Yeah but my friends aren't fighter savvy to even understand what he is saying. "Mixup" "minus" "DI" "SPD" "footsies" can't go one sentence without throwing a tech term in
Some people say learning combos is the hardest part of improving at fighting games. Some people say it's learning neutral. Some say it's situational awareness and learning matchups. But for a lot of people, the hardest part is improving your mental game. And, unfortunately, a lot of people can't get there in the end. I feel like this is something that should be talked about more. Laughing at scrubs is funny, of course, but as this video demonstrates, these aren't always just bad players looking for free wins, often it's players like you and me who are just having a bad day and don't know how to properly deal with that feeling. Great vid though, would love to see another episode of this. 👍
Yeah, that kimberly in the first game was playing like they just got broken up with! you look at those inputs and it reads like FULL tilt. There are so many aspects to improving at fighting games, and recognizing when to stop playing is one of them.
@@SylemGistoeagreed. I have an awful habit of wanting to press on after losing 10 sets in a row, despite knowing full well my mental stack is demolished and yet my ego wants to prove myself wrong. Very tough but that’s why fighting games are great.
@@jpVari DSP is like LTG. A large hater following. People love to watch a train wreck lol the excitement. personally I think DSP whines and complains as part of his act and SF persona, but if it works why not?
The Sandford Kelly stick throw after his match with Rico Suave continues to be one of the all time classic FGC moments haha. I still chuckle whenever I see it.
I like how someone pointed out that none of these players were bad. Reminds me of that video Sajam made a while ago on how being a scrub is more about your attitude than skill. I think what causes a lot of salt is not understanding the situation you were in when you got angry. That's why its important to review your replays and remember when and why you got angry. Gives you a little more clarity when you look at your mistakes and ask what you could've done differently.
whether someone is a scrub literally has nothing to do with skill level. when you lose, if you blame yourself, you're not a scrub. if you blame anything else, you're a scrub.
Bro, I'm sure many people have said it already but this shit needs to be a weekly series or something. It's funny as hell and teaches a whole lot about better decisions, ugly habits (jumping too much, burning all meter etc). It's also great that you insert the correct combos or punishes in training mode. Really, amazing video!
I love how educational he was trying to be with this video, having the cutaways to possible solutions to the problem, it felt like he was actually trying to teach these people what went wrong while still laughing a bit at the rage. Very entertaining and fun to watch! I hope to see more!
My favorites scrub quotes are the ones that fabricate alternate reality game mechanics to blame their losses on. Saw a steam community post complaining about "rampant cheating" simply based on the fact that the opponents were blocking on wakeup
It wasn't a fighting game, but once upon a time I was convinced a dude was cheating and messaged him about it (some swearing, but no slurs or wishing of violence, at least). Looking back, I probably did just get outplayed. Even if he WAS cheating, it's a video game and years ago so 🤷♂️.
Props to whomever edits these. I really like the included snippets of gameplay examples showing what diaphone is talking about in each moment. Hope we get more vids like this!
Make more of these vids plz. And your cut always to the actual punish happening when you say what to do is really informative. Painting that mental picture of the situation is amazing.
I come from different competitive games but I think part of the reason why these players aren't really low ranked is that most casual and beginner players don't care as much. They are still just having fun. These people invested time and effort into the game, reached a certain level and with that comes expectations of themselves and entitlement. They belive they understand how the game should be played, they feel cheated out of winning cause of the connection, the controls or the characters because they are unable to reflect and analyze their gameplay. Obviously often instigated by high emotions after a tense session/ tough loss.
As someone consistently in low rank (by choice) in most games, it's just more fun. High tier play is all the same characters and you can't be nearly as risky. You can just hop on a chat say "let's both pick trash and have fun" and your more likely to get a yes.
@@MastaGambit no, I just don't sweat. I play to have fun, and that means unoptimized combos, low tier characters, and mostly fighting friends or other low tier players.
@@Reineerus_The_Rat You say that like those of us pursuing improvement AREN'T "playing for fun." We are. It's a video game. We're ALL playing it for fun, unless your name is Daigo, Mena, Justin Wong, Tokido, et. al.
Remember everyone, there's nothing wrong with being mad, even at a video game, it's how you express that anger that's the problem. If you're getting frustrated at a game, is perfectly okay to take a 15 minute break, collect yourself, and go do something else, even if that something else is just playing a much more calming game. it doesn't matter how good you are, or think you are, a bad mental state will always make you play worse than you normally would.
