"Everybody keeps saying I got all this potential. Potentials good. I'm feeling good about being potentially good." - Kyle, Final Fight: Streetwise
@TroyLambert-b5c3 ай бұрын
God Tier brother
@Eidlones8 ай бұрын
Me on launch: "I should have DI that DI instead of block" Me yesterday: "I should have DI that DI instead of block"
@Dr_Ki11enger8 ай бұрын
The fact that DI still sometimes short-circuits my brain even though I KNOW I can react to it now almost a year later is SO annoying lol
@LungDrago8 ай бұрын
What happens to me is: "Ok, they like to DI very often, so they absolutely are going to DI now. Anytime now. DI coming now. Right now. Now now now. Ok maybe theyre going to do something e--" and I eat a DI and die. :D
@kennard31067 ай бұрын
@@LungDrago I felt that in my soul lmao!
@ninjapurpura17 ай бұрын
You in a year from now: "I should have DI that DI instead of block
@doublevendetta3 ай бұрын
@@LungDrago Real. 😂
@johnarmstrong92828 ай бұрын
There's also a bit of this that applies to any skill endeavor. The more you learn, the more you realize that the thing that was "good" when you're a beginner is no longer good. Now to improve you have to "level up" and try new things against stronger competition. Of course you lose more when you try and adjust your old habits. Part of the process of getting better. Great video Brian.
@Kasaaz8 ай бұрын
It's a cycle. You learn what NOT to do, then you learn what TO do. And it just goes back and forth every time you reach that new level.
@tomasclutterbuck20388 ай бұрын
There was a video by a woman who said “How good you get at something is determined (in part) by how much you can tolerate feeling the opposite of what you want” So if you want to win a lot and feel in control, you have to be able to tolerate not having control and losing a bunch
@imjust_a8 ай бұрын
Deciding to learn a fighting game (SF6 in my case) really opened my eyes to this fact. It gave me an entirely new perspective on what it meant to *learn* a skill. I quickly realized I'd experienced the same feelings and frustrations when trying to improve my art skills, or with any other hobbies I've taken on. It was a really liberating feeling!
@Roclaph8 ай бұрын
Facts
@BulletproofBL8 ай бұрын
@@tomasclutterbuck2038 do you have a link for this channel? Seems like something I'd love to watch. Thanks mate
@dangangalaxy97598 ай бұрын
Another useful tip: GIVE UP AND GO TO SLEEP. Seriously. There’s real science behind this. Your brain consolidates, organizes, and settles in the memories you’ve made and connections you’ve attempted to form throughout the day when you rest. This especially happens during sleep, but it even happens when you take a break from the task and move on to something else. If you’ve ever spent all day practicing a combo that just wasn’t clicking, then tried again the next morning and suddenly you’re magically nailing it consistently, that’s exactly what happened; your brain consolidated all of those repetitions and saved it into your muscle memory while you were sleeping. So if you’re getting frustrated, take a break and give your brain the space it needs to settle in that muscle memory you’ve been beating into it. Your brain is still training after the fact, even when you’ve stopped :)
@afelias4 ай бұрын
There's also the "prayer before bed" effect. Right before you sleep, reflect on the actions, make the connections, and maybe even say out loud "today I did this and should have done that. Tomorrow I will be doing that from now on" a couple of times. Almost the opposite to pumping yourself up right before doing something.
@cauadsouza3 ай бұрын
@@afelias i did that a lot playing sekiro and it always worked lol i just forget to do it with street fighter for some reason but im going to try now
@jameji_phdАй бұрын
I usually like to hit a goal like "land this combo 5 times then I can stop", but if it's really not working I'll loosen it up progressively like from "land it 5 times in a row" to "land it 5 times" to "land it 3 times" to "land it one more time", just so I can have a positive thing (even if diminished from the initial goal) to end the session on, I find that helps with easing me out and making it a little easier to enter that "sleep and consolidate" mode rather than ending on a rage quit since then I'm ending the session thinking about what I actually did instead of just thinking about how mad I am about messing it up.
