As Tokido once said....." Fighting Game is Something so great".....committing to getting your ass kicked to learn believe it or not is what makes learning this awesome.
Loved this! Also, random thing I noticed: I feel like you’d really like playing Guile. Your approach to Luke, playing him more patient and pestering your opponent into making errors is what Guile excels at. If your comfortable with charge characters you should give him a try!
I never comment on videos. This one deserves one. 1) Great transitions. Fun to watch. 2) Amazing work documenting your experience. I’m super proud of you for creating a goal, practicing towards it, explaining the game mechanics and meta for the audience to follow, and trying to execute on it. 3) I already knew you wouldn’t get too far in a tourney but I wasn’t aware how much you’d actually learn. You’re a genius in the making! Good stuff, man.
Glad to see you went to the first tournament! As you can see, there's a lot more to fighting games than just "mastering" the very basics. Even hitting Master rank is just the VERY beginning of competitive play. You're definitely still in your novice phase, true mastery takes a few years at least before you start being competitive in local brackets.
As a Luke player myself I understand the struggle of how to play this game. Most of time for new beginners they started off playing Modern controls that way you are more familiarize with the games mechanics. Also yes there is an absurd amount of Akuma players online.
I absolutely love street fighter! i used to play it as a pure casual player (since I wasn't really that good back then). once SF6 released I decided that I would actually try and take it a bit more seriously and try out ranked. I was an akuma player in other games but since akuma wasn't out yet I had to choose someone else, and BOY did I choose the most unexpected choice for a character. I decided to give Zangief a spin (heh heh *spin*... get it?) and of course I ranked at the lowest of the low, iron. but over time I've climbed the ranks and now I'm in Diamond 1! watching this video made me remember the journey of climbing the ranks! i hope you continue to improve even more!
this video is very underrated and i hope to see it gain popularity with time. All the sound effects, the animation transitions and the wavy bubble font give me heavy Asumsaus vibes amd I love it. Keep up the good work!
I am on Day 5 of my "new to SF 6 experience". Not a SF newbie by a long shot, have played for a few years in SF4 AE and got some SF5 experience but not much. Mostly quit after 4AE I am in platinum now. One thing I can say is anyone who has had any experience from the past games but hasn't gotten SF6 yet, don't worry. The entire ranked system is really forgiving, I would say it starts getting competitive around Gold 3 upwards. Everyone's fundamentals are GONE with these new mechanics because it has definitely made everyone impatient. Genuinely it amazes me some of these players got so far playing the way they do. I have been playing off of my own experience and memory with minimal labbing, consistently beating out plats/masters. It's crazy how far my past memory has taken me, defense especially has been frustrating almost every opponent I come across. Almost everyone I met was not used to me actively waiting on hard guaranteed punishments and not fishing, so they'd just walk backwards and zone. My combos are ass but one thing I always did learning a fighting game is "KEEP IT SIMPLE". Simple, guaranteed punishes and building up from there. Having the new Over Drive gauge full on start is interesting, because you can really apply crazy pressure immediately with EX Moves that in the old games you had to work at least a round for. Overall I love the game, I couldn't get into 5 but 6 fills like a great mix of 4,5, and the new mechanics 6 introduces.
Amazing video, as someone who tries to get people into fighting games on the regular, the first steps are always brutal and turn off a lot of people. I hope this video helps some of my friends to get over the initial learning curve.
