@@felicehoffstedde6665 i would love it but some areas cant really do this i would think it would take a decent amount of money also some people can barely drive on tarmac
the biggest problem happens when, lets say, a deer crosses the road infront of you and you accidentally do the perfect execution of the scandinavian flick towards the forest... Not always helpful ^^
Brandon Bowman nah the hardest problem would be to follow these directions and apply anywhere near this much break and deer in the road or not your gonna crash. The oppo-reg-oppo plus some power once you know where you wanna go will usually provide enough to slide the way you want.... Deer free.
I can only do it in video games, 1st reason being my insane lack of drifting experience in real life, meaning I've never done it, and 2 it doesn't take a genius to know that you can't pull an inertia drift in a front wheel drive on dry asphalt. Video games though it's so easy because you can dive right into it and try as many times as you need without worrying about killing anyone
Scandinavian flick was used in old A group cars with passive and strong low sleep diferentials. Lancia Delta HF Integrale , Toyota Celica GR four St 185. More modern WRC cars and RWD cars don’t need souch treetment and that is time loose.
I learned this from playing GTA games. I never knew it was an actual technique and there is a process to do it. This will help time it better for myself in games where weight transfer matters alot more
If the first steering to the opposite direction of the corner is too harsh or too prolonged, you either will spin out to the opposite direction, or you wont be able to turn to the right directionin time. If the steering to the right direction after the first flick is too harsh or fast, you will turn to the right direction but you will oversteer and spin out.
For real, I've been doing this is in all driving games I've ever played and I've just thought of it as "Shifting the weight of the car to the back and slinging around corners in a drift"
Why is it actually called the Scandinavian flick? I'm from Finland, and flicking cars sideways during winter, or on desolate country gravel roads was like THE past time thing when I was 18-20 years old. Is it just down to that sort of stuff, or does the name have some deeper origin story?
Scandi flick is the first name for this technique. For me a feint is a less aggressive version that doesn't make the car loose grip after the first series of input, typically done on asphalt
so many bad angles, so little time. The camera is jumping all over the place: is the car going right or left? Is the camera replaying, or not? My MTV / Fast and Furious video training are throwing me off.
Hi Matthew. Yes, this is from Dirt Rally. Available on consoles and PC. You can find tons of gameplay footage (my channel has some too) of it on RUclips. It's immensely fun, yet punishing for newcomers.
I knew that there would be overused Initial D memes in this comment section. They're not even funny, nor were they ever, honestly I can't even watch the show without cringing anymore because of this overused meme.
also put on some eurobeat, it should make this much easier
This
Takumi in mf ghost be like
@@lime3264 tbh in a short way this vid is talking about takumis KANSEI dorifto
10/10 comment. Would read again.
I Concur
NANI!? KANSEI DORIFTO
:D
Italian kansei dorifto
Dejavu
I lerned more of watching 30 seconds of this video then i did on like 8 hours in school
Well, they don't exactly teach rally driving in school so that's pretty much expected.
@@technorunner1 they sould teach rally Driving in school
@@felicehoffstedde6665 i would love it but some areas cant really do this
i would think it would take a decent amount of money
also some people can barely drive on tarmac
@@tempwaffle it was a Joke
@@felicehoffstedde6665 ik, but still
To think I've been using this technique a lot, and not realizing it has a name. In my head I called it tossing the car's ass sideways xD
I feel like it'd be easier to do a Scandinavian Flick in real life than in a video game lol
the biggest problem happens when, lets say, a deer crosses the road infront of you and you accidentally do the perfect execution of the scandinavian flick towards the forest... Not always helpful ^^
Otto Knabe not helpful, but still easier lolol
Brandon Bowman nah the hardest problem would be to follow these directions and apply anywhere near this much break and deer in the road or not your gonna crash. The oppo-reg-oppo plus some power once you know where you wanna go will usually provide enough to slide the way you want.... Deer free.
Devon Collins dont cut
I can only do it in video games, 1st reason being my insane lack of drifting experience in real life, meaning I've never done it, and 2 it doesn't take a genius to know that you can't pull an inertia drift in a front wheel drive on dry asphalt. Video games though it's so easy because you can dive right into it and try as many times as you need without worrying about killing anyone
Scandinavian flick was used in old A group cars with passive and strong low sleep diferentials. Lancia Delta HF Integrale , Toyota Celica GR four St 185. More modern WRC cars and RWD cars don’t need souch treetment and that is time loose.
I learned this from playing GTA games. I never knew it was an actual technique and there is a process to do it. This will help time it better for myself in games where weight transfer matters alot more
This is the trademark of our people!