@dangangalaxy9759Ай бұрын
@ ooooo I really like that approach, I think I’m gonna try it out next time I’m practicing something. Thanks for sharing!
@KevinRobertsArt8 ай бұрын
Lesson: No matter how good you get, you have to give yourself permission to suck if you're going to continue to improve. It's true with everything.
@DTVisDISNEY19848 ай бұрын
Facts
@JP__Delta8 ай бұрын
there is a concept in education called scaffolding where you gotta make sure you have the basics of something down before you move on to the next step and learning things from youtube videos you kind of find a zillion cool concepts and want to learn them all at the same time
@dassainokabi8 ай бұрын
You can do a bit of both. Trying solidifying the building blocks while still trying the other advanced, medium, trivial concepts. Not only does it make learning more fun, but diving into things outside your current level will both make you lose fear of learning it in the future and give you a broader picture of everything you have to learn
@JP__Delta8 ай бұрын
@@dassainokabinot sure we're talking about the same thing, can you give an example of an advanced concept ?
@rare92428 ай бұрын
@@dassainokabi you can but the whole point of op I think was that without a solid basis its really hard to understand why these advanced concepts are so good or why you do them. Its one thing to be like "this option is good", but its another to understand the game enough to know why its used and when. its fun to work ahead because it gives you something to strive for but sometimes you misunderstand the why and end up just using good tech kinda poorly
@JP__Delta8 ай бұрын
@@rare9242 absolutely. What happens when you try to apply concepts that are too advanced in games (like let's say a beginner trying to check drive rush) is that it overloads your working memory (or "mental stack" in fgc terms) and prevents you from forming new associations between what you already know and new *concepts because you are too focused on doing something hard so you don't internalize the new concept. Experts are experts because they have relegated easy, moderate and harder tasks into their long term memory, enabling to think about other things while they play, like baiting, whiff punishing, side switching, etc
@rare92428 ай бұрын
@@JP__Delta glad I wasn't off. I agree 100%
@EmeraldLance8 ай бұрын
Brian just said "here's what makes improving difficult, and here's how you'll feel, and here's why you'll feel that way, and here's exactly how you'll mess up, and here's what you'll tell yourself when you mess up, and here's how you overcome that, and here's the difficulty you'll face overcoming that, and here's how you'll slowly keep improving, and here's..." and he lists every single thought that goes through my head as I play as if he knows me personally (he does not). He explains the entire improvement process in plain English and with psychic accuracy, and he does it all in a single 20 minute video. Guy's killing it. I can't help but like all of these videos. Very informative and helpful!
@lightpass17618 ай бұрын
THIS WAS LITERALLY MY THOUGHTS AS I WATCHED THIS VIDEO
@Ryygor8 ай бұрын
Your video lessons over the years helped me go from bronze in SFV to high diamond in SF6. Thank you.
@emocionou46368 ай бұрын
idk man, I will keep blaming ken players tbh
@OzonebxGaming8 ай бұрын
Sounds about right
@sc5628 ай бұрын
DRIVE RSH JAB.
@Mr-Slip-128 ай бұрын
Luke is much worse
@liquidbiden8 ай бұрын
You might be onto some real science here.
@rob0duck4308 ай бұрын
@@Mr-Slip-12Luke's back throw doesn't put you straight into the corner
@superman0O78 ай бұрын
Embracing losing is something no one ever does. If anything, people begin to look and discover if any unwritten rules can rectify their losses. It is good that videos like this exist.
@mango24508 ай бұрын
This process also isn't limited to Street Fighter or any fighting game or even any game. This is an efficient way of putting learning in perspective and executing on it to improve at any skill!
@MrNutz878 ай бұрын
This is natural for the learning process for improving at anything. implementing higher order skills will always lead to an apparent "dip" in performance but will lead to a new peak over time.