I tell others and myself the same thing, when I start losing a lot in rank. I noticed that when the turtling and projectile game is too good, I tend to stop parrying the pokes and sonic booms. I tend to stop, go wash the dishes or play something else for a bit then come back
The lesson I see is, people will complain about any perceived difference between them and their opponents as unfair Once they get to realize there's no hacks and the controls are all fine... You graduate to saying your opponents character is op lmao Edit - I've though that the starcraft 2 player Harstems series 'is it imba or do I suck' was a great way to teach people about the game itself AND the correct mental approach, while still having fun This is the same level of helpful, especially with the training clips edited in. PHENOMENAL work with this. You should do it regularly.
One of the biggest lie we tell ourselves, is that in fighting games, when you lose, you only have yourself to blame, no teammates to blame for your losses. Fighting game players have proven that statement wrong. We blame our opponents, the lag, the unfair characters, imagined hackers, game is supposedly "broken", the sun is in our eyes, too many particles effects in the game, online tactics that would supposedly never work offline, scrub tactics that pros never use, but when they use it against you, you fall for it.
I love that you put examples into the Video everytime you talk about something that would be a better option! I really appreciate it casue more often than not when watching these types of Videos I sit there and think "What is this man talking about" Thanks for the extra effort
extremely low level players in competetive games aren't nearly as toxic on average, I think. More low rank people just aren't invested emotionally in it so they don't go nuts. Gold/platinum kind of ranks are where I've felt the biggest toxicity - good enough to know the basics, putting enough time in to feel invested, but bad enough that you make a ton of silly mistakes and lose things you feel you should have won.
I agree with the toxicity being with “high ranking” players. I remember I came across this platinum Jamie player who beat me 7 times in a row. Which I didn’t mind because to his credit, he was really good with Jamie and although he was frustrating I was using him as practice so I would fair better against lesser Jamie players. But as time went on I was getting used to his tactics and was getting harder and harder to put down. During our last fight I was lowkey dominating. Before I could get my first win of our set he rage quit on me. I once again remind you that I took 7 Ls from this man which pissed me off immensely when he rage quit on me when I was beating him. The fact he stuck around for all his wins but couldn’t stomach one loss is baffling to me
I think that's the thing when you look at these people and be like "oh well they were actually alright though", most of them are just missing some kind of fundamental aspect to their gameplan that essentially got them opened up to hell once someone caught them out on it and that can feel way worse than just being bad at the game because they're genuinely at that point where they think they've got the whole game figured out. It's that stage where they're discovering certain burst options for the first time that some people know how to deal with and others don't, and they haven't learnt that those burst options should only be used in moderation rather than all the time where they become reactable. I've gone through this same kind of thing before learning fighting games and definitely had to learn how to fix my gameplay rather than just be salty.
Showing the options one has to deal with the situations presented is some S tier content. Really satisfying to visually show the conterplay to the scenarios people complain about. I feel like that's something no other FGC content creator has done yet. Inspiring stuff!
This is exactly the content that new players looking to take the next step and returning players trying to figure out what they're doing wrong absolutely need. Diaphone lowkey doing Gods work out here, you love to see it!
Maaan, I lost 30 fights straight yesterday with my Honda. Honestly, I was happy the guy kept playing with me cause I wanted to get better. If I won a round I would get humbled the next. As soon as I finally won a set he left and gave me a gg. So to that person, thank you! I see my weaknesses a bit better now. Drive rushing, I just can't pull them off yet. I fumble my joystick inputs a lot. I also need to improve reaction to DI. In hindsight lots of matches were winnable but I didn't pull off supers when I should have to finish it. This is my first time playing SF since this first year of SF4. Lots of adjustments and rust to shake off.
Starting to become a fan of yours man! I picked up Kim just naturally before seeing you play her and now I'm Plat 2 and still going thanks to the tips - between you and Max everything is getting better!
It honestly doesn't surprise most of these players were higher rank, rookie ranks are so happy when they pull off just a target combo most of them don't even care if they win or lose. I think a lot of it is the frustration these players have with still having so much to learn even at high ranks.
The issue with Honda is most characters you have an exchange, I do this, they do that and eventually you get into it. With Honda you are always on the back foot because you spend your time countering him the whole match. There’s little in the way of mutual exchange, it’s “How do I stop his game plan?”
