What is your crass and brutally honest opinion, on the controversial mixture of Muay Thai + Peek-A-Boo + Judo combined? Would such a combination of combat styles be considered LETHAL???
Kickboxing is better than Muay Thai, good kickboxers pick Muay Thai fighters apart with the distance managing and it's better for takedown defence since you're giving your knee up less
When it comes to real life fighting and real life situations, boxing and grappling are the best way to go. They are the most realistic, most natural, and most primitive.
@@kaedemiyagi9130 chances are , the best akido "fighter" could beat a beginner muay thai fighter. Beyond that, I dont know. In my opinion, master kicking, punching, wrestling, grappling, throughout your whole life. Then you will surely be the better fighter in most cases.
Best martial art: athletics, in particular 1000m sprints. Highest succcessrate of all. Works great even against multiple attackers and in particular knife attacks.
@@Awesomeflame16 : Here where I live, you can. During the time he draws the gun, aims at you and pulls the trigger, you have ample of time to get away, since here this procedure includes getting a gun in the first place.
out of all 3 of these, in a realistic situation, i'd say boxing is probably best because complex movements is something you wont easily remember when your fight or flight instinct kicks in. boxing has simple movements unlike tkd or karate so you can immediately get into action and then once you've calmed down a little you can start doing any complex movement you remember.
I dont think so, karate Is about fight in a medium range from the other guy the First kid in the vid did a terrible tsuki, he just punched whit His arm, not whit the whole body and he end up very colse. He also did an ura mawashi, u wont use that in the street, but as i say Is not about the art Is about the artist
@@maximov5339 yes however, tkd and karate have a vast and complex arsenal and also karate has a shitton of styles. boxing is good because most street fight hits are just haymakers. you're good with just boxing because you'll be decent at it within a month meanwhile tkd and karate, you'll still need to practice for alot more months before you get good at it. all of them take practice but boxing takes less of it and also in tkd and karate you need to be flexible in the legs
@@bobsticles7958 if you dont wanna put Time on your trainmnt or do it like an old grandma dont train Bro, if u are not going to push u to the limit no One will
I do taekwondo but I'm thinking about leaving 😭 i feel very demotivated and I just can't see myself doing it in the future Thanks for all the advice I appreciate it
Don’t give up. Every king has felt it every president has felt it every lion has felt it. Don’t you give up on your dream hold it tight. If you want to add another martial art feel free. BUT DONT GIVE UP OR I WILL LOW KICK YOU IN LEG
Start Jeet Kune Do, or, I don't tell this to most people, learn the RAT, a brutal fighting system taught to the Navy SEALs. The most dangerous man in the world after Bruce died is the maker of it: Paul Vunak
Based upon what you said , I would say the 2 most practical arts to learn would be Hapkido and Freestyle Wrestling . Learning how to throw someone to the concrete pavement so as to severely stun them , and use their own force & momentum against them and ultimately break their arm in the process . And while the person is writhing in extreme pain , you run like Usain Bolt to get away .
I see to many muay tai ppl get hit over and over and lose or they just take the hits. Wrestling and bjj are for streets so it’s kinda a guaranteed win for the grappler if they get the attacker on the ground. I think tkd and boxing or kickboxing might be better than muay tai just bc unless your extremely good with protection going to knees to the face or to the stomach are risky bc you also get hit unless you train street muay tai
@@ReverseDC If a wrestler or jiu jitsu practitioner gets hold of you and you only have pure boxing then it's game over for you. Your only hope is to knock them out before they can secure a clinch or takedown. In a street situation that's going to be much harder for you than in the ring. And assuming equal skill level Muay Thai would beat boxing every day of the week because of kicks, sweeps and elbows/knees in the clinch. Boxing is fantastic but it's a sport, not a complete fighting style.
Depends what works, a mix of good arts or things that work from arts. I personally wouldn't do a "spinning hook kick" if I was defending myself, always keep your eyes on the threat, but that's just me, it could work depending on the situation but again "depends".
Silat is the most dangerous because it's focused on deadly brutal locking, attacks, and tactics. When not performed carefully and right it could kill someone.