Great vid! the editing and narrative are top notch and it brought back memories of when I was first learning the game One tip I have for your default combo is to do an uncharged heavy knuckle after the charged light knuckle and then buffer a tackle. It puts you at +3 on block and in range for a strike/throw/shimmy mixup (use the frame meter to check your timing). The tackle is auto-timed meaning you can buffer everything. You can hit confirm with 2MP LP for strike On hit you’re +32 or smth and usually in the corner so you can do whatever you want lol altho I’d suggest a 5MP frame kill into throw or 2MP LP hit confirm. You could also just not frame kill and instead shimmy A tip to practice this btw is to set a save state right after the perfect light knuckle so that you’re not tearing your hair out every time you miss it like I did for months lmao I do this by pausing the screen right after it starts, changing the game speed to pause, and then setting the save state. Also saves a lot of time The problem with the medium knuckle finisher is that it loses to back roll. So even though it puts you in an advantageous position, they’re too far away to allow you to capitalize on your opening. The only downside of the heavy knuckle finisher is that it requires a perfect light knuckle, but if you miss the perfect timing you can just do the medium knuckle finisher as a backup. the basics such as anti-airing and spacing are generally more important than combos, but when you’re learning the fastest way to get better is to work on your offense. Good luck on your SF journey! Game’s hella fun altho there is some annoying BS (Bison 👀) but that’s every game lol
Thats dope, sf is also my first fighting game placed in rookie and made my way up to diamond 4 in the last year. Edit: oh damn you knew more about the game in 1 week than I did in a couple of months 😅
As a new FGC Competitor, one mistake I made as well is not going to weekly locals before going to big tournaments. The pros say it all the time: go to your locals. What better way to get better than to go to the hub for people like us that meet up every week? I wish I knew that before I got curb stomped at Max Mode earlier this year. Lmao. You're not alone, man. Keep practicing!
If it makes you feel any better, I got to Plat 4 with Cammy, and then I was like, “Ya know what? I’m gonna try entering a tournament, let’s see if I can do good in that.” To say I got destroyed is an understatement. My neutral was terrible, my anti airs were bad, I had no idea what the concept of whiff punishing was, and I lost horribly. I ended up taking a few months off of playing Street Fighter 6 after that cuz I just wasn’t having fun after realizing how bad I really was. But, I finally had the itch to play again, and I dedicated that time to getting better. I spent all of my time learning how to fix all of the holes in my game plan over the course of a couple of weeks, and wouldn’t ya know, I got to Diamond! I now sit at a solid Diamond 2 rank, making my way up to Master ever so slowly. Fighting games really are an eternal journey of improvement.
Great video and editing my man! Love the layman's style of breaking down fundamentals in the game. MUCH more enjoyable than watching these experts talk, where you feel like you need a SF dictionary to interpolate everything. 😊
Really like the flow and pacing of the video. The edits keep the flow while not being distracting. Ps for new players, the reason why the pros look like they tech every throw, it's probably due to them using a option select called delay tech throw. Think of a MCQ question of A,B,C. Option select covers "A,B" but not "C". By probablity, 33.3% per answer now becomes 50% chance of getting it right by using option select. Delay throw tech covers throw and blocking hits. But loses to shimmy
Ayer le decía a alguien que se quejaba de la dificultad de Black myth Wu Kong que probará llegar a MASTER en street fighter 6, soy máster con 5 personajes en el juego 😂 creo que por eso YT me recomendó tu vídeo, siempre me alegra ver llegar nuevos jugadores a SF6 .. felicitaciones!
This reminded me so much of when I first started learning SF6 (also my first fighting game) at release. Great video, and I hope you continue to enjoy the game!
i cant believe i started this video thinking this was a very well established channel, only to see the count, mad props, this is pretty good all around, i hope to see even more in future
It took a lot of guts starting from the ground zero to a Toronto major in one month a lot of people been playing fighting games over 10+ years. Keep at it again and watching videos of pros online for your char helps alot
Man keep it up I like your video. This is why I love fighting games when your new week by week you can see how much you improve. It took me months and months to learn tekken7.. and a yr or 2 in I was winning tournaments. I also love how each rank you get in the players fight different and at high level it's basically a different game. And doesn't it feel good when you try so hard at something that's hard and you see yourself improving. Man I love that feeling
this was an awesome video! even though ive been playing since sfv i loved the break down of the mechanics and your pokes. that throw tech part is so real. you've just earnt a new sub!