This is probably one of my favorite videos you’ve ever done. Really was educational entertaining and helped put things into perspective as someone who gets tilted on a regular basis
Hope you can do a follow up video for this. As someone who’s played SF for decades, I still have a lot to learn from experience and these videos help me understand “do’s” and “do not’s.”
I've understood the concept of saying someone is worse then you after you just beat them. Like, did you just have a brain injury 4 seconds ago or what? "You're trash." "And you're on the ground."
I get it, i understand why people get really mad when they lose a lot and start to vent on the lobby chat. I been there many times in other fighting games. The key is to remain calm and realize what you are doing wrong or not doing in a match then change it up. The problem is most people don't think this way and continue to do the wrong shit over and over, hence why they lose. When i start losing to a player, it's cuz he's too damn good and/or i start getting frustrated and start playing dumb. Best thing to do when you start getting mad is take a break and come back in 15 mins to an hour
Ayyyy the one I sent in made it. I didn't even watch that guys (Jamie who just wouldn't block) matches, I just was lurking while playing hub matches. Pretty sure you found the right match too because scrubquotes takes a couple days to post. This was a god-tier video idea
TBH as someone who hasn't been able to put time into SF6 due to life, I had no idea burnout could backfire on people so bad. I get the feeling people just don't know that spamming meter literally makes your neutral game worse.
I think the most saltiest people aren't bad players. They're players who think they're better than they are, or rather they're losing to things that they feel are beneath them. Saltiest people I see in most fighting games are actually good, way better than I am usually but I manage to beat them with simple tactics and gimmicks that they weren't ready for. That really gets the rage going.
Edutainment pure and simple. I am not really competitive in Beat'em up games, but I like to watch. Solid video and that demo on dealing with Honda's air attacks is very useful!
@@willh7352 And yet here we are, I have come to regard Streetfighter as a beat'em up. You do the same thing, but in Streets of Rage, you tipically have to follow the arrow pointing Right!
Subbed as of right now. GJ that was excellent. I like how you didn't just make fun of them and you instead showed them how they could have dealt with the situation and what they were doing wrong. I think you should 100% do a video like this once every 2 weeks. I know I would tune in every time. The way you present it is easy to digest,quick and to the point and offers ways to improve and learn. Please do more of these.
As someone who's new to fighting games, this has actually taught me so much about how I'm playing and what I can improve on! Cause I know I'm impatient and don't know spacing well, but this taught me a few things I should work on! And what I shouldn't do for some characters! So thank you for that!
I don't even play sf, but this analysis was sick, entirely understood what you were talking about, and the visuals were awesome. Keep up the good work m8.
Love the way you you edited in the ways to beat certain moves or the combos you can get from landing certain attacks. I support more vids like this lol.
Wait look closely, the 2nd person was complaining about modern controls and how people using them should die in a well, but they were the only one using modern controls, bro just hates himself 😭😭
Butt slam in a real game with different timing are VERY difficult to deal with. Honda and Blanka are characters I instantly mentally lose to when i see them on the screen
Episode 2 is out! ruclips.net/video/2_IkHgO_8hI/видео.html
This would be an absolutely fantastic series I thoroughly enjoyed this. As a total sf6 beginner I can actually use it as education for what not to do
Yoo same!
You can also look at this as effects of tilt/salt. On average people tend to take larger risks, play faster, and make more fringe reads when angry
Great video. I love the little cutaways with examples of better options.
Yes please, this is great content.
Yeah but my friends aren't fighter savvy to even understand what he is saying. "Mixup" "minus" "DI" "SPD" "footsies" can't go one sentence without throwing a tech term in
The bits from training mode where you show how to correctly do the thing or how those players made mistakes were a great addition! Great video man
yeah that's really good editing, I hope more fgc RUclipsrs steal that tech
Fr! FGC youtubers dont be editing nothing its so frustrating
Wanted to add my ow. Comment of appreciation
Exactly this. Actually that feels like the main menu with roasting as side dish
Some people say learning combos is the hardest part of improving at fighting games.
Some people say it's learning neutral. Some say it's situational awareness and learning matchups.
But for a lot of people, the hardest part is improving your mental game. And, unfortunately, a lot of people can't get there in the end.