@russdellapenna8 ай бұрын
Coming from Tekken, and really going through it in ranked these last few weeks, I needed this. Gaining new skills not getting things right in game, feeling like im getting worse while i see my friends that arent putting in that effort get by without it has been tough, but this has helped me keep the faith and trust that it will pay off. So thank you
@Crouton-8 ай бұрын
If there's a lot of new things, I usually just pick 2 things and only worry about those two mew things. Helps to not get overwhelmed. Just remember a loss isn't a loss if you did the correct thing, that's a win for self improvement in my book :)
@Crouton-8 ай бұрын
Bruh nvm Brian literally just said all this lol
@christianchristoff79748 ай бұрын
@@Crouton- this was my logic. I just started a few days ago coming from Tekken too. I’m labbing all kinds of crazy tech, but in match I’m focusing on using my best neutral tools and DPing enemy jumps and nothing else
@MDYT078 ай бұрын
I'm a Plat Modern Luke switching from a PS5 pad to a hitbox-style controller while also switching to Classic. This is motivating me to get out of training mode and be ready and willing to lose games.
@Lost-Cause.V18 ай бұрын
When you lose check out replays see what situation caused you to blow up think about why you lost and cover that option
@sethrice40748 ай бұрын
I was steadily going up and hit Platinum 5 with Cammy. I immediately went on a losing streak that lasted WEEKS and I dipped all the way back to Gold 5 eventually. I've never been great at fighting games, but this year i've really put in the effort to analyze and improve my gameplay. Going from a 58% win streak down to 33% is just demoralizing so at that point I just accepted that I am terrible at fighting games and took a long possibly indefinite break. With that said, this video is EXACTLY what I needed to get my head back into the right mindset.
@imjust_a8 ай бұрын
Feeling this in my own journey. SF6 is the first fighting game I've decided to get into. Worked my way to Silver 4 and then got on a multi-session losing streak that bumped me all the way back to Silver 1. After every session I'd hop on Discord and tell my friend (Master rank Manon) that I don't know why I bother and I should just give up because I'm so bad. That was over 2 months ago, and honestly I haven't picked up ranked since. I kept trying to "play correctly" and I felt like I just kept doing worse and worse. I'd be dropping stuff left and right, mentally knowing what I should be doing but unable to do it. I even started flubbing my b&b ("crossed wires" as Brian_F put it). But this video really encouraged me! It was comforting to know that even people as skilled as Brian_F have experienced this part of the journey. It's natural for us to go through. It's a good remind for people like us to give ourselves some extra grace when it comes to learning. You'll make it. You did it once, you can do it again -- and this time, you'll be even stronger when you get there!
@mrkfightsbck21998 ай бұрын
almost same happened with me,now iam diamond 2 rn, take a break a bit if it helps and ye mindset is everything imo.
@vortaheadthebeast80728 ай бұрын
This has happened to me multiple times in my way to master. Sf6 was my first fighting game ever and I feel in love with it when I first played it. I played for a few dozen hours with my brother before even touching ranked and actually placed gold 3 in my placement matches. I was so happy I almost quit ranked right there because I was afraid to lose my rank and go down. But as I kept playing I kept learning and getting better. Leaving gold and getting to platinum. And that’s where I started feeling this comment. So many days I’d play ranked and just lose, and lose, and derank, and derank, over and over again. It sucked so much. But I took many, many breaks and poured dozens of hours into the training room and learned my muscle memory for my B&B’s. Eventually making my way to diamond. Where the same thing happened. But after all of that I climbed my way through diamond and I hit master earlier this month. It’s a process, and not a short one. People learn and adapt differently and that’s alright. So long as you know what you’re doing wrong then that means you know what to do right. If a guy like me who’s never played fighting games seriously made it all the way to master then anybody can. Put in the time and even if you stay silver forever so long as you put in effort to get better people will respect that
@Retrofun698 ай бұрын
We should play together and het better together everyone in this chat
@MrMegaman14173 ай бұрын
I mean I’ve gone on some losing streaks, but never 5 whole ranks. What did you determine to be the cause of you going down so much?