Boxing and judo for the throws, 2 fighting styles proven very effective on the streets, both allow you to stay on your feet, strike fast and get away quick, because odds are the guy you just dropped has his buddies charging at you at that point
Until a wrestler grabs you and slams you on your head. Watch early ufc fights lol it already gave us this answer. Superior grappling wins 1v1 street fights, good luck knocking out someone shooting a low single leg takedown and strangling you.
@@R3QVIEM Overused quote. Even mikey boy would get picked apart by a mediocre college wrestler.😂 Boxing is amazing though and one need to lear everything.
This is how i learned to be an beast First try muay thai since childhood Then kyokushin karate for more conditioning While learned judo too Im doing wrestling for high school and boxing practice Just use judo with wrestling for grappling Then use kyokushin and muay thai for diffrent kicks And boxing for better footwork, head movement, and punches The muay thai will also help shins elbows and knees This is how i use all my limbs to destroy in all ranges and angles
If you can do kickboxing with the basic knowledge to get out of a grappling situation if you end up on the ground you will be one bad dude. You never want to be on the ground for long.
Karate is about self defence so in other words it's to escape with minimal or no fighting and if no choice the attack your enemy only to inmobilize them and run So it's just hit and run Boxing is honestly hands only and isn't very convenient because most boxers have big bodies that's just a bigger target but they have the finest punches NGL And it does require a weapon like the gloves Taekwondo is mostly about kicks their punches really suck but kicks must be done fast because while your doing it you trust one leg to keep you stand straight and balance So if it was about attack I'd say taekwondo has a solid place Defense would go to boxers Offense would make karate Karate does have a wider array of attack and attack styles but all of them are experience based and to master them truly in a short time is not permitted because they literally won't give you the belt even if you become the best karate dude in a week Taekwondo does have a brutal kick technique but their punches are feathers as they mostly aim for kicks but their legs develop due to these conditions and they have amazing leg agility Boxers are honestly like a show for people but once inside the ring it's you and your opponent and nobody is there to save you
Watch early ufc fights lol it already gave us this answer. Superior grappling wins 1v1 street fights, good luck knocking out someone shooting a low single leg takedown and strangling you. Not opinion but historical fact and any world class striker in modern MMA has to have years of wrestling and BJJ experience to use their striking effectively. Growing up doing folkstyle/freestyle wrestling and proficient Jiu jistsu will win you 9/10 street fights no matter size differential but you add in either boxing or muay Thai or dutch kickboxing training for striking defense and timing or against multiple attackers offense with the ability to stay on your feet from years of wrestling this is the ideal average joe self defense master
Street fights arent the same as UFC fights. People gauge eyes, people bite, people will stomp your groin. If you’re on the ground in a street fight its over as its very rarely a 1v1. And the last thing you want in a street fight is to stick close to the person rolling around. strike and move
@@ThePointlessBox_ last I checked, 70% of assaults are committed by individuals. Good luck biting and eye gouging the guy who's mounted you and is beating your face in. Hell, one of Royce gracies opponents bit him in UFC 1... Only thing that happened is Royce "didn't feel" the tap. Also, as someone who's seen a decent number of street fight videos I've never seen a bite or eye gouge win a fight. If you have an example id love to see it. I have however seen many examples of wrestling and BJJ working and winning street fights. (Edit) P.S. groin shots were allowed in early UFC fyi.
@@ThePointlessBox_ You realize the other person can eye gauge and bite too right? But they can strange you on top of that. And you don’t. So you ain’t gonna do any of that shit against trained ppl.
What if you get punched while going for takedown. I got a wrestler down with Classic 1 2 3 boxing combo. He dodged my jab got my cross on his nose he closed his eyes got a left hook on his chin and Game over.
@@parameshwar3345 it’s far more likely that a striker will get taken down than a grappler will get hit by a perfect fight-ending blow… MMA has shown that time and time again. A combo of both is probably the way to go though
What is your crass and brutally honest opinion, on the controversial mixture of Muay Thai + Peek-A-Boo + Judo combined? Would such a combination of combat styles be considered LETHAL???
@@OtomoTenzi Yes it definitely is Lethal. Every martial art is lethal it's upto fighter like some great guy said "There are better fighters and not better styles" with that being said let's continue now Muay Thai for strong and powerful strikes with a peek a boo stance for defence and using Judo Throws on opportunity. In my opinion to make it complete you need out boxing Footwork move around freely like Ali who was an Out Boxer believe me having better footwork makes a crazy difference. And also need some BJJ if the fight gets to the ground.