I feel like this is something that should be talked about more. Laughing at scrubs is funny, of course, but as this video demonstrates, these aren't always just bad players looking for free wins, often it's players like you and me who are just having a bad day and don't know how to properly deal with that feeling.
Great vid though, would love to see another episode of this. 👍
Yeah, that kimberly in the first game was playing like they just got broken up with! you look at those inputs and it reads like FULL tilt. There are so many aspects to improving at fighting games, and recognizing when to stop playing is one of them.
Yeah some people have zero emotional intelligence and are man-children who rage at video games.
they all end up goin back to Fortnite and play on auto pilot
definitely
@@SylemGistoeagreed. I have an awful habit of wanting to press on after losing 10 sets in a row, despite knowing full well my mental stack is demolished and yet my ego wants to prove myself wrong. Very tough but that’s why fighting games are great.
DarksydePhil's scrub quotes would fill an entire video on their own
From only one of his sessions, too.
Why do people mention dsp in every diaphone comment section now? He did a single video. So weird.
@@jpVari DSP is like LTG. A large hater following. People love to watch a train wreck lol the excitement. personally I think DSP whines and complains as part of his act and SF persona, but if it works why not?
A video?
My friend, Phi's scrub quotes would last for a Millenia, what are you on? Lol
@@jpVariall the weirdos who love to watch people they hate for some reason.
The Sandford Kelly stick throw after his match with Rico Suave continues to be one of the all time classic FGC moments haha. I still chuckle whenever I see it.
If I remember right, that wasn't Sanford's stick...(he threw SOMEONE else's stick that he borrowed for the match)
@@BigTymers1211yeah you’re right lol he was down bad
A hood classic
Mentos. The Fresh maker
I love that it left a whole dent in the floor too afterwards lmao
I've gotten pretty upset at losses before, but never enough to complain in a steam review lmao
I like how someone pointed out that none of these players were bad. Reminds me of that video Sajam made a while ago on how being a scrub is more about your attitude than skill. I think what causes a lot of salt is not understanding the situation you were in when you got angry. That's why its important to review your replays and remember when and why you got angry. Gives you a little more clarity when you look at your mistakes and ask what you could've done differently.
the person that said that none of these players were bad was being incredibly generous.
whether someone is a scrub literally has nothing to do with skill level.
when you lose, if you blame yourself, you're not a scrub. if you blame anything else, you're a scrub.
@@mrosskne Well said.
@@libertarianvoter The third and fourth players were decent imo.
But they just kept indirectly screwing themselves over.
"Maybe he meant DI in a pit"
10/10 comment 😂
Cannot believe a modern zangief can complain about ANYTHING.
Bro, I'm sure many people have said it already but this shit needs to be a weekly series or something. It's funny as hell and teaches a whole lot about better decisions, ugly habits (jumping too much, burning all meter etc). It's also great that you insert the correct combos or punishes in training mode. Really, amazing video!
I love how educational he was trying to be with this video, having the cutaways to possible solutions to the problem, it felt like he was actually trying to teach these people what went wrong while still laughing a bit at the rage. Very entertaining and fun to watch! I hope to see more!
My favorites scrub quotes are the ones that fabricate alternate reality game mechanics to blame their losses on. Saw a steam community post complaining about "rampant cheating" simply based on the fact that the opponents were blocking on wakeup
💀
It wasn't a fighting game, but once upon a time I was convinced a dude was cheating and messaged him about it (some swearing, but no slurs or wishing of violence, at least).
Looking back, I probably did just get outplayed. Even if he WAS cheating, it's a video game and years ago so 🤷♂️.
Props to whomever edits these. I really like the included snippets of gameplay examples showing what diaphone is talking about in each moment. Hope we get more vids like this!
Make more of these vids plz. And your cut always to the actual punish happening when you say what to do is really informative. Painting that mental picture of the situation is amazing.
I come from different competitive games but I think part of the reason why these players aren't really low ranked is that most casual and beginner players don't care as much. They are still just having fun.
These people invested time and effort into the game, reached a certain level and with that comes expectations of themselves and entitlement.
They belive they understand how the game should be played, they feel cheated out of winning cause of the connection, the controls or the characters because they are unable to reflect and analyze their gameplay.
Obviously often instigated by high emotions after a tense session/ tough loss.
that sounds like me, F345 modern zangeif and ken RAGEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
As someone consistently in low rank (by choice) in most games, it's just more fun. High tier play is all the same characters and you can't be nearly as risky. You can just hop on a chat say "let's both pick trash and have fun" and your more likely to get a yes.