@RonJomero8 ай бұрын
I'm fairly new to FGC but been doing other games (some competitively) since the 90s. And I've always told others based on my own experiences that the best way to learn a new technique, keymapping, or skill is you need to just jump into the fire and go up against other real players. And you WILL fail and suck for a week or two. But your improvement will improve light years beyond just practicing in a lab or against the cpu. There is just something in our brains that creates more urgency when up against a real opponent and THAT is where I've found the real learning and muscle memory happens. So I definitely agree with this video. Don't ever get down on yourself when losing while learning something new. Expect it, embrace it.
@Xa1e8 ай бұрын
Stress triggers neuroplasticity, or so I've heard.
@BLAHBLAH1000shop8 ай бұрын
Love Brian_F explainer vids where we zoom in on Luke's feet every 5 seconds (joke aside this is a great and helpful vid thank you)
@zeroth888 ай бұрын
Funnily enough, the zoomed shot at the end of the video really made me notice how ugly and weird looking his feet are
@RonJomero8 ай бұрын
Tarantino watches his vids for a reason.
@mattb65397 ай бұрын
If he’s gonna zoom like that, I’d like to zoom on some different random background stuff. There’s alot there that we never pay attention to
@sweethistortea8 ай бұрын
In the last month, I went from Bronze IV to Platinum after just randomly deciding to do ranked with Juri after watching Nephew play her. There was a lot of losses on the way and there’s lots of losses now as I try to climb to higher ranks, but the knowledge I gained from those losses have helped me a lot.
@GizmoMaltese8 ай бұрын
I needed to hear this. I'm not making progress because instead of messing up trying to use my new techniques I'm falling back on what's safe and works.
@MrIfrit8 ай бұрын
I think the worst of getting better is knowing what should be done and getting punched in the mouth because you expected your opponent to do "the right thing" instead of whatever the hell they did.
@Dimchek9708 ай бұрын
For these cases it's best to record a few reversals and get used to all of them coming out of the cpu randomly
@bwnnn8 ай бұрын
I'm an '09er, but recently decided to pick up Dhalsim as my new main in SF6 just to shake things up a bit. Never having played Sim before, it took me weeks to get used to doing the most basic things with this character. Some things that are simple and universal for the rest of the cast are just different for Sim. Instead of just neutral jumping to punish a command grab, suddenly I have to jump, float, then punish. I'm now devoting mental stack space to confirming off of stray fullscreen fireball interactions. I have so many different anti-air and air-to-air options for different ranges and angles of jump, and even punishing a blocked sweep isn't necessarily straightforward. And adjusting to defense on a character with such limited reversal options has been the hardest part for this former shoto player. I've had to unlearn years of muscle memory and relearn skills that I can do in my sleep on other characters. Sure enough, adjusting meant losing a lot of matches at first, but it's been really refreshing going through this process again in my main game. It's humbling, which is a good thing, and I'm having more fun with street fighter than I have in a long time.
@terrestrialsoup8 ай бұрын
This is true in any aspect of your life. Any hobby or skill you are learning you will eventually hit this same feeling. The key is to keep going and you’ll break thru it.
@Carnage12908 ай бұрын
This is actually the best explanation for how to improve in fighting games, and how it feels to improve in fighting games, I’ve ever seen. This is a great video. Amazing summary of a weird process.
