation is like "press and hold a" " double tap o for iniate backdash ( o is secondary forward ) "tap s " " tap o" "tap s" "tap o " repeat. My inputs looks clean but never get that speedy kdb. Please someone help me
One tihnk to add, my inputs are clean, my frame time is 2 for d 4 for db 4 for b 4 neuteral 10 b 4db 2 b 4 neut 12b 5 db 2 b I think this should be fast enough but my paul never looks or make distance as the video shows. I am really lost and don't know how to fix
when i was learning KBD, i thougght that theres a free back input when i release db. but there wasnt. i even change the springs of my stick because i might need a stronger spring but it didnt change anything. Then i learn that its just the hand guiding the stick to back after downback. So its all practice and timing
I didn't play tekken 7 ranked or even seriously at all just because i coudln't backdash correctly, and i just learned it in seconds just cuz of your tutorial unironically phidx is one of the greatest tekken players of all time after arslan ash and knee just cuz of his content (other than being a pro)
Great tutorial! Is it possible do a training regimen video for learning character punishment? I've used the punishment trainer and labbed other key moves, but I don't know a good method for internalizing that knowledge and turning conscious responses into automatic ones (if that makes sense). For example, when a King does df1,2 I want to be able to 10 frame punish everytime automatically, or df2,1 duck the high without even thinking about it. Right now I have to be consciously looking for moves to properly punish. It feels like pro players will auto punish everything 99% of the time.
Thanks for this PhiDx. As someone who has played drum kit for 14 years and loves practice philosophy / approaches it's amazing how similar your approach Tekken to learning an instrument deeply and properly (IMO) . Honestly wouldn't be surprised if you are quite good at an instrument 😆
I've been playing Nina for 5 years in Tekken 7, and I've never practiced the Korean Backdash! With this course, I'm going to add a significant option to my game plan in Tekken 8. Thanks, Phi
The first time I watched this, I thought I understood what I was doing but I couldn't pull it off in a match so I just stuck to normal BD but after many hours of ranked and practice, this time, I'm about to grasp the concept better. My goal is to eventually have the confidence to compete in some tourneys (not necessarily majors) but at least locals bc I love fighting games so much. This game and your guidance have re-ignited my fire in Tekken, so thank you, Phi! In orange rn but can compete with purple and some blues, just have to stop dropping kill combos and getting clipped by stupid ish. Can't wait to get good tho!
The leverless KBD and Wavedash (to a lesser degree) are WILDLY slower than stick. Feel like stick players coping about “cheatbox”. Hit box definitely has a lower barrier of entry for basic, but there’s a reason the OGs don’t switch… and it’s not just comfort.
I just got a hori stick and man talk about way different than controller. I wish the hori alpha that I got didn’t have such sensitive buttons . I’ll keep practicing 👍
I do it different. I let go on the d pad and don’t roll it and it works. I go : ⬅️⬅️↙️ *let go* ⬅️↙️ *let go ⬅️ ↙️ *let go* ⬅️ ( unless this is what he’s saying )
k so i watched many videos and tried normal ways and some special for keyboard. I am using leverless keyboard. On good days slightly faster than back dash or stuck and just moving weird like fish out of water.... then my middle finger starts to have mild cramp.. . so keep doing back back down back back up (still better than just back back) i finally got out of yellow and reached orange but i feel unless i master this its hard to control space and cannot go up any further...
Pretty sure nowadays the majority of pros use pad over stick (at least in the west, i think in the east stick is still preferred but dont quote me on that)
I have been playing for a while...I thought I was hitting the KBD, but now I now how wrong I was hitting it. I was 25% right...ish edit: My set up was an omni using a Fujin V3. I couldn't use the taeyong since it seemed to spin in my hands
I recently bought my first leverless controller (the kitsune one everyone using these days) and I main (or try to lol) Kazuya, I've noticed that in the video here the inputs are exactly the same. Is it just me missing something or is it actually true on leverless, that KBD and wavedash have the same input?