@@parameshwar3345 Good points all around... I would think that Muay Thai's knees, elbows, and kicks from long-to-mid range would beat out almost anybody who tries to close the distance on you, while Peek-A-Boo's bob and weave swarm-style approach would be also kinda powerful offensive-defensive wise when YOU want close distances quickly on someone. Not using it as a stance for blocking/defending, but to get in close enough to smash rib cages in real good and to set 'em up for lightening-fast hooks and uppercut combinations from HELL. As for Judo, I'm not too real familiar with all of the advanced techniques it has, but I heard that 'Tomoe Nage' (stomach throw) is one pretty fucking lethal and dangerous move if you flip someone over like 20+ feet in the air and they land right on the back of their head/neck on a very hard surface!
@@OtomoTenzi yeah it's a pretty overall great combo but Idk if some really quick grappler tries to tackle you that's when your footwork (To avoid tackle) and BJJ (if you can't avoid it) can come in handy . And are crosstraining in those styles right now ? Anyways keep training as we don't know when what will come in handy in fight.
@@parameshwar3345 No, I don't train but I am just curious to know... Footwork for moving in between distances, and BBJ groundwork (incase of takedowns) are very good to use in training to be an all-around balanced fighter!
What is your crass and brutally honest opinion, on the controversial mixture of Muay Thai + Peek-A-Boo + Judo combined? Would such a combination of combat styles be considered LETHAL???
Boxing wrestling Or real karate ( not the shit that they call karate today) But no sport is good for self defense Self defense training combined with a craft is a good option
@@Szt1998 well yes you right but idk why I like to use kick more Than punch I just want to learn taekwondo for confident know how to fight learn cool kick rotation kick and I don’t like to punch
@@Thyriththecuber if you want to train TKD do it. There is some legitimate fighting knowledge there, and for 9 out of 10 people, the main thing you'll be getting from a gym / dojo is a fun place to workout and a good place to meet more people. The truth about self defense is that if you've gotten into a fight you've already failed. As long as you don't think you're a john wick tier assassin you'll be benefited by taking TKD. You just won't be able to fight.
@@6ft7guy Stupid man I learn boxing since last 4 years so don't talk about getting hit....also I commented because of Stupid comparison between 6 months and 16 years
@@irfatara8061 or ever felt a leg kick or ever felt a roundhouse to the ribs. When you get taken down and 12 to 6 elbows are being smashed on your face how's boxing going to help?
anything for striking + anything for grappling and you're already pretty well-set. If you want to go the extra mile then choose the best ones but honestly if you do what you like it's probably gonna help more than something you chose half-assedly just because "it's the best one for self-defense".
Boxing plus BJJ with a few muay thai bits. Simple. In this clip....the boxer is doing minimal movements...but moving the bag the most by far. The rest are more moving extravagantly around the bag not doing much damage
Out of the three, probably boxing. Even though I love taekwondo and have done it for years, in a street self defense situation kicks are very high risk. But they're all great and if you truly master your craft you will be able to defend yourself
The best combo for fighting will always be a striking and grappling martial art For striking the best is probably boxing because in street fights, you aren't usually wearing something that's good for kicks, but low kicks are your best friend Grappling, probably wrestling or bjj
I'd love to see anyone making the Blue Eyes White Dragon style work. In all seriousness, what y'all say is quite dumb. It's only true when both martial arts are effective. A mma, boxer, kickboxer, muay thai practitioner etc all have 99% chances against a Tai Chi fighter of the same physicality. And even that 1% of them winning is only from sheer luck.
@@alamgirsani5531 most chinese martial arts are quite effective, but unlike Tai Chi, i never really thought that it's useful for self defense since mostly they used it for yoga stuff....but for Wing Chun, if you use it in a way that instead of attacking, but blocking by using the movements that seems like a perfect defense mechanism(if you're actually had the right way to do it), then i'd say that any martial arts are useful *if* the user *knows* how to utilized it in a creative way....maybe it kinda sound dumb, but i'm just giving an opinion of my own
Boxing or taekwondo I say this because taekwondo with the range and boxing with the insane hand quickness karate is nice too and not to be slept on but I prefer those two
Muay Thai + judo + jujitsu
Edit: Muay Thai is pretty well rounded for striking and judo and jujitsu cover standing and ground grappling respectively
What is your crass and brutally honest opinion, on the controversial mixture of Muay Thai + Peek-A-Boo + Judo combined? Would such a combination of combat styles be considered LETHAL???