RUNNING IN THE 90s
hmmm.. NO
*N O O N E S L E E P S I N*
*T O K Y O*
hmmm no
D E J A VU I JUST BEEN IN THIS PLACE BEFORE
*FUTURELANDDD*
Holy Moly that voice!! 😍😍 I remember it from WRC 2003 or 04. This is legend!
If the first steering to the opposite direction of the corner is too harsh or too prolonged, you either will spin out to the opposite direction, or you wont be able to turn to the right directionin time.
If the steering to the right direction after the first flick is too harsh or fast, you will turn to the right direction but you will oversteer and spin out.
Some things you just need to feel them, when you explain it it's sounds alot more complicated than it actually is
For real, I've been doing this is in all driving games I've ever played and I've just thought of it as "Shifting the weight of the car to the back and slinging around corners in a drift"
Approach a right hand corner, brake hard, turn slightly left, ease up the brake and push the throttle a little bit, turn right and step on it.
Instructions unclear, parting out my car.
Scandinavian flick is life! Modern rally cars are boring.
mattmattmatt131313 not always boring
Yeah when they crash:) But a Prius is entertaining in a crash as well so that doesn't say much.
Born and raised with this technique up here in the north!
Beautiful Video. Its my favourite game. So much fun and always flicking... 🤘🏻
I actually use this when I use a rally car on a video game,idk why but it feels good
Pendulum Turn=Kansei Dorifto
Simple af
wow, moss from the IT crowd knows a lot about computers AND cars!
What is the name of the song used pls
Pendulum turn, Scandinavian flick, inertia drift
Initial (D)irection
Dirt rally was so pure... much more worth of money than 2.0.... 2.0 is more rinse, repeat....
Awesome demonstrations. Thank you. Is this technique the same for 4 wheel drive vehicles?
Made for fwd but works with awd
only way to do hairpins with a land cruiser IRL.
Nani corensent drift! 🚗
this is exactly Kansei Dorifto !
for my smooth brain the flick is basically overcorrecting a turn on purpose
go right to go left
that is not enough subs for such quality content
He didn’t make it, it’s a tutorial from the Official Dirt Rally 2 series. He just stole it
@@jooncash8844 Damn didn't know that thx for the info
@@jooncash8844 It's from Dirt Rally 1 to be extra precise.
@@jooncash8844 ''Stole it'', lmao. Check the description, he doesn't claim it's his or anything.
I didnt know this technique had a name. I thought this is just how you do a sharp turn on gravel.
Why is it actually called the Scandinavian flick?
I'm from Finland, and flicking cars sideways during winter, or on desolate country gravel roads was like THE past time thing when I was 18-20 years old. Is it just down to that sort of stuff, or does the name have some deeper origin story?
you mean drift around the corner?
2:34 Nani ?! K A N S E I D O R I F U T O ?!
Turn right to go left?
I thought the same!!
totally feint drift using inertia, maybe
that's a feint drift.
Reaper Actual
Technically the same thing
Scandi flick is the first name for this technique.
For me a feint is a less aggressive version that doesn't make the car loose grip after the first series of input, typically done on asphalt
That is literally a "kansei dorifto"
yes hahahhah wow 2 years
Delta drift
Finnish flick
so many bad angles, so little time. The camera is jumping all over the place: is the car going right or left? Is the camera replaying, or not? My MTV / Fast and Furious video training are throwing me off.
Is this a game? if so which one?
Hi Matthew. Yes, this is from Dirt Rally. Available on consoles and PC. You can find tons of gameplay footage (my channel has some too) of it on RUclips. It's immensely fun, yet punishing for newcomers.
hello 2016 that is dirt rally and i wholeheartedly recommend dirt rally 2.0
or drift....
نسميها في السعودية استفهام
its more easy say, steer and don,t jump the cliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif *they dies in a flip*
so basically just a drift
well, i think who needs this explenation will never be able to master it, good explenation tho
I knew that there would be overused Initial D memes in this comment section. They're not even funny, nor were they ever, honestly I can't even watch the show without cringing anymore because of this overused meme.
It is overused yes
kansei dorifto
Americans who think NASCAR is a sport... LOL
Sky Watcher Is it wrong to enjoy both?
Yes, it is a sport. And it's way harder than you'd expect. Try NR2003 and see for yourself.
Nascar is more strategy and endurance
Well it is so
2:39 "Remember this is an advanced technique and practise makes perfect"
wait so its now spelled practise instead of practice?
He's a British speaker; spelled differently