Ngl. I was sloppy 10 years ago, and im sloppy now. Ironically....i now play bryan since armor king is not here and i get caught with dash electrics alot since i sway sometimes. Practice people...practice.
ngl, it is kindda boring...watching everyone including new players just play ranked and rank up while i am sitting here practicing 3 inputs for hours is demotivating. But i hope its worth it. Nice video though
At the beginning this video reminded me of learning how to play guitar fast but then the SOCD thing is more like a monosynth with legato. Sometimes keyboards let you customize the rollover behaviour but not sure how useful that would be for Tekken.
Awesome video. It's a bit tedious at the beginning to do it slow but i improved so much faster than trying it fast. Btw, whats the name of the arcade stick with the P5 template? :D
Dude I've been trying to Korean backdash for a solid decade at this point. I've tried with sticks, controllers, even keyboard and I can't fucking get it
I don't need that at my level and probably never will 'cause I suck at Tekken. It would be nice to know which kind of player a guide is aimed for. More often than not people try to run before learning to walk. I still can' t defend in this game and still not comfortable with Tekken's movement in assailant rank.
while hitbox may technically be easier you still have to coordinate your fingers well especially if you want to do this with just your left hand. my ring finger is being used like never before
this actually helped a lot especially with xbox series controller. even king jae had a hard time using the xbox series controller versus the dual sense when it came to tekken
*_Speedkicks KBD Tutorial:_* ruclips.net/video/UHur59-dhCo/видео.htmlsi=disAyvvrP1o0uBqE
*_Hitbox Arcade Website:_* www.hitboxarcade.com/blogs/hit-box/tekken-7-on-hit-box-korean-back-dash
Amazing guide, already subscribed!
Speedkick's video is an eye opening video. Other than the KBD, it teaches you about the right mind set to have while learning anything execution heavy.
One little tip I can give to people who're starting this method: put the opponent in "stand and approach mode". This way they'll follow you and you can keep practicing for longer before you need to reset/run back to them.
Also change the restart setting "Restart Position" to "Wall" so that when you restart it takes you to the right/left side of the map (depending on player side). A long map like Yakushima is perfect for this.
Duh! Dude, thank you, how did I not think of this before?
Awesome tup, thank you!
I was going to ask if there was an "advanced" version of this where you have a character recorded using a long string you could try to avoid
As a major Tekken casual who learned from Speed kicks and PhiDX’s original T7 KBD guide, I can confirm that this is TRULY THE WAY TO GO. Slow and steady my friends!
Damn Phi you really are becoming a tekken guru at this point. The amount of knowledge you share with the public giving all of us the skills and tools we need is truly a blessing.
It's cool seeing more people talk about keyboard as a controller. It's often forgotten wgich is kind of sad since it's pretty much a hitbox with a bunvh more buttons.
A lot of these tips are useful when learning the piano
That persona fight stick is sick asf dude
You're a ridiculously good teacher.
The advice I received from my piano teacher:
Muscle memory is created while resting after the activity.
Fire. Love this
Thank you very much for the guide, starting my tekken journey with your guidance :)
This is like video game martial arts dojo oss
Holy shit thank you for inclusion of leverless into this video
for everyone saying that it's slightly faster, remember its one second gaster than the orininal from 3.4 or 2.5 LET ME REMIND YOU This is around 30% faster than the original dash
I love your tutorials. Would love if you could do tutorial for new characters like Reina.
I press the dpad inputs in the left side with other part of my thumb, not the tip like you do, maybe that's my issue.
I move around with the tip of my thumb when pressing the right part of the dpad, and when pressing the left part I rotate the tip of my thumb up and press with the down side / middle part of my thumb, that way I don't have to move the thumb out of place too much, but like I say, maybe that's why I cant do it properly
hmmm phi is an ann takamaki enjoyer? nice
3:07 me with my 2lb spring feels this,
Hi, it's my first time playing tekken, and I play victor, I'm hard stuck Garyu in rank and I don't know if it's just hard to rank up with victor at this level or I just suck. I find victor really cool, i tried to practice other characters but Idk if I should commit the time or just stick with victor, since I'm new, I'm not sure what is the most efficient way to be better in this game.