Boxing + Sambo trumps everything
@@Kodibot Is Sambo like a military-style martial art used by the Russian Spetsnaz?
@@OtomoTenzi it's like bjj and wrestling
@@Kodibot That sounds pretty SOLID...
This is how you become the best fighter ever, Muay Thai, wrestling and bjj
Definitely can’t argue with that combination! Even someone adept at only one art are formidable.
Yep
And maybe a bit of boxing two
Kickboxing is better than Muay Thai, good kickboxers pick Muay Thai fighters apart with the distance managing and it's better for takedown defence since you're giving your knee up less
definitely, i say learn all, kickboxing, thai, bjj/wrestling, boxing. if y can fit em all in you cant go wrong
When it comes to real life fighting and real life situations, boxing and grappling are the best way to go. They are the most realistic, most natural, and most primitive.
No martial art is better than the other in my opinion. The sword is as strong as the one who wields it.
Aikido is as good as Muay Thai?
@@kaedemiyagi9130 chances are , the best akido "fighter" could beat a beginner muay thai fighter. Beyond that, I dont know. In my opinion, master kicking, punching, wrestling, grappling, throughout your whole life. Then you will surely be the better fighter in most cases.
Reply to this if you like furry black balls
@@Maddoxg1 Reply to this is you are currently bent over taking backshots from a black man
@@Maddoxg1 Why do you keep replying
Best martial art: athletics, in particular 1000m sprints. Highest succcessrate of all. Works great even against multiple attackers and in particular knife attacks.
But can you outrun bullet?
@@Awesomeflame16 : Here where I live, you can. During the time he draws the gun, aims at you and pulls the trigger, you have ample of time to get away, since here this procedure includes getting a gun in the first place.
@@Awesomeflame16if the guy has a gun and enough distance between you, ......youve lost regardless of whatever martial art you are good at.
Taekwondo was clean
Bruh its itf taekwondo
I got black belt when I was 11
@@myself511 youtube black belts 🙄 in real life i bet you've never punched someone
@@maniangboss4074? No I mean actually a black belt when I was eleven you can see it if you have diacord
@@myself511 means you've quitted or still training
Combined them all and you are damn near invincible!!!!! 🔥🔥🔥"Be water my friend"!! Bruce Lee...
true
out of all 3 of these, in a realistic situation, i'd say boxing is probably best because complex movements is something you wont easily remember when your fight or flight instinct kicks in. boxing has simple movements unlike tkd or karate so you can immediately get into action and then once you've calmed down a little you can start doing any complex movement you remember.
I dont think so, karate Is about fight in a medium range from the other guy the First kid in the vid did a terrible tsuki, he just punched whit His arm, not whit the whole body and he end up very colse. He also did an ura mawashi, u wont use that in the street, but as i say Is not about the art Is about the artist
@@maximov5339 yes however, tkd and karate have a vast and complex arsenal and also karate has a shitton of styles. boxing is good because most street fight hits are just haymakers. you're good with just boxing because you'll be decent at it within a month meanwhile tkd and karate, you'll still need to practice for alot more months before you get good at it. all of them take practice but boxing takes less of it and also in tkd and karate you need to be flexible in the legs
@@bobsticles7958 if you wanna do something for a month dont do it
@@maximov5339 why not? practice takes time.
@@bobsticles7958 if you dont wanna put Time on your trainmnt or do it like an old grandma dont train Bro, if u are not going to push u to the limit no One will
Mike tyson : bet wanna try?
I do taekwondo but I'm thinking about leaving 😭 i feel very demotivated and I just can't see myself doing it in the future
Thanks for all the advice I appreciate it
Don’t give up. Every king has felt it every president has felt it every lion has felt it. Don’t you give up on your dream hold it tight. If you want to add another martial art feel free. BUT DONT GIVE UP OR I WILL LOW KICK YOU IN LEG
Keep going, you're gonna be thankful in the future for doing that.
