@@bigking2743 good question. These training styles complement each other pretty well so you wouldn’t be losing out on progress as long as you’re consistent. Now, if it were sporadic and different every week, then yeah you wouldn’t make much progress
Only because it’s usually most affective and versatile for different forms of martial arts. But if you want to follow a bodybuilding based plan, you can head over to the website and check out our Baki workouts!
Can you make a sun wukong (The monkey King) workout from journey to the West and black myth wukong? If you don't know who the monkey King is, one of the greatest Chinese mythology characters, in my opinion the greatest Chinese legend ever. In the novel, Sun Wukong is a monkey born from a stone who acquires supernatural powers through Taoist practices. After rebelling against heaven, he is imprisoned under a mountain by the Buddha. Five hundred years later, he accompanies the monk Tang Sanzang riding on the White Dragon Horse and two other disciples, Zhu Bajie and Sha Wujing, on a journey to obtain Buddhist sutras from India, known as the West or Western Paradise, where Buddha and his followers dwell. Sun Wukong possesses many abilities. He has supernatural strength and is able to support the weight of two heaven mountains on his shoulders while running "with the speed of a meteor".[3] He is extremely fast, able to travel 108,000 li (54,000 km, 34,000 mi) in one somersault. He has vast memorization skills and can remember every monkey ever born. As king of the monkeys, it is his duty to keep track of and protect every monkey. Sun Wukong acquires the 72 Earthly Transformations, which allow him to access 72 unique powers, including the ability to transform into animals and objects. He is a skilled fighter, capable of defeating the best warriors of heaven. His hair has magical properties, capable of making copies of himself or transforming into various weapons, animals and other things. He has partial weather manipulation skills, can freeze people in place, and can become invisible.[4] The supernatural abilities displayed by Wukong and some other characters were widely thought of as "magic powers" by readers at the time of Journey to the West's writing,[5] without much differentiation between them despite the various religious traditions that inspired them and their different and varied functions, and were often translated as such in non-Chinese versions of the book.
Can you make a jin kazama training video
I’ll put a poll up for it in the near future! 🫡
Wouldn't changing the training so often end up in not getting any results?
@@bigking2743 good question. These training styles complement each other pretty well so you wouldn’t be losing out on progress as long as you’re consistent. Now, if it were sporadic and different every week, then yeah you wouldn’t make much progress
No not really
Please
Aww man no weights besides kettle bell 😕
Only because it’s usually most affective and versatile for different forms of martial arts. But if you want to follow a bodybuilding based plan, you can head over to the website and check out our Baki workouts!
Can you make a sun wukong (The monkey King) workout from journey to the West and black myth wukong?
If you don't know who the monkey King is, one of the greatest Chinese mythology characters, in my opinion the greatest Chinese legend ever.
In the novel, Sun Wukong is a monkey born from a stone who acquires supernatural powers through Taoist practices. After rebelling against heaven, he is imprisoned under a mountain by the Buddha. Five hundred years later, he accompanies the monk Tang Sanzang riding on the White Dragon Horse and two other disciples, Zhu Bajie and Sha Wujing, on a journey to obtain Buddhist sutras from India, known as the West or Western Paradise, where Buddha and his followers dwell.
Sun Wukong possesses many abilities. He has supernatural strength and is able to support the weight of two heaven mountains on his shoulders while running "with the speed of a meteor".[3] He is extremely fast, able to travel 108,000 li (54,000 km, 34,000 mi) in one somersault. He has vast memorization skills and can remember every monkey ever born. As king of the monkeys, it is his duty to keep track of and protect every monkey. Sun Wukong acquires the 72 Earthly Transformations, which allow him to access 72 unique powers, including the ability to transform into animals and objects. He is a skilled fighter, capable of defeating the best warriors of heaven. His hair has magical properties, capable of making copies of himself or transforming into various weapons, animals and other things. He has partial weather manipulation skills, can freeze people in place, and can become invisible.[4]
The supernatural abilities displayed by Wukong and some other characters were widely thought of as "magic powers" by readers at the time of Journey to the West's writing,[5] without much differentiation between them despite the various religious traditions that inspired them and their different and varied functions, and were often translated as such in non-Chinese versions of the book.