Great video btw, hope you could help. Cheers!
I wanna see you fight shinblade lol but I’m new to tekken n I check your channel everyday
Can you make a video on kings blue spark throws ? Specifically shining wizard
thx for the great guide (have some free engagement :) )
Man I dunno how you got your neutral input on the lever less backlash without socd to be around 3 frames. When I do it that neutral input is around 8, making the whole kbd end up being slow
Thanks bro
thanks
Stick player here but im on a square gate with the Hori Alpha SF6 wonder if switching to Octagonal gate might help some too. Use stick for SF6 and TK8 but for MK1 I still prefer Pad lol
No. Square gate is infinitely better for tekken. Oct gate ruins your free back input because it's harder to "accidentally" hit back when you release to neutral.
in the first part is it:
back, release, back, downback, back release back release etc
or is it
back release, back, downback, back and repeat the back,downback, back part?
This is the question I was asking myself rn… did you figure it out?
Where did you get your fighting stick from?
ty
Props to anyone willing to spend hours on end trying to backdash slightly faster than usual
Lmao
Makes your movement more unpredictable
look cool brain go happy mode
@@ZiyaB3ast not really. If I see you do it once, I know I'm gonna see you do it 3 more times in rapid succession
more benefits to it then just being faster, like you can bait out whiffs . watch his video with knee, itll make sense.
Taking breaks is great advice when it comes to Tekken and learning movements. There have been many times trying to learn juggles and getting frustrated always hitting the wrong commands after a few hours. Take a break, get some sleep, come back, and you'll find yourself executing these moves no problem.
It's the same with soulslikes. You get stuck on a boss for hours,go to sleep, try again the next morning and get it on the first try
Lee mains
@@beebeeicetrue asf
Facts. Especially when practicing consistently for EWGF
READ THIS:
when you sleep, memory is transferred between regions of the brain (hippocampus & cortex). This is how this phenomenon works.
You need to practice, sleep (REM sleep) THEN expect results.
We all know the frustration of spending an entire day practicing something, and feeling like you don't fully have it.
You don't. You wont' fully have it until the next day.
This is also why you always sleep before exams; never stay up all night studying, the night before- you physically haven't committed anything to memory.
I use pad. The epiphany that happened for me when it comes to learning KBD is that you can start a KBD from crouch. You don't actually need the first back dash (back, back) to perform a KBD. I found that if you hold B,D, then release to neutral then hit back (quickly) you will get a back dash and the notation will be correct, then just hit B,D again to cancel and repeat. I found this very helpful as I can practice the motions separately and consistently. Literally learned to KBD in less than an hour.
This is how I learned back in the day as well on pad , however my inputs weren’t clean (I actually didn’t know the proper notation). On pad, it’s easy to hit db, release, and get a free back input , so that you can just do a single back input for another backdash.
I learned how to do backdash with Bryan using the up back version instead of the down back version…and I could never do it with Nina until the later games.
I think the only problem is if you start to learn it from a crouching position you will start to do it like that in real games which can lead to your defense suffering. Even if it just a small amount of frames you will be crouching right in your opponents face which can lead to you getting hit by mids frequently right at the start of you wanting to get some distance. If you start standing you will more likely block it
@@satanpixel not in the slightest. The idea is once you've gotten your rhythm down just start adding the bb at the beginning. For me getting to the "meat" of the KBD was the toughest part to practice because I was doing two different cancels. The b,b,d+b & d+b,*,b,d+b... Figuring out I can do them individually helped me learn the mechanics of them and I simply pieced them together like LEGOs ™️.
If you really think about it I now have an unexpected advantage. I can now intuitively back dash when crouching or standing.
@ex_asperated I learned this on pad.