@@Reineerus_The_Rat lmao "im low rank by choice" thats like the apex of cope
@@MastaGambit no, I just don't sweat. I play to have fun, and that means unoptimized combos, low tier characters, and mostly fighting friends or other low tier players.
@@Reineerus_The_Rat You say that like those of us pursuing improvement AREN'T "playing for fun." We are. It's a video game. We're ALL playing it for fun, unless your name is Daigo, Mena, Justin Wong, Tokido, et. al.
This is so educational and overall enjoyable to watch. Please make more.
Remember everyone, there's nothing wrong with being mad, even at a video game, it's how you express that anger that's the problem. If you're getting frustrated at a game, is perfectly okay to take a 15 minute break, collect yourself, and go do something else, even if that something else is just playing a much more calming game. it doesn't matter how good you are, or think you are, a bad mental state will always make you play worse than you normally would.
I tell others and myself the same thing, when I start losing a lot in rank. I noticed that when the turtling and projectile game is too good, I tend to stop parrying the pokes and sonic booms. I tend to stop, go wash the dishes or play something else for a bit then come back
The only thing that make me mad is slow internet, and people who Just walks backwords, other than this is all good
I would love this as a series, man! Great stuff 😁
The lesson I see is, people will complain about any perceived difference between them and their opponents as unfair
Once they get to realize there's no hacks and the controls are all fine... You graduate to saying your opponents character is op lmao
Edit - I've though that the starcraft 2 player Harstems series 'is it imba or do I suck' was a great way to teach people about the game itself AND the correct mental approach, while still having fun
This is the same level of helpful, especially with the training clips edited in. PHENOMENAL work with this. You should do it regularly.
One of the biggest lie we tell ourselves, is that in fighting games, when you lose, you only have yourself to blame, no teammates to blame for your losses.
Fighting game players have proven that statement wrong. We blame our opponents, the lag, the unfair characters, imagined hackers, game is supposedly "broken", the sun is in our eyes, too many particles effects in the game, online tactics that would supposedly never work offline, scrub tactics that pros never use, but when they use it against you, you fall for it.
@@Tommy9834 exactly
never thought id see an IMBA reference
@@Tommy9834 Wait till Project L and then we'll circle back to blaming our teammates
you need to do more videos of this. i loved watching these matches and i felt like i learned some stuff
I love that you put examples into the Video everytime you talk about something that would be a better option!
I really appreciate it casue more often than not when watching these types of Videos I sit there and think "What is this man talking about"
Thanks for the extra effort
extremely low level players in competetive games aren't nearly as toxic on average, I think. More low rank people just aren't invested emotionally in it so they don't go nuts. Gold/platinum kind of ranks are where I've felt the biggest toxicity - good enough to know the basics, putting enough time in to feel invested, but bad enough that you make a ton of silly mistakes and lose things you feel you should have won.
The hardest place to be for your mental is being at the point where you know what you SHOULD be doing but you're not doing it
I agree with the toxicity being with “high ranking” players. I remember I came across this platinum Jamie player who beat me 7 times in a row. Which I didn’t mind because to his credit, he was really good with Jamie and although he was frustrating I was using him as practice so I would fair better against lesser Jamie players. But as time went on I was getting used to his tactics and was getting harder and harder to put down. During our last fight I was lowkey dominating. Before I could get my first win of our set he rage quit on me. I once again remind you that I took 7 Ls from this man which pissed me off immensely when he rage quit on me when I was beating him. The fact he stuck around for all his wins but couldn’t stomach one loss is baffling to me
I think that's the thing when you look at these people and be like "oh well they were actually alright though", most of them are just missing some kind of fundamental aspect to their gameplan that essentially got them opened up to hell once someone caught them out on it and that can feel way worse than just being bad at the game because they're genuinely at that point where they think they've got the whole game figured out. It's that stage where they're discovering certain burst options for the first time that some people know how to deal with and others don't, and they haven't learnt that those burst options should only be used in moderation rather than all the time where they become reactable. I've gone through this same kind of thing before learning fighting games and definitely had to learn how to fix my gameplay rather than just be salty.