This was so well done and inspirational as who is just starting to jump into content creation. You've absolutely earned this sub! Thank you for the amazing video and good luck on your journey!!
Can I just say, being placed in Gold 4 being a shock to you is probably why you found it difficult to adjust mentally. When I first started playing Masters I thought I'd never beat them, the rank itself got into my head. Now I know the rank means nothing lol you just have to play to your potential and not get in your own head. I've played masters that panic OD DP spam like they're hard stuck gold ranks lol
This video was amazing and your channel deserves to be bigger! Honestly, even if you got ROLLED at the tournament in the end, you learned vital info. That burnout is REALLY bad (literally avoid it at all costs, make that ur new priority to learn) and that you lack a lot of matchup knowledge. Keep playing sf6 dude, this content is awesome and i wanna see you get even better and would like to also learn from you
Credit for ranking up altogether and getting offline experience with other players at a live tournament. SF6 is an incredible fighting game which is hard AF; although rank doesn’t always indicate skill, it is a testament to hard work and consistency the higher you level up. Great clip & keep it up 👍🏾
Trust me playing in tournament is a another level! The nerves are working against you. I went to Evo last year and only won one match and then got bodied. I have been going to locals and the highest I ever got was 3rd place. I put work in too. Please don't get frustrated. Your journey was refreshing to watch. There are a lot of cheaters online that can frustrate new players.
Great video. One piece of feedback that I have is if you go and explain stuff as basic as hit confirm or drive mechanics, I'd love if you explain everything, like 11:38 was insanely confusing for me because what is that 66 supposed to mean.
I really enjoyed this video! Appreciate the level of quality you put in to it! Speaking as a master rank Kim player, I would advise you study top players and learn from their videos! It helps a lot
Very good video man. I hope you keep playing. Even though you had some prior fighting game experience, getting to Platinum in a month despite never really playing any Street Fighter is impressive no matter what anyone tells you. It took me a few months get there and after a year I still haven’t hit Diamond (granted I swap characters more often than people swap underwear but still) Expecting to do well in a real tournament is basically like expecting to beat Master ranked players (because the majority who search out tournaments are going to at least be that good)
Nice run! SF6 was my first real foray into fighting games as well (played a little snk2 as a kid against my brother though). I played a week at launch, got placed gold with Marissa and worked up to plat. Then came back and played another week right after Ed was released, playing as Ken... placed plat and worked up to diamond. I'm proud of achieving both those goals so quickly... but I'm 99.9% sure you'd still whoop my ass. I don't think my rank really reflects the cheese I achieved it with :D
Great video…loved the montage! It’s pretty silly to think you’re going to win your first tournament after one month but I think you knew that. Anyway, love how you broke it down. For me I try to not think about my rank and focus more on my progress and recognizing how much better I’ve gotten. It’s less sweaty and more fun that way. 😅
Just attended and participated in my first EVO for sf6 this year. Went 1-2. VERY first ever tournament setting I was ever in...lost 16 straight games. Stay on the path, you got this.
As someone who never touched a street fighter game until yesterday, this video is a treasure, i love the game so far and this vid just made me love it even more, incredible edits and content if i could sub twice i would.
Been a SF fan since SF1 hit arcades. Im a solid platinum Guile main that enjoys a good match win or lose. To get really good requires a dedication i dont have the time or patience for. It will eat you up. Going from 0 to a tournament setting in a month is not a small feat. Extra kudos to your luke
I have been a Ken main since i Got sf6, last year I managed to hit high gold and then dropped off the game. Went back on it last week and hovering around gold and low platinum with demoralising losses. It’s expected to be very challenging at that point however.
I always had a negative feeling about starting fighting games. Actually my guess is many people who shy away from fighting games fear that they are not a good learner and have self esteem issues when losing a clear 1v1, where they can not blame any teammates.