Well yes, that's a backdash. It two different types. The one you're doing is the normal backdash and the one PhiDx is doing, is the Korean BackDash. Most pad people just do it the way your doing as KBD on pad is really if your trying to incorporate a low parry with your movement
As a bit of a newcomer to Tekken, learning the game through your videos has been extremely enjoyable. Keen to continue improving and see what you have for us next :)
Old video, but I have to get this off of my chest. I've casually played Tekken since Tekken 2. I learned what KBD was in TTT2 and have been very casually practicing it off and on for years since I've never taken the game seriously (I was too busy competing in tournaments in the much more niche little sibling game Soul Calibur). In all of this time, I've never gotten past doing it slowly the legit way, and doing it decently the cheating way with the qcb. Last night, this video showed up in my recommended, the first time I'd seen a guide on how to do it since TTT2. After about ten minutes of practice, I've doubled my speed of the legit KBD. More importantly, I have a much better understanding of what I'm doing, increasing my mind and body connection so that I can see more clearly what I'm doing wrong and how I can improve. This was the most successful guide on any mechanic in a fighting game I have ever watched. Thank you so much for this video
Phi, I legit picked up this game less than a week ago. You're knowledge and teaching skills are insane. Thank you, I went from thinking fighting games were always out of my reach to now wrecking my friends and gaining ranks. I'm loving the game and community, lifelong subscriber bro for real.
As a Korean...wtf...I haven't seen people play this game since elementary school...not sure why youtube recommended it. but it seems to have some following still going on. Enjoy the game gents
Can you do one of these videos for Electric God Fists? It’s super helpful and you have a teaching style that no one else has!
Hey nice video man
Hey thanks man
I’ve played tekken as a kid on arcades but never really got deeper than surface level on the game. This is the first tekken I’ve bought since then and am not sure if I should just spend time practicing and not even playing so I don’t build bad habits or practice some and play here and there
Now I can figure out 2p side, hopefully there will be a wavedash tutorial in the near future as well 🙂
Sitting here holding my napping baby daughter, repeating the KBD motions on my PS5 controller. I feel like I'm back in high school practicing picking with 3 fingers and slapping my thumb for my bass guitar while I sit in class (22 years ago).
What a game, so glad I'm finally dipping into some Tekken, and I'm so glad there are such detailed tutorials.
A moment of silence for the 10 top players who are angry that they made korean backdash easier......
Anyway, big ups to the developers improving the controls.
This somehow clicked with me so goddamn quick, i'm literally getting perfect kbds after never having known how to get them before lol, thankyou Phidx! very based
That's awesome to hear thank you!
You were not kidding about this practice taking hours. I've been practicing the cancel on each side for a few hours now, but I can feel the muscle memory forming. Thanks for the video!
If you struggle with kbd just do bb,u,bb…etc
The timing of this video couldn't have been more perfect. I just got an Etokki Omni after years of playing on pad. I know arcade sticks won't make you automatically good at Tekken but I'm in it for the fun factor! Great video as always and can't wait to see more!! 👏
If you do KB on PS5 pad, you're a legend. That controller fucking sucks!
Shout outs to Jiang Iksu. Pioneer of the Korean Backdash. Tekken Tag Tournament 1.
Great tutorial! Time to hit the lab.
PS5 pad is absolutely trash. The pad buttons are so loose and out of alignment.