Make this a series. This was mad fun to watch 😅
The editing on these videos with the in between combo demos are so good bro
These series would be an awesome addition to your channel. Your imput and general knowledge of the game makes it very entertaining
I love this segment…there are TOO MANY people who are unable to look themselves in the mirror and blame others…godlike video
This was fun and informative. I hope you do more of these in the future.
Showing the options one has to deal with the situations presented is some S tier content. Really satisfying to visually show the conterplay to the scenarios people complain about.
I feel like that's something no other FGC content creator has done yet. Inspiring stuff!
This is exactly the content that new players looking to take the next step and returning players trying to figure out what they're doing wrong absolutely need. Diaphone lowkey doing Gods work out here, you love to see it!
Maaan, I lost 30 fights straight yesterday with my Honda. Honestly, I was happy the guy kept playing with me cause I wanted to get better. If I won a round I would get humbled the next. As soon as I finally won a set he left and gave me a gg. So to that person, thank you! I see my weaknesses a bit better now. Drive rushing, I just can't pull them off yet. I fumble my joystick inputs a lot. I also need to improve reaction to DI. In hindsight lots of matches were winnable but I didn't pull off supers when I should have to finish it. This is my first time playing SF since this first year of SF4. Lots of adjustments and rust to shake off.
The editing on the situations you speak of adds do much to the video. Id keep this up, this is also a super dope series. Very cool stuff
More scrubquotes videos I can't get enough of them!
I already saw today's one!
Starting to become a fan of yours man! I picked up Kim just naturally before seeing you play her and now I'm Plat 2 and still going thanks to the tips - between you and Max everything is getting better!
It honestly doesn't surprise most of these players were higher rank, rookie ranks are so happy when they pull off just a target combo most of them don't even care if they win or lose. I think a lot of it is the frustration these players have with still having so much to learn even at high ranks.
thanks for actually going into training to show us the "what ifs". It was extremely helpful!
This was actually really great, especially the little clips that show what the other options were. Thank you so much. Informative AND fun! :)
I would love more of this. Imo it's the best way to be entertaining and informative. Your editing and examples are super useful.
This was a really great video, with the training mode cut ins and the detective work 🤣 Would love to see more of this as a series
I really appreciate edits from training showing what you're discussing. Very helpful!
those cutaways to the lab are so helpful thats so cool thanks for including those
The issue with Honda is most characters you have an exchange, I do this, they do that and eventually you get into it. With Honda you are always on the back foot because you spend your time countering him the whole match. There’s little in the way of mutual exchange, it’s “How do I stop his game plan?”
looking forward to part2 of this after u win evo! Best of luck this weekend
This is probably one of my favorite videos you’ve ever done. Really was educational entertaining and helped put things into perspective as someone who gets tilted on a regular basis
I enjoyed this more than I expected. I like the format and the edited-in parts where you show stuff in the lab right after.
This is a brilliant idea u need to continue with on this channel. Dont think anyone else has taken the time to put the matches to the scrubquotes
Dude the guy that kept saying for people to die literally knows 3 moves like bro that’s just a massive skill issue if I’ve ever seen one
the kim was definitely playing like every other diamond kim i've run into
Best SF6 educational content I've seen on RUclips yet. Intercutting the commentary with training mode examples of better plays is chef's kiss 😌👌
Hope you can do a follow up video for this. As someone who’s played SF for decades, I still have a lot to learn from experience and these videos help me understand “do’s” and “do not’s.”
I've understood the concept of saying someone is worse then you after you just beat them. Like, did you just have a brain injury 4 seconds ago or what?
"You're trash."
"And you're on the ground."
The replay featuring is the best, love being able to see what made people rage
I would love to see these as often as you can post them. Excellent!
Your content is so insanely high quality, the little cut-ins showing how to improve on these mistakes are amazing!
LOVE this concept! Would love to see more!
This should be a series Dia, you might agree it's good content and good for your channel! :)
I get it, i understand why people get really mad when they lose a lot and start to vent on the lobby chat. I been there many times in other fighting games. The key is to remain calm and realize what you are doing wrong or not doing in a match then change it up. The problem is most people don't think this way and continue to do the wrong shit over and over, hence why they lose. When i start losing to a player, it's cuz he's too damn good and/or i start getting frustrated and start playing dumb. Best thing to do when you start getting mad is take a break and come back in 15 mins to an hour
I personally like to keep my unbridled rage in the privacy on my own home
ayy i was the one who posted the scrubquote at 4:30! i had no idea i'd be the key to solving the mystery!
