I could possibly do this in the future, but I'd need to put my own twist on it. For now, there is a good written guide for Nina which you can find here: docs.google.com/document/d/15iC2duCQLb0EoqBXyMkjWffiFE_IDLaenVBA6kS2bM4/edit I'm not affiliated with this guide and had no part in its creation. I know a lot of players refer to it and find it a huge help :)
@@AFriendlyTree Thanks for the reply! I really like the style of ceryneianfox. He is inactive, but when he made guides for Tekken 7 season 4, he linked in his YT video descriptions really well-made PDFs.
I think I'm more confused how well people understand Nina tech in Tekken God GoD compared to what I see in tournament play. Genuinely confusing watching my own replays and then seeing how people respond to these strings in tournaments.
Now, this is an interesting one. These days I don't really fall into either category, but I've observed something quite similar. The non-tournament but high-level players are more likely to engage in defensive reads and counter play, while the tournament high-level players are more likely to not engage in defensive interactions but identify opportunities to begin their own offense. This is a huge part about aggression being far too rewarding, and there being far too many situations where you could duck/step but there's also a rewarding option which covers that action very well. Then it's also likely to do with the mental stack and decision fatigue that comes with playing all day in a tournament. You'll also hear the term "active defense" a lot in Tekken 8, while a lot of what videos like mine are showcasing don't really fall into that category. e.g. using power crushes to interrupt pressure, using moves to challenge in gaps, and keeping offense frame-tight to prevent power crushes, or allow you to block them if they are used.
@@AFriendlyTree I don't play other characters (at a high level). But, I need to watch replays of other GoD rank matches if this applies to Nina the most. My guess is Clive (with his crazy range making it hard for you to move in on neutral) will also get the same treatment.
I haven't faced a single person at Tekken King or above who doesn't punish completing every single string. I am forced to constantly loop d4 and ss1 cancels to apply any sort of decent pressure.
@usamaimran1516 haha thamk you. Some people will watch it, but these videos are generally only getting a few hundred views, and most of the time averaging ~2mins. It's fine though, I'll still finish the series! 😤
Happy new year bro
Happy new year to you too!
Lmao this is the longest Pulling At Strings episode
Haha yes, it is :O
I just checked and my one for Anna in Tekken 7 was over 30mins long. I wonder how long her Tekken 8 one will be...
Would you consider making a beautiful and comprehensive Nina PDF guide?
I could possibly do this in the future, but I'd need to put my own twist on it.
For now, there is a good written guide for Nina which you can find here: docs.google.com/document/d/15iC2duCQLb0EoqBXyMkjWffiFE_IDLaenVBA6kS2bM4/edit
I'm not affiliated with this guide and had no part in its creation. I know a lot of players refer to it and find it a huge help :)
@@AFriendlyTree Thanks for the reply! I really like the style of ceryneianfox. He is inactive, but when he made guides for Tekken 7 season 4, he linked in his YT video descriptions really well-made PDFs.
I think I'm more confused how well people understand Nina tech in Tekken God GoD compared to what I see in tournament play.
Genuinely confusing watching my own replays and then seeing how people respond to these strings in tournaments.
Now, this is an interesting one. These days I don't really fall into either category, but I've observed something quite similar.
The non-tournament but high-level players are more likely to engage in defensive reads and counter play, while the tournament high-level players are more likely to not engage in defensive interactions but identify opportunities to begin their own offense. This is a huge part about aggression being far too rewarding, and there being far too many situations where you could duck/step but there's also a rewarding option which covers that action very well. Then it's also likely to do with the mental stack and decision fatigue that comes with playing all day in a tournament.
You'll also hear the term "active defense" a lot in Tekken 8, while a lot of what videos like mine are showcasing don't really fall into that category. e.g. using power crushes to interrupt pressure, using moves to challenge in gaps, and keeping offense frame-tight to prevent power crushes, or allow you to block them if they are used.
@@AFriendlyTree I don't play other characters (at a high level). But, I need to watch replays of other GoD rank matches if this applies to Nina the most.
My guess is Clive (with his crazy range making it hard for you to move in on neutral) will also get the same treatment.
“ShE’s sOo OP!” 🙄
I haven't faced a single person at Tekken King or above who doesn't punish completing every single string.
I am forced to constantly loop d4 and ss1 cancels to apply any sort of decent pressure.
Delete this
It's ok, not many people will watch all of it anyway :'(
@AFriendlyTree how people can CANNOT see this? This series is amazing.
@usamaimran1516 haha thamk you. Some people will watch it, but these videos are generally only getting a few hundred views, and most of the time averaging ~2mins.
It's fine though, I'll still finish the series! 😤