I started playing 1 year ago (seriously at least, been playing on and off since T3) and I developed a very sloppy and messy backdash because my main isn't a backsway character. With this method I'm really really improving a lot and in just a couple days I've been able to really speed up consistently and even use KBD effectively in matches to bait whiffs
Now that you've released this video it will make it so much easier for everyone to find and understand this method. Really well done
I'am about to get crazy My SOCD Backdash is fine if i am %75 speed. But if i go to as fast full speed SOCD, i can not chain anything.. It NEVER feels and looks that fast. And as a bushin rank that start to make me really annoyed. İ use second forward as a kb player ( o for p1 side u for p2 side) and my notation is like
"press and hold a"
" double tap o for iniate backdash ( o is secondary forward )
"tap s "
" tap o"
"tap s"
"tap o "
repeat. My inputs looks clean but never get that speedy kdb. Please someone help me
One tihnk to add, my inputs are clean, my frame time is 2 for d 4 for db 4 for b 4 neuteral 10 b 4db 2 b 4 neut 12b 5 db 2 b I think this should be fast enough but my paul never looks or make distance as the video shows. I am really lost and don't know how to fix
when i was learning KBD, i thougght that theres a free back input when i release db. but there wasnt. i even change the springs of my stick because i might need a stronger spring but it didnt change anything. Then i learn that its just the hand guiding the stick to back after downback. So its all practice and timing
I'm so glad I found this channel at the start of Tekken 8! A goldmine of information presented so cleanly and in a pedagogical way
I didn't play tekken 7 ranked or even seriously at all just because i coudln't backdash correctly, and i just learned it in seconds just cuz of your tutorial
unironically phidx is one of the greatest tekken players of all time after arslan ash and knee just cuz of his content (other than being a pro)
kbd got a lot easier for me once i started thinking of it as (b, d/b, b) triplets instead of (b, b, d/b)
Great tutorial!
Is it possible do a training regimen video for learning character punishment? I've used the punishment trainer and labbed other key moves, but I don't know a good method for internalizing that knowledge and turning conscious responses into automatic ones (if that makes sense).
For example, when a King does df1,2 I want to be able to 10 frame punish everytime automatically, or df2,1 duck the high without even thinking about it. Right now I have to be consciously looking for moves to properly punish. It feels like pro players will auto punish everything 99% of the time.
Give yourself time. It will sink in with more reps and experience
Thanks for covering the PS5 controller
Thanks for this PhiDx. As someone who has played drum kit for 14 years and loves practice philosophy / approaches it's amazing how similar your approach Tekken to learning an instrument deeply and properly (IMO) . Honestly wouldn't be surprised if you are quite good at an instrument 😆
Haha I grew up as a musician
It reall is weird how sometimes you feel you have it and others you dont
Where my controller joystick boys at lmao
Built different....
Bro why u gotta bait me with this thumbnail..
There are no lies in the thumbnail
@@PhiDX 🤣
😋 nina
I've been playing Nina for 5 years in Tekken 7, and I've never practiced the Korean Backdash! With this course, I'm going to add a significant option to my game plan in Tekken 8. Thanks, Phi
or if your lazy like just spam sidestep and it'll work on most low rank players (me)
Only thing about doing the KBD in T8 that sucks is that the stages are smaller 😢
The first time I watched this, I thought I understood what I was doing but I couldn't pull it off in a match so I just stuck to normal BD but after many hours of ranked and practice, this time, I'm about to grasp the concept better. My goal is to eventually have the confidence to compete in some tourneys (not necessarily majors) but at least locals bc I love fighting games so much. This game and your guidance have re-ignited my fire in Tekken, so thank you, Phi! In orange rn but can compete with purple and some blues, just have to stop dropping kill combos and getting clipped by stupid ish. Can't wait to get good tho!
Great guide! It's so hard on gamepad to get the single fluid motion and the left side gamepad KBD strains my thumb much more than right side.
Thank you so much!
The leverless KBD and Wavedash (to a lesser degree) are WILDLY slower than stick. Feel like stick players coping about “cheatbox”. Hit box definitely has a lower barrier of entry for basic, but there’s a reason the OGs don’t switch… and it’s not just comfort.
Hey brother great video but one question what fighstick are you using (the one with Ann from persona 5)
Amazing guide! This is literally just like hitting a specific lick on an instrument, so funny how the advice overlaps.
I just got a hori stick and man talk about way different than controller. I wish the hori alpha that I got didn’t have such sensitive buttons . I’ll keep practicing 👍
Great video. Slow + correct is better than fast + incorrect.
Slow = steady, steady = fast.