@Super light well im from london there was just a taekwondo class near where i live. im sure u could a good itf one near you
Start Jeet Kune Do, or, I don't tell this to most people, learn the RAT, a brutal fighting system taught to the Navy SEALs. The most dangerous man in the world after Bruce died is the maker of it: Paul Vunak
Most of the RAT came from Bruce
Everything that teach you how to wrestle, throw, disarm, grappling, clenching, and strike and how you descalate the situation
This guy is right
Based upon what you said , I would say the 2 most practical arts to learn would be Hapkido and Freestyle Wrestling . Learning how to throw someone to the concrete pavement so as to severely stun them , and use their own force & momentum against them and ultimately break their arm in the process . And while the person is writhing in extreme pain , you run like Usain Bolt to get away .
Boxing+ muay thai + bjj & wrestling
My personally taekwondo+boxing+judo
That's mma
Muay Thai + Wrestling + BJJ would be very scary in a street fighting scenario
I see to many muay tai ppl get hit over and over and lose or they just take the hits. Wrestling and bjj are for streets so it’s kinda a guaranteed win for the grappler if they get the attacker on the ground. I think tkd and boxing or kickboxing might be better than muay tai just bc unless your extremely good with protection going to knees to the face or to the stomach are risky bc you also get hit unless you train street muay tai
Lol average boxer could destroy ur combination.
@@ReverseDC bruh bruh and bruh, u bad at joking
@@ReverseDC I doubt that .
@@ReverseDC If a wrestler or jiu jitsu practitioner gets hold of you and you only have pure boxing then it's game over for you. Your only hope is to knock them out before they can secure a clinch or takedown. In a street situation that's going to be much harder for you than in the ring.
And assuming equal skill level Muay Thai would beat boxing every day of the week because of kicks, sweeps and elbows/knees in the clinch.
Boxing is fantastic but it's a sport, not a complete fighting style.
Depends what works, a mix of good arts or things that work from arts. I personally wouldn't do a "spinning hook kick" if I was defending myself, always keep your eyes on the threat, but that's just me, it could work depending on the situation but again "depends".
Muay thai + wrestling + bjj
Silat is the most dangerous because it's focused on deadly brutal locking, attacks, and tactics. When not performed carefully and right it could kill someone.
Does silat involve pressure testing and sparring? If not it's bullshit.
@@connorperrett9559 yes silat also has that
@@connorperrett9559 Do you even know nerve strikes?
@@connorperrett9559 They focus on strikes that can kill instantly
@@connorperrett9559 there is even a silat strike where you can hit someone in the temple head and yes it can cause a hemorrhage
RUN
as someone who trains karate kyokushin i think its pretty effective but i cant say its the best art because i didnt practice many other martial arts
Everything put together
Boxing and judo for the throws, 2 fighting styles proven very effective on the streets, both allow you to stay on your feet, strike fast and get away quick, because odds are the guy you just dropped has his buddies charging at you at that point
Muay thai+ wrestling
no one is best....practice make perfect....😌🤺
Wresting and judo wrestling helps if on the ground and on top,judo help on top and ground
boxing is all you need to win a street fight
Until a wrestler grabs you and slams you on your head. Watch early ufc fights lol it already gave us this answer. Superior grappling wins 1v1 street fights, good luck knocking out someone shooting a low single leg takedown and strangling you.
@@caballoloco7131 "everybody have a plan until they got punched in the face".
@@caballoloco7131 til you're rolling and get shanked by a weapon you didn't know he had or stomped by his boys.
@@caballoloco7131 good luck submitting a person with grappling while rolling on the ground as his buddies kick your head like a soccer ball.
@@R3QVIEM Overused quote. Even mikey boy would get picked apart by a mediocre college wrestler.😂
Boxing is amazing though and one need to lear everything.
This is how i learned to be an beast
First try muay thai since childhood
Then kyokushin karate for more conditioning
While learned judo too
Im doing wrestling for high school and boxing practice
Just use judo with wrestling for grappling
Then use kyokushin and muay thai for diffrent kicks
And boxing for better footwork, head movement, and punches
The muay thai will also help shins elbows and knees
This is how i use all my limbs to destroy in all ranges and angles
I definitely liked the last one. His flow on the kicks made him look like he was dancing. SHEESH!!