@pkphantom8 ай бұрын
I love these discussion videos. I enjoy your gameplay videos immensely as well, but I REALLY like these videos where you just talk about about various aspects of the game and how to play it/build experience
@LightBringer6668 ай бұрын
i am literally going through this phase of losing more and have been working on correcting it in the past week, naturally seeing the title of the video i had to click and watch it to give my 2 cents fresh out the oven. i may be repeating a lot of what Brian says in the video, but i guess it just adds credibility to it: honestly the best thing i've found to improve consistently is having a better player play with you regularly and focus on punishing your bad habits and "guiding" you towards the right solution, be it mid-game or between rounds where you discuss it.for example my friend who does not like jumping in SF6 has made a habit of jumping in on me to help me practice my DPs and cross-cuts. essentially "manufacture" the situation you're trying to solve to speed up the growth process through mental pressure... if i'm not punishing these jump-ins i'm becoming vulnerable or falling into a ken oki vortex. don't focus on losing/winning, focus on surviving as long as possible and taking as much advantage, if the goal is growth, winning is a side-effect, not a target... "1HP and a dream" can mean your opponent spends their bar to kill you and now you have some advantage in the next round... think about the game, watch your replays, ask better players what you should have done, record to memory, try again, lose a lot more, keep doing it till you drill the practice into your brain's "mid-battle mode". if you're getting jumped in at too much, you don't have to REACT WITH DP every time, make sure you AT LEAST register that you've identified the moment and thought "i should dp here"... next time or maybe the one after it you'll be able to do it and celebrate... now keep that up. nothing more fun than the growth process, especially when you're losing but your opponents have to work harder and harder to beat you... and in those match-defining moments you'll be learning the most because you're figuring out what made you win/lose. further about the step 2 and 3: try to incorporate this mindset of awareness as much as you can mid match... pay attention to every mistake and every correct decision you make and your flowchart will slowly but surely improve and become perfected, no matter what the "mistake" or even "Scramble" is like... you'll even find that in most fighting games the majority of scrambles (for example dropped combos or being tapped with a LP while jumping) are repeatable and have optimal options to follow up with. i've personally gotten really good at reacting to a missed meaty button with grab to get meter and space control to punish the opponent for making a mistake. what i'm trying to say is that every moment of a FG match contains a problem and its solution, and the long-term goal is to become good at identifying problems as you play, the ideal being that you're able to identify the problem, solve it, assume your opponent assumes you will, and respond accordingly, all in the span of a tournament set. and most important advice i can give is : know when to take a break... having a bad day of loss after loss? call it a day and come back tomorrow after a good night's sleep, you'll surprise yourself. been playing nonstop for a whole month? game feeling a bit stale cause you're seeing the same things over and over and you're going on autopilot without any improvement? perfect time to take an extended break, maybe play another game or genre entirely in the meantime, the feeling you'll get after you come back to it with a fresh mind is exhilarating best of luck to everyone, i'm no pro or good player by any means but thanks to this mindest i regularly play with master ranks (maybe i should just start playing ranked i guess?), but i guess i'm a bit privileged to have a friend who consistently places top8 in tournaments he enters as a training partner best of luck to y'all and i hope my wall of text was helpful info on top of the video.
@stevenbrunelle31568 ай бұрын
I'm currently in the exact same situation and it's frustrating as hell. I finally reached Diamond 2 rank and was cruising away quite smoothly in my ranked matches, then suddenly it felt like everyone just started seeing through everything I was doing. I dropped from Diamond 2 allll the way back down to Platinum 5! I even achieved my greatest losing streak of 15 losses in a row. It's like all of a sudden all of my opponents just started doing all the right things and every time I made the smallest mistake, I got punished to hell for it. By the way, I'm an A.K.I. main for some context. Also, this whole uprising of Ryus lately is partly responsible for my downfall. I've been losing to Ryu almost every time I meet him in ranked. I'm developing PTSD over here. 😵💫
@SuperCaleb2838 ай бұрын
I'm a coach for varisty esports and im still figuring a lot of things out, but this video has helped me recognize a step I was missing when teaching my players. Thanks so much!
@Cassapphic8 ай бұрын
Its also important not to beat yourself up for knowing that you missed the better option, I often whenever I get jumped in on or miss a punish or drop something I shouldn't be will get too harsh on myself and beat myself up over dumb mistakes and it makes me steadily play worse and its a bad cycle, its good to identify missed opportunities mid match, but not to get frustrated at yourself for missing them.