Love your edits with the training room mid commentary!
showing the 'right' examples inbetween was perfect in my opinion, great video
Love it, would love this to be a series ❤ keep up the awesome work
The Phoenix Wright music was perfect 🤣
Ayyyy the one I sent in made it. I didn't even watch that guys (Jamie who just wouldn't block) matches, I just was lurking while playing hub matches. Pretty sure you found the right match too because scrubquotes takes a couple days to post. This was a god-tier video idea
I don't know if scrub #4 knows he can just down-back to charge booms + flashkick.
He's always walking back to fire booms.
TBH as someone who hasn't been able to put time into SF6 due to life, I had no idea burnout could backfire on people so bad. I get the feeling people just don't know that spamming meter literally makes your neutral game worse.
From a beginner, thank you. You're such a good SF6 content creator. Shoutout to all the coaches in the FGC
These guys remind me of the Nago players that pop two times a round and then complain that he's weak
Honestly brother this format is really well done
Love the explanation intermediate sequences. Great content.
I think the most saltiest people aren't bad players. They're players who think they're better than they are, or rather they're losing to things that they feel are beneath them. Saltiest people I see in most fighting games are actually good, way better than I am usually but I manage to beat them with simple tactics and gimmicks that they weren't ready for. That really gets the rage going.
Edutainment pure and simple. I am not really competitive in Beat'em up games, but I like to watch.
Solid video and that demo on dealing with Honda's air attacks is very useful!
Fighting* games
Beat Em Ups are games like Streets of Rage, Double Dragon, TMNT..
@@willh7352 And yet here we are, I have come to regard Streetfighter as a beat'em up. You do the same thing, but in Streets of Rage, you tipically have to follow the arrow pointing Right!
Subbed as of right now. GJ that was excellent. I like how you didn't just make fun of them and you instead showed them how they could have dealt with the situation and what they were doing wrong. I think you should 100% do a video like this once every 2 weeks. I know I would tune in every time. The way you present it is easy to digest,quick and to the point and offers ways to improve and learn. Please do more of these.
Please make this a series. You have to! This is content goldmine!
As someone who's new to fighting games, this has actually taught me so much about how I'm playing and what I can improve on! Cause I know I'm impatient and don't know spacing well, but this taught me a few things I should work on! And what I shouldn't do for some characters! So thank you for that!
I don't even play sf, but this analysis was sick, entirely understood what you were talking about, and the visuals were awesome. Keep up the good work m8.
Please please make this an ongoing series. I've subscribed because this idea alone is too good. Loved it.
It may be unintentional but this is a really good eye into how a pro player might observe their own gameplay
Love you Diaphone
Maybe "die in a pit" guy is an old school Pit Fighter player.
or a MK player
Diaphone, this is gold content 🤣 funny and educational, more scrubs plz
Thank you algorithm for recommending this video. Looking forward to watching more
This was awesome. Showing the possible answers was very useful.
the constant fight about classic and modern controlls is a proof that we need those juicy dynamic controlls
Enjoyed the video! Keep making this type of content!
Very fun investigative work men! And I also learned a few stuff. This should be a regular series.
this was hilarious but also crazy informative! I love how you put a video example of stuff you're talking about!
This is an awesome video format never thought to look through someones stuff from their name. sick
Love the way you you edited in the ways to beat certain moves or the combos you can get from landing certain attacks. I support more vids like this lol.
"Whoa he got fucking cooked!" during Scrub 4's research phase got me.
Perfect use of the Poongko clip. That mans motivation got me into the FGC
Wait look closely, the 2nd person was complaining about modern controls and how people using them should die in a well, but they were the only one using modern controls, bro just hates himself 😭😭
Great video Diaphone! entertaining and educational, perfect combo
this needs to be a series
Adding the clips of training when ur explaining is super sick
You (and your editor) make by far the most entertaining fighting game content on youtube. Big fan, keep it up!
This is great, I'd love for this to be a series as well.
"Very poor decision-making... guy never blocks."
I feel personally attacked.
This video was super informative and also super entertaining please do more of this
Butt slam in a real game with different timing are VERY difficult to deal with. Honda and Blanka are characters I instantly mentally lose to when i see them on the screen
Sf6 caught in 4k edition with the character ID 😂genius