If you can do kickboxing with the basic knowledge to get out of a grappling situation if you end up on the ground you will be one bad dude. You never want to be on the ground for long.
unless ur smaller or a bjj guy like me, i also wrestle but ill tell u wrestling is going to get u killed in a fight with a competent grappler
@@saxxxxxmanL Not really the best MMA fighters are proficient at Muay Thai and wrestling
Is not the martial art... is the martial artist who define that.
just my opinion as a Jeet kun do and systema specialist. There is not a best, It is all about the effort you spend in learning the art.
This.
Boxing is very effective in the streets but on the mat it's different
I am still Not Sure which martial to do i am more of a Person that punches and i preffer a high defense
Depends in what situation you are
Song: Go! by NEFFEX
Combination of all only using the simple effective punches kicks throws ground work simple fast explosive timing reaction
Taekwondo + boxing
That’s how you make the perfect striker add in wrestling or BJJ and you’ll be the full set
So kick boxing?
@@CristanioPeweyyy taekwondo have many kick than kickboxing
@@Khairil-wo6jn KB is Taekwondo on crack.
@@animereports9358 still incomplete without leg kicks and elbows and knees
Muay Thai + wrestling + boxing = undefetable
"But not the most powerful"
This guy is really asking to for a karate punch in his stomach
*that, *really is, *to
Well a bodyshot from any martial art must be really painful
bro asking to get knocked in a street fight
I'm open for a karate punch in the stomach
@@ranjanaverma4310 Bruh💀Bro tryna act like grammarly
All of them
Out of these 3 boxing is best but wrestling, Judo or Muay Thai beats that.
It depends
Taekwondo+boxing+wrestling+muay Thai
Karate is about self defence so in other words it's to escape with minimal or no fighting and if no choice the attack your enemy only to inmobilize them and run
So it's just hit and run
Boxing is honestly hands only and isn't very convenient because most boxers have big bodies that's just a bigger target but they have the finest punches NGL
And it does require a weapon like the gloves
Taekwondo is mostly about kicks their punches really suck but kicks must be done fast because while your doing it you trust one leg to keep you stand straight and balance
So if it was about attack I'd say taekwondo has a solid place
Defense would go to boxers
Offense would make karate
Karate does have a wider array of attack and attack styles but all of them are experience based and to master them truly in a short time is not permitted because they literally won't give you the belt even if you become the best karate dude in a week
Taekwondo does have a brutal kick technique but their punches are feathers as they mostly aim for kicks but their legs develop due to these conditions and they have amazing leg agility
Boxers are honestly like a show for people but once inside the ring it's you and your opponent and nobody is there to save you
E
And muai thai?
muay thai + judo + bjj would be killer
Gun-fu is best
Maybe In America in other countries not as much
💀😂
I love taekwondo because I trained 10 years on taekwondo
Watch early ufc fights lol it already gave us this answer. Superior grappling wins 1v1 street fights, good luck knocking out someone shooting a low single leg takedown and strangling you. Not opinion but historical fact and any world class striker in modern MMA has to have years of wrestling and BJJ experience to use their striking effectively. Growing up doing folkstyle/freestyle wrestling and proficient Jiu jistsu will win you 9/10 street fights no matter size differential but you add in either boxing or muay Thai or dutch kickboxing training for striking defense and timing or against multiple attackers offense with the ability to stay on your feet from years of wrestling this is the ideal average joe self defense master
Street fights arent the same as UFC fights. People gauge eyes, people bite, people will stomp your groin. If you’re on the ground in a street fight its over as its very rarely a 1v1. And the last thing you want in a street fight is to stick close to the person rolling around. strike and move
@@ThePointlessBox_ last I checked, 70% of assaults are committed by individuals. Good luck biting and eye gouging the guy who's mounted you and is beating your face in. Hell, one of Royce gracies opponents bit him in UFC 1... Only thing that happened is Royce "didn't feel" the tap. Also, as someone who's seen a decent number of street fight videos I've never seen a bite or eye gouge win a fight. If you have an example id love to see it. I have however seen many examples of wrestling and BJJ working and winning street fights.
(Edit) P.S. groin shots were allowed in early UFC fyi.
@@ThePointlessBox_ You realize the other person can eye gauge and bite too right? But they can strange you on top of that. And you don’t.
So you ain’t gonna do any of that shit against trained ppl.
karate if its kyokushin for sure. but as a 3 year muay thai trainer im taking my skill set any day of the week
Boxing+Muaythai
Mma, simple as that.