@RedLineOneGC8 ай бұрын
Im saving this...i have this exact problem with ed...but ALSO, wit me being so competitive and wanting to win...the minute i see my self losing trying to implement new things i immediately go back to what im comfortable with to win the match and ignore implementing what i was trying to do and say "ill jus try it next match" the next match happens and the same process...and these are in casual matches by the way lol...Directing my focus on new tech over winning is where i struggle with
@trunks46718 ай бұрын
Id argue this is easily the most important sf/fighting game/life lesson to learn. You’re literally teaching how to learn
@Sapreme7 ай бұрын
This is true. The best teachers I ever had in school were the ones that taught their students how to learn, instead of teaching them a lesson
@marcelvaloir7 ай бұрын
This video is awesome Brian! I hadn't broken down steps 3 & 4 into separate steps of growth, and it's really smart. Not thinking of every step before 4 as growth and success is what makes you frustrated, and its completely unfair to yourself. I had to stop and forgive myself for dropping an input because I went for it on muscle memory, and just *that specific time* it wasn't fast enough, even though it was the right idea. Keep it up!
@marcelvaloirАй бұрын
I keep coming back to this video months later, in every part of my life. It really is such a good breakdown of learning a skill, and each step of the process is progress. What a great video!
@TheThanhster8 ай бұрын
13:54 has been my life in Diamond 3 purgatory for the past 2 months. The plateau is real, first one was Plat 4. Great vid and take, good to know it's typical but man it truly is the "valley of despair" in the Dunning-Kruger chart that is leveling up in this game. I'm getting throw so much new tech at me it's hard to pick just one to improve upon, getting bodied in nuanced ways. I kill Diamond 2's consistently but D3 is a CRAZY, at least for me. Ken, playing since SF2 SNES. Thanks Brian!
@baldbishop16678 ай бұрын
Seeing this is like reliving my journey through ranked mode with my character, so rewarding when you apply what you practiced. Still is how i approach this game.
@kneelb4chevelle8 ай бұрын
I practiced with Ed for the last 2 weeks. I got all his routes and setups down to a T. Then I proceeded to win 2/10 Placement Matches. And I'm a decent player who has spent 400 hours in Training mode total.
@Brian_F8 ай бұрын
Gotta still work on what you practice in a real match. Need both training mode and real match experience
@Raxyz_08 ай бұрын
I think I jumped in ranked day 2 after a couple of hours in training. I got something like 4 out of 10 and it put me in Diamond 1, which was surprising to me. Overloading in training usually leaves your overall experience kinda skewed, and you do lose the initial wave of lots of players also trying the character or trying to rank up by beating people who're learning the character. I find that period to have the best learning experience with any char.
@ThePlasticBowl8 ай бұрын
Here’s something that has worked for me, take advantage of fighting a high lvl CPU. You can spend 400 hours in training mode but what you need is to be able to confidently move about the screen and react accordingly with the things you’ve practiced in a real match. Now understand fighting the CPU you are not trying your learn a match up or how to fight against a specific character because the average player does not play the same as a high lvl CPU. What you’re trying to do is create muscle memory on how to confidently move and fight against a moving opponent in a much less stressful situation than a ranked match or even a casual match. Losing to a high lvl CPU is much less stressful than a real person and I promise it will make you so much more confident in performing what you know you know how to do within a real match. I recommend lvl 6 CPU to start and once you can beat that consistently go up to 7. Lvl 8 is pretty ridiculous don’t waste your time on that, if you can beat lvl 6 CPU consistently you’re probably in a pretty good place to jump online. But remember this IS NOT match-up practice, it’s building muscle memory after collecting 400 hours of data to comfortably apply that data.