As a luke player myself its nice to see someone else new try him out but aside from the burn out situation the other issue was your oki how you suppose to keep the pressure on them if your not right on top of them you need to look for a way to setup your oki to force more damage
I started SF6 about a month ago and we have similar progression!. After 50h of playing I'm stuck in Platinum 1 (falling to Gold 5 from time to time) I think I get the fundamentals right but I can't drive rush combo even If my life depends on it. I barely use Supers as well because I'm not good at QCFx2. I think being proficient on the use of those mechanics is what separate high Platinums/Diamonds players from the rest because the damage I take is like always 2x of what I do (because I can use just simple combos) I refuse to buy a hitbox too😅
Fighting games up to plat+ are really just all about max dmg combos. I'm not a player that is good at execution, but I am a very fundamental and mind game player. I will usually win the fundamentals and mind game aspect, but my low execution puts me at like 20% dmg or something per combo, which means I have to win 3-4 of those to win while 50/50 setups into 50%+ combos means I can't guess wrong twice or maybe even once if chip wears me down a bit. This isn't just SF6, I see it in nearly all fighting games. I'd like to see fighting games be more about fundamentals, mind games, and footsies rather than 1 or 2 50/50 setups per round.
Also awesome that you went out to support a local event! Even if you didn't win any sets, I hope you had time to play some casuals and have fun. The most I've ever learned playing fighting games was losing to someone better at an offline setup. It's something everyone who's ever become good can relate to and help you with.
For the first week, I probably would’ve recommended going to the beginner Battle Hub lobby. They’re pretty low stakes & can get you some good practice. I actually spend most of my time in the regular BH lobbies, & I’m a Master-ranked Kimberly main.
If you played on lower CPU difficulties for longer, working on removing your weaknesses, wouldve been a more efficient use of your time. The optimal way to train is to understand a thing in training mode. Practice it against AI and then implement it against humans.
As Tokido once said....." Fighting Game is Something so great".....committing to getting your ass kicked to learn believe it or not is what makes learning this awesome.
A GAME THAT TAKES 5 YRS TO BECOME GOOD AT IS NOT A GAME FOR MANY.
@@freddurst4420 it only takes how long it takes for you to quickly learn and adapt
Bro the lil animation transitions into the real fight is so cool
dude frrrrrr
For real! Seems insane this dude has less than 1k subs
agreed
"I didn't know any matchups besides Akuma" LMAOOOOOO
Loved this! Also, random thing I noticed: I feel like you’d really like playing Guile. Your approach to Luke, playing him more patient and pestering your opponent into making errors is what Guile excels at. If your comfortable with charge characters you should give him a try!
You broke down what takes people years to master kudos to you good sir.
💯🤭
I never comment on videos.
This one deserves one.
1) Great transitions. Fun to watch.
2) Amazing work documenting your experience. I’m super proud of you for creating a goal, practicing towards it, explaining the game mechanics and meta for the audience to follow, and trying to execute on it.
3) I already knew you wouldn’t get too far in a tourney but I wasn’t aware how much you’d actually learn. You’re a genius in the making!
Good stuff, man.
Agreed
Glad to see you went to the first tournament! As you can see, there's a lot more to fighting games than just "mastering" the very basics. Even hitting Master rank is just the VERY beginning of competitive play. You're definitely still in your novice phase, true mastery takes a few years at least before you start being competitive in local brackets.
@@pietime123123 well said
Naw this is pretty much it....
As a Luke player myself I understand the struggle of how to play this game. Most of time for new beginners they started off playing Modern controls that way you are more familiarize with the games mechanics. Also yes there is an absurd amount of Akuma players online.
I absolutely love street fighter! i used to play it as a pure casual player (since I wasn't really that good back then). once SF6 released I decided that I would actually try and take it a bit more seriously and try out ranked. I was an akuma player in other games but since akuma wasn't out yet I had to choose someone else, and BOY did I choose the most unexpected choice for a character. I decided to give Zangief a spin (heh heh *spin*... get it?) and of course I ranked at the lowest of the low, iron. but over time I've climbed the ranks and now I'm in Diamond 1! watching this video made me remember the journey of climbing the ranks! i hope you continue to improve even more!