Probably judo or wrestling to be honest
What if you get punched while going for takedown. I got a wrestler down with Classic 1 2 3 boxing combo. He dodged my jab got my cross on his nose he closed his eyes got a left hook on his chin and Game over.
You’ll probably want some striking too
@@parameshwar3345 it’s far more likely that a striker will get taken down than a grappler will get hit by a perfect fight-ending blow… MMA has shown that time and time again. A combo of both is probably the way to go though
@@outsideiskrrtinsideihurt699 you know how to strike out of the womb but not grappling
True legends recognise all three of this guys
Muay Thai + Wing Chun + Great Footwork + Judo / real Aikido + Brazillian Jujutsu = Invincible Fighter.
What is your crass and brutally honest opinion, on the controversial mixture of Muay Thai + Peek-A-Boo + Judo combined? Would such a combination of combat styles be considered LETHAL???
@@OtomoTenzi Yes it definitely is Lethal. Every martial art is lethal it's upto fighter like some great guy said "There are better fighters and not better styles" with that being said let's continue now Muay Thai for strong and powerful strikes with a peek a boo stance for defence and using Judo Throws on opportunity. In my opinion to make it complete you need out boxing Footwork move around freely like Ali who was an Out Boxer believe me having better footwork makes a crazy difference. And also need some BJJ if the fight gets to the ground.
@@parameshwar3345 Good points all around... I would think that Muay Thai's knees, elbows, and kicks from long-to-mid range would beat out almost anybody who tries to close the distance on you, while Peek-A-Boo's bob and weave swarm-style approach would be also kinda powerful offensive-defensive wise when YOU want close distances quickly on someone. Not using it as a stance for blocking/defending, but to get in close enough to smash rib cages in real good and to set 'em up for lightening-fast hooks and uppercut combinations from HELL. As for Judo, I'm not too real familiar with all of the advanced techniques it has, but I heard that 'Tomoe Nage' (stomach throw) is one pretty fucking lethal and dangerous move if you flip someone over like 20+ feet in the air and they land right on the back of their head/neck on a very hard surface!
@@OtomoTenzi yeah it's a pretty overall great combo but Idk if some really quick grappler tries to tackle you that's when your footwork (To avoid tackle) and BJJ (if you can't avoid it) can come in handy . And are crosstraining in those styles right now ? Anyways keep training as we don't know when what will come in handy in fight.
@@parameshwar3345 No, I don't train but I am just curious to know... Footwork for moving in between distances, and BBJ groundwork (incase of takedowns) are very good to use in training to be an all-around balanced fighter!
Kyokushin karate, Muay Thai, BJJ, freestyle wrestling,Judo
JKD...i guess
Boxing
Guys who does mixed martial arts left the chat😂
Karate because it is a mix of boxing and taekwondo
Boxing is easily incorporated into an actual fight
Learn everything there is to be learnt and use every one of your kicks, punches and takedowns according to the situation, environment and opponent
Taekwondo looks fast
Of the ones displayed boxing would be the best martial art.
What is your crass and brutally honest opinion, on the controversial mixture of Muay Thai + Peek-A-Boo + Judo combined? Would such a combination of combat styles be considered LETHAL???
Nah just really cringey
Idf hand to hand. Neck breaking and all the fun stuff
boxing, muay thai, kickboxing, wrestling, judo, ji jutsu,.
Boxing wrestling
Or real karate ( not the shit that they call karate today)
But no sport is good for self defense
Self defense training combined with a craft is a good option
The best is all combined, ultimate
Taekwondo is the best because it use less punch and more kicks
Karate use both the more the merrier
Karate use both the more the merrier
Kicks are great, but without good hands and grappling you'll be hard pressed to actually use them.
@@Szt1998 well yes you right but idk why I like to use kick more Than punch I just want to learn taekwondo for confident know how to fight learn cool kick rotation kick and I don’t like to punch
@@Thyriththecuber if you want to train TKD do it. There is some legitimate fighting knowledge there, and for 9 out of 10 people, the main thing you'll be getting from a gym / dojo is a fun place to workout and a good place to meet more people. The truth about self defense is that if you've gotten into a fight you've already failed. As long as you don't think you're a john wick tier assassin you'll be benefited by taking TKD. You just won't be able to fight.