I do it different. I let go on the d pad and don’t roll it and it works. I go : ⬅️⬅️↙️ *let go* ⬅️↙️ *let go ⬅️ ↙️ *let go* ⬅️ ( unless this is what he’s saying )
I love this guy! What a tutorial
k so i watched many videos and tried normal ways and some special for keyboard. I am using leverless keyboard. On good days slightly faster than back dash or stuck and just moving weird like fish out of water.... then my middle finger starts to have mild cramp.. . so keep doing back back down back back up (still better than just back back) i finally got out of yellow and reached orange but i feel unless i master this its hard to control space and cannot go up any further...
I like that finally someone it's using a controller, not all of us are planning to go to evo but still want to be good
Pretty sure nowadays the majority of pros use pad over stick (at least in the west, i think in the east stick is still preferred but dont quote me on that)
I have been playing for a while...I thought I was hitting the KBD, but now I now how wrong I was hitting it. I was 25% right...ish
edit:
My set up was an omni using a Fujin V3. I couldn't use the taeyong since it seemed to spin in my hands
This seems so fucking hard man... I gotta release these buttons hella quick 😭My brain doesn't compute that cancel.
bro am garyu as kazuya and did it the first try
well done well done very well done teaching and elaborating
just gotta work on speed now THANKS
I don't even play T8, but I plan to. I played TT2 as my first game and gave up due to complexity. Heard this Tekken was easier.
I recently bought my first leverless controller (the kitsune one everyone using these days) and I main (or try to lol) Kazuya, I've noticed that in the video here the inputs are exactly the same. Is it just me missing something or is it actually true on leverless, that KBD and wavedash have the same input?
Ngl. I was sloppy 10 years ago, and im sloppy now. Ironically....i now play bryan since armor king is not here and i get caught with dash electrics alot since i sway sometimes. Practice people...practice.
Thanks for the video. Bit of a NOOB question but can you play tekken on keyboard with a PS5? And how?
ngl, it is kindda boring...watching everyone including new players just play ranked and rank up while i am sitting here practicing 3 inputs for hours is demotivating. But i hope its worth it. Nice video though
At the beginning this video reminded me of learning how to play guitar fast but then the SOCD thing is more like a monosynth with legato. Sometimes keyboards let you customize the rollover behaviour but not sure how useful that would be for Tekken.
Awesome video. It's a bit tedious at the beginning to do it slow but i improved so much faster than trying it fast. Btw, whats the name of the arcade stick with the P5 template? :D
my command history matches but for some reason my character is just staying in place :((
Dude I've been trying to Korean backdash for a solid decade at this point. I've tried with sticks, controllers, even keyboard and I can't fucking get it
I don't need that at my level and probably never will 'cause I suck at Tekken.
It would be nice to know which kind of player a guide is aimed for.
More often than not people try to run before learning to walk.
I still can' t defend in this game and still not comfortable with Tekken's movement in assailant rank.
using leverless and struggle on p2 kbd T_T that's sooooo painfull >,> but p1 is pretty easy x)
first phidx vid
this boutta be my favorite channel for gaming i can already tell
Would you recommend a similar process when learn other direction based inputs e.g. EWGF?
The Tekken community is fortunate to have you, Phi. You are an awesome teacher.
On SOCD 2P side my left hand 4th finger is getting tired fast but on 1P side he's holding back and it's easier
How do you beat the kbd, I can't do it and I find it impossible to deal with people using it.
while hitbox may technically be easier you still have to coordinate your fingers well especially if you want to do this with just your left hand. my ring finger is being used like never before
this actually helped a lot especially with xbox series controller. even king jae had a hard time using the xbox series controller versus the dual sense when it came to tekken
if there is a man who knows his way around a backdash, it's phidx
Wonderful! Now will ya cover King wave dash as well? 💛is this still a thing in Tekken 8?
Practical wavedash guide next maybe with how to practice towards getting moves out of the wave dash such as iWS or iWr