Spin lol
The best SF6 video I have seen so far! Brilliant playing too!
this video is very underrated and i hope to see it gain popularity with time. All the sound effects, the animation transitions and the wavy bubble font give me heavy Asumsaus vibes amd I love it. Keep up the good work!
Great video! And perfect timing for me to stumble on. I just bought SF6 last week, and it is my very first FG. I can already relate to so much!
Nice to see new comers sticking to it. Keep it up
I mess with this video heavy liked and subscribed
I really like the ending, mainly because you identified what was wrong, shows you're paying attention. That's is how it is sometimes. Good video.
I am on Day 5 of my "new to SF 6 experience". Not a SF newbie by a long shot, have played for a few years in SF4 AE and got some SF5 experience but not much. Mostly quit after 4AE
I am in platinum now. One thing I can say is anyone who has had any experience from the past games but hasn't gotten SF6 yet, don't worry. The entire ranked system is really forgiving, I would say it starts getting competitive around Gold 3 upwards.
Everyone's fundamentals are GONE with these new mechanics because it has definitely made everyone impatient. Genuinely it amazes me some of these players got so far playing the way they do.
I have been playing off of my own experience and memory with minimal labbing, consistently beating out plats/masters. It's crazy how far my past memory has taken me, defense especially has been frustrating almost every opponent I come across. Almost everyone I met was not used to me actively waiting on hard guaranteed punishments and not fishing, so they'd just walk backwards and zone. My combos are ass but one thing I always did learning a fighting game is "KEEP IT SIMPLE". Simple, guaranteed punishes and building up from there.
Having the new Over Drive gauge full on start is interesting, because you can really apply crazy pressure immediately with EX Moves that in the old games you had to work at least a round for. Overall I love the game, I couldn't get into 5 but 6 fills like a great mix of 4,5, and the new mechanics 6 introduces.
Amazing video, as someone who tries to get people into fighting games on the regular, the first steps are always brutal and turn off a lot of people. I hope this video helps some of my friends to get over the initial learning curve.
This was really awesome and insightful. Thanks for the vid!
Great vid! the editing and narrative are top notch and it brought back memories of when I was first learning the game
One tip I have for your default combo is to do an uncharged heavy knuckle after the charged light knuckle and then buffer a tackle. It puts you at +3 on block and in range for a strike/throw/shimmy mixup (use the frame meter to check your timing). The tackle is auto-timed meaning you can buffer everything. You can hit confirm with 2MP LP for strike
On hit you’re +32 or smth and usually in the corner so you can do whatever you want lol altho I’d suggest a 5MP frame kill into throw or 2MP LP hit confirm. You could also just not frame kill and instead shimmy
A tip to practice this btw is to set a save state right after the perfect light knuckle so that you’re not tearing your hair out every time you miss it like I did for months lmao I do this by pausing the screen right after it starts, changing the game speed to pause, and then setting the save state. Also saves a lot of time
The problem with the medium knuckle finisher is that it loses to back roll. So even though it puts you in an advantageous position, they’re too far away to allow you to capitalize on your opening.
The only downside of the heavy knuckle finisher is that it requires a perfect light knuckle, but if you miss the perfect timing you can just do the medium knuckle finisher as a backup.
the basics such as anti-airing and spacing are generally more important than combos, but when you’re learning the fastest way to get better is to work on your offense.
Good luck on your SF journey! Game’s hella fun altho there is some annoying BS (Bison 👀) but that’s every game lol
Thats dope, sf is also my first fighting game placed in rookie and made my way up to diamond 4 in the last year.
Edit: oh damn you knew more about the game in 1 week than I did in a couple of months 😅
I've been playing for a month and made it to bronze yesterday :')
@@Vinoyl "Never back down. Never, what?"