From the three is choose karate
U missed kung fu bro
For self defense boxing and wrestling or judo. Or just have really good cardio and dip. I wouldn’t mess with kicks too much besides a leg kick or teep
Pull out the the glock and pray they don't remember some of the basics of CQC
Combination of all these with muay Thai and even judo
Someone who's done muay Thai and grappling for 6 months would fuck up a boxer who's been doing it for 16 years
When you don't know the punch power of a boxer😂😂😂
@@irfatara8061 you ain't never felt an elbow straight on your nose
@@6ft7guy Stupid man I learn boxing since last 4 years so don't talk about getting hit....also I commented because of Stupid comparison between 6 months and 16 years
No! Its all about speed
@@irfatara8061 or ever felt a leg kick or ever felt a roundhouse to the ribs. When you get taken down and 12 to 6 elbows are being smashed on your face how's boxing going to help?
anything for striking + anything for grappling and you're already pretty well-set. If you want to go the extra mile then choose the best ones but honestly if you do what you like it's probably gonna help more than something you chose half-assedly just because "it's the best one for self-defense".
Go for grappling arts, even the wrestling which many see it just as a sport.
Karate easily I think at least at my dojo 4/5 of the stuff we do is self defense (headlock escapes, wrist grabs etc.)
Boxing plus BJJ with a few muay thai bits. Simple. In this clip....the boxer is doing minimal movements...but moving the bag the most by far. The rest are more moving extravagantly around the bag not doing much damage
Karate +kick boxing + muay thai best combination for aggressive fighting style my fav too
Kickboxing and muay thai are quite similar, so just karate+muay thai
@@andreasveide thats nice I m learning karate I was planing to learn kickboxing but there not a center in my area so I will just learn muay thai
@@musicgamer7730 I have been learning muay thai for 1 year and I can tell you that it’s the most brutal martial art if used correctly
Out of the three, probably boxing. Even though I love taekwondo and have done it for years, in a street self defense situation kicks are very high risk.
But they're all great and if you truly master your craft you will be able to defend yourself
Me personally, the best martial arts to use in the streets is definitely:
Running away
Boxing and Wrestling
I do karate ❤❤❤
Taekwondo be doing the jiggy
Kickboxing and judo
The best combo for fighting will always be a striking and grappling martial art
For striking the best is probably boxing because in street fights, you aren't usually wearing something that's good for kicks, but low kicks are your best friend
Grappling, probably wrestling or bjj
I have learnt karate, now black belt I want to learn other ones too 🥰🤞
Taekwondo with Boxing would be ultimate speed and power
Any marital arts can be good self defence if you have good skill and right mindset....
It's always the user who makes it effective
I'd love to see anyone making the Blue Eyes White Dragon style work. In all seriousness, what y'all say is quite dumb. It's only true when both martial arts are effective. A mma, boxer, kickboxer, muay thai practitioner etc all have 99% chances against a Tai Chi fighter of the same physicality. And even that 1% of them winning is only from sheer luck.
@@alamgirsani5531 most chinese martial arts are quite effective, but unlike Tai Chi, i never really thought that it's useful for self defense since mostly they used it for yoga stuff....but for Wing Chun, if you use it in a way that instead of attacking, but blocking by using the movements that seems like a perfect defense mechanism(if you're actually had the right way to do it), then i'd say that any martial arts are useful *if* the user *knows* how to utilized it in a creative way....maybe it kinda sound dumb, but i'm just giving an opinion of my own
Karate and boxing
Boxing + Wrestling
Muay Thai + Jui Jitsu
Boxing or taekwondo I say this because taekwondo with the range and boxing with the insane hand quickness karate is nice too and not to be slept on but I prefer those two
Boxing and karate
Kickboxing, muaythai , karate ,mma and teakwondo
Wrestling + Boxing
Muay thai +boxing + karate
Kickboxing 🔥🔥
Muathay, KickBoxing, jujitso🎊🎊🎊🎊🙏
In my opinion It's really a matter of how you use them...
🥊 BOXING 🥊 forever
Muay Thai wrestling bjj and judo best combo
I like to mix my taekwondo (4th dan Black belt) moves with my kung fu (3rd dan black belt) moves
Boxing out of those