This came across my recommended...and Im glad I watched! Great to see your Journey and I hope you keep it up! :)
As a new FGC Competitor, one mistake I made as well is not going to weekly locals before going to big tournaments. The pros say it all the time: go to your locals. What better way to get better than to go to the hub for people like us that meet up every week?
I wish I knew that before I got curb stomped at Max Mode earlier this year. Lmao. You're not alone, man. Keep practicing!
love the animations, music, and everything about this video, good shit dude thinkin on doing this myself
great video man, blew me away when I saw your sub count for such a solid video! Honestly makes me wanna try and get good at street fighter
I really liked this video! I recently got SF6 and have been taking notes from this.
Damn the montage got me pumped to play
bwuhj i laughed so fucking hard at that ending😭
If it makes you feel any better, I got to Plat 4 with Cammy, and then I was like, “Ya know what? I’m gonna try entering a tournament, let’s see if I can do good in that.” To say I got destroyed is an understatement. My neutral was terrible, my anti airs were bad, I had no idea what the concept of whiff punishing was, and I lost horribly. I ended up taking a few months off of playing Street Fighter 6 after that cuz I just wasn’t having fun after realizing how bad I really was.
But, I finally had the itch to play again, and I dedicated that time to getting better. I spent all of my time learning how to fix all of the holes in my game plan over the course of a couple of weeks, and wouldn’t ya know, I got to Diamond! I now sit at a solid Diamond 2 rank, making my way up to Master ever so slowly. Fighting games really are an eternal journey of improvement.
Great video and editing my man! Love the layman's style of breaking down fundamentals in the game. MUCH more enjoyable than watching these experts talk, where you feel like you need a SF dictionary to interpolate everything. 😊
Really like the flow and pacing of the video. The edits keep the flow while not being distracting.
Ps for new players, the reason why the pros look like they tech every throw, it's probably due to them using a option select called delay tech throw.
Think of a MCQ question of A,B,C. Option select covers "A,B" but not "C". By probablity, 33.3% per answer now becomes 50% chance of getting it right by using option select.
Delay throw tech covers throw and blocking hits. But loses to shimmy
Ayer le decía a alguien que se quejaba de la dificultad de Black myth Wu Kong que probará llegar a MASTER en street fighter 6, soy máster con 5 personajes en el juego 😂 creo que por eso YT me recomendó tu vídeo, siempre me alegra ver llegar nuevos jugadores a SF6 .. felicitaciones!
Love your videos style, great montage and music. Regards from Italy my friend
"You have to get washed to be clean"
Some of the single best advice when coming into any fighter. By a rando at my locals.
These kinda videos are always a hit. The improvement processes is on of the best things about fighting games.
This reminded me so much of when I first started learning SF6 (also my first fighting game) at release. Great video, and I hope you continue to enjoy the game!
It’s almost a rite of passage to be humbled by going 0-2 at your first local
Those transitions in the video are sick!
i cant believe i started this video thinking this was a very well established channel, only to see the count, mad props, this is pretty good all around, i hope to see even more in future
Great video, I will show this to my friends who don't want to play fighting games because they're too hard :D
It took a lot of guts starting from the ground zero to a Toronto major in one month a lot of people been playing fighting games over 10+ years. Keep at it again and watching videos of pros online for your char helps alot
Man keep it up I like your video. This is why I love fighting games when your new week by week you can see how much you improve. It took me months and months to learn tekken7.. and a yr or 2 in I was winning tournaments. I also love how each rank you get in the players fight different and at high level it's basically a different game. And doesn't it feel good when you try so hard at something that's hard and you see yourself improving. Man I love that feeling
this was an awesome video! even though ive been playing since sfv i loved the break down of the mechanics and your pokes. that throw tech part is so real. you've just earnt a new sub!
This was so well done and inspirational as who is just starting to jump into content creation.
You've absolutely earned this sub! Thank you for the amazing video and good luck on your journey!!
this channel is underrated
Welcome to the FGC!
Congrats on reaching Plat! If you're still interested in the game don't let the tournament discourage you!
Great video!
The journey never ends! Look forward to your next month with SF
Can I just say, being placed in Gold 4 being a shock to you is probably why you found it difficult to adjust mentally. When I first started playing Masters I thought I'd never beat them, the rank itself got into my head. Now I know the rank means nothing lol you just have to play to your potential and not get in your own head. I've played masters that panic OD DP spam like they're hard stuck gold ranks lol
This video was amazing and your channel deserves to be bigger! Honestly, even if you got ROLLED at the tournament in the end, you learned vital info. That burnout is REALLY bad (literally avoid it at all costs, make that ur new priority to learn) and that you lack a lot of matchup knowledge. Keep playing sf6 dude, this content is awesome and i wanna see you get even better and would like to also learn from you
Credit for ranking up altogether and getting offline experience with other players at a live tournament. SF6 is an incredible fighting game which is hard AF; although rank doesn’t always indicate skill, it is a testament to hard work and consistency the higher you level up. Great clip & keep it up 👍🏾
Great vid man!Just bought the game a few days ago and this made me want to try and grind the game!Keep up the good work!
hearing the line "im just gonna spend my time in burnout hopefully that goes well" im like bro...
The ending was SO GOOD :D
Trust me playing in tournament is a another level! The nerves are working against you. I went to Evo last year and only won one match and then got bodied. I have been going to locals and the highest I ever got was 3rd place. I put work in too. Please don't get frustrated. Your journey was refreshing to watch. There are a lot of cheaters online that can frustrate new players.
You got better so fast man. That’s so impressive
LOL that was not the outcome I expected :) good job none the less, and a good video!
Don’t get discouraged bro! Keep practicing. You should be proud of ur progress from being a day 1 beginner, to an intermediate player 💪🏽
Great content! Toronto represent!
13:31 Bread and butter combo.
Loved the video, helpful for me as I’m trying to move up the ranks
Great video. One piece of feedback that I have is if you go and explain stuff as basic as hit confirm or drive mechanics, I'd love if you explain everything, like 11:38 was insanely confusing for me because what is that 66 supposed to mean.
I'm very proud of you!! You gained a sub from this! I will continue to see your progress in future videos
fantastic video
Unironically you did a good job. Don't let your journey end so soon.
Well done. Subbed.
I hope you had fun outside of the bracket. And I hope you continue to play sf6 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Awesome video - thanks
Great video! Very cool animations of the fighters!
I really enjoyed this video! Appreciate the level of quality you put in to it! Speaking as a master rank Kim player, I would advise you study top players and learn from their videos! It helps a lot
i actually thought you were famous by the quality of this video, keep it up bro!
Very good video man.
I hope you keep playing. Even though you had some prior fighting game experience, getting to Platinum in a month despite never really playing any Street Fighter is impressive no matter what anyone tells you.
It took me a few months get there and after a year I still haven’t hit Diamond (granted I swap characters more often than people swap underwear but still)
Expecting to do well in a real tournament is basically like expecting to beat Master ranked players (because the majority who search out tournaments are going to at least be that good)
Nice run! SF6 was my first real foray into fighting games as well (played a little snk2 as a kid against my brother though). I played a week at launch, got placed gold with Marissa and worked up to plat. Then came back and played another week right after Ed was released, playing as Ken... placed plat and worked up to diamond.
I'm proud of achieving both those goals so quickly... but I'm 99.9% sure you'd still whoop my ass. I don't think my rank really reflects the cheese I achieved it with :D
Great video…loved the montage! It’s pretty silly to think you’re going to win your first tournament after one month but I think you knew that. Anyway, love how you broke it down. For me I try to not think about my rank and focus more on my progress and recognizing how much better I’ve gotten. It’s less sweaty and more fun that way. 😅
Donut Country Avatar = Best game ever
Just attended and participated in my first EVO for sf6 this year. Went 1-2.
VERY first ever tournament setting I was ever in...lost 16 straight games.
Stay on the path, you got this.
I’m guessing the level of competition was crazy high huh
As someone who never touched a street fighter game until yesterday, this video is a treasure, i love the game so far and this vid just made me love it even more, incredible edits and content if i could sub twice i would.
Que vídeo do caralho, estava prestes a desistir do sf6 por ser muito ruim, mas agora eu vou voltar com tudo
congrats my dear friend for improving so much in short period of time :D
i thoroughly enjoyed this
Great content! I know how the drive bar works now, thank you! Liked & subbed.
This was insightful
That was a great video, dont give up your doing great❤
Been a SF fan since SF1 hit arcades. Im a solid platinum Guile main that enjoys a good match win or lose. To get really good requires a dedication i dont have the time or patience for. It will eat you up. Going from 0 to a tournament setting in a month is not a small feat. Extra kudos to your luke
I have been a Ken main since i Got sf6, last year I managed to hit high gold and then dropped off the game. Went back on it last week and hovering around gold and low platinum with demoralising losses. It’s expected to be very challenging at that point however.
I always had a negative feeling about starting fighting games. Actually my guess is many people who shy away from fighting games fear that they are not a good learner and have self esteem issues when losing a clear 1v1, where they can not blame any teammates.
As a luke player myself its nice to see someone else new try him out but aside from the burn out situation the other issue was your oki how you suppose to keep the pressure on them if your not right on top of them you need to look for a way to setup your oki to force more damage
Footsies is basically controlling the rim of the fighting measure. It's a weird term.
Loved the video! Hope you make more SF6 content :)
I started SF6 about a month ago and we have similar progression!. After 50h of playing I'm stuck in Platinum 1 (falling to Gold 5 from time to time)
I think I get the fundamentals right but I can't drive rush combo even If my life depends on it. I barely use Supers as well because I'm not good at QCFx2. I think being proficient on the use of those mechanics is what separate high Platinums/Diamonds players from the rest because the damage I take is like always 2x of what I do (because I can use just simple combos)
I refuse to buy a hitbox too😅
dude it feels illegal watch this quality content without paying, keep it up
Fighting games up to plat+ are really just all about max dmg combos. I'm not a player that is good at execution, but I am a very fundamental and mind game player. I will usually win the fundamentals and mind game aspect, but my low execution puts me at like 20% dmg or something per combo, which means I have to win 3-4 of those to win while 50/50 setups into 50%+ combos means I can't guess wrong twice or maybe even once if chip wears me down a bit. This isn't just SF6, I see it in nearly all fighting games.
I'd like to see fighting games be more about fundamentals, mind games, and footsies rather than 1 or 2 50/50 setups per round.
Street Fighter 6 is one of the best. I love it
The big mistake beginners always seem to make is focusing too much on memorizing combos and not enough on fighting game fundamentals.
I GYAAAATTT to sub to you, GOATED VIDEO
shocked this doesn't have more views!
Also awesome that you went out to support a local event! Even if you didn't win any sets, I hope you had time to play some casuals and have fun. The most I've ever learned playing fighting games was losing to someone better at an offline setup. It's something everyone who's ever become good can relate to and help you with.
For the first week, I probably would’ve recommended going to the beginner Battle Hub lobby. They’re pretty low stakes & can get you some good practice. I actually spend most of my time in the regular BH lobbies, & I’m a Master-ranked Kimberly main.
I went through the same thing with Dragon Ball FighterZ, don't give up man, online and in person is totally different
Good ahh content, luv it
If you played on lower CPU difficulties for longer, working on removing your weaknesses, wouldve been a more efficient use of your time.
The optimal way to train is to understand a thing in training mode. Practice it against AI and then implement it against humans.