@sirchris60478 ай бұрын
muscle memory it for 7 years before you check the optimals and see u know like 2 of them @@Brian_F
@xodiac-gg70498 ай бұрын
@@ThePlasticBowl very good advice. I did this in the past with games like guilty gear and tekken. Sometimes i wouldnt have time for some matches so i would fight high level bots and try to drill concepts in my head and i would always get to a point where i felt less finicky where i just default to panick press. And yes losing to the bot is ok, dont think that just cuz ur losing to a bot that ur somehow just ass its a natural learning process that will feel satisfying once you start to win, its actually much better to lose early on because u can much better see your improvements. If you win from the get go u dont really get a good idea of the situation ur in with the character(u could also already be comfortable with the character where u can jump into online)
@johnsnider29568 ай бұрын
I experienced this feeling training both judo and bjj and I've definitely been in a slump trying to deal with it. Sometimes the answer is just keep putting in the work and keeping an open mind.
@RileyScott7 ай бұрын
unrelated to the video but your editor does such an amazing job with very subtle changes in background music that add emphasis to what you are saying. It is a very cool editing tech mad respect
@kolmorka8 ай бұрын
I love the premise of this video! Great job would love to see more of that nature :)
@masterofdoom50008 ай бұрын
Doing ANY task with intentionality will reduce your competence temporarily, you're not vibing anymore you're trying to build an actual skillset. Just gotta trust the process that you'll accommodate to it all in time~
@marufranco52813 ай бұрын
One thing important to mention is to learn those things one at a time like you said but also take a complete break from it, maybe by not playing the game completely for a while, going to sleep right after or playing another character for a little while. This way, your bad habits that are messing up what you are trying to do will be "forgotten" if you let enough time pass, assuming you practice your new thing extensively enough, when you come back your brain will default to that thing you have been practicing rather than you doing the bad habit/mistakes you were doing, if you practice non stop you risk also reinforcing your mistakes into your brain. That goes with going to ranked mindlessly and putting off learning the solutions, if you do that you will reinforce the wrong things the more you repeat them in a real match and the harder it will be to fix when you finally get to it, very difficult. Just make sure you take the break after you got consistent enough to it, if you take the break too soon and for too long (depending on what it is what you were practicing) you might forget it completely
@Mozgodrobil8 ай бұрын
This is very universal, I'm a Tekken player and I've recognized myself being in a similar state. Thanks for sharing
@filippe958 ай бұрын
This learning and development process is why I've fallen in love with sf6! Thanks for the help along all the way, Brine!
@King_CFR8 ай бұрын
it is surreal to see Brian, Smug, Punk etc grow up right before our eyes
@adventura64218 ай бұрын
Im currently trying to implement whiff punishes into my gameplan but im getting blow up by whiffing into mash a lot and when i doo get them i mess up the combo. Is really painful.
@greengriffin77588 ай бұрын
Put something I had kind of noticed about my game play into words very well, and gave everyone a great path to self improvement. Great Video
@danieldrummond84776 ай бұрын
I wish I had your mentality. I’m so hard on myself when I mess up. I just hit master after about 100 hours. I have since lost 100 MR in master and my win rate has absolutely tanked. Just feels like everyone’s offense is crazy and I have to to find tiny frame openings.
@suraisufgc8 ай бұрын
This is definitely the method that will help improvement with no failure. Been doing it for years and it has been the one to take me to the next level every time.
@jufru5358 ай бұрын
I don't even play sf6 but your videos are often still very helpful for other fighting games. Great stuff
@jonathasmartins44708 ай бұрын
To be honest thats a really good process to learn almost anything in life
@AyeTmoney8 ай бұрын
One of the best explanations of getting good at something I have ever heard
@retnuHDJ8 ай бұрын
I need this video haha. I feel so much better about my play after watching this. It all makes sense
@imjust_a8 ай бұрын
I really needed this, thank you!
@pretzels74378 ай бұрын
Mainly overconfidence and underestimating your opponent. Just because you landed a max damage combo for your character doesn't mean you have to go for it EVERY SINGLE TIME. Improving your basics is all you need to improve, even if its not flashy
@marcbraun53428 ай бұрын
This is the video/message I need right now and also because of the switch to Ed. ^^ Learning a game I can easily put any ego aside and grow better, which happened playing Ken, the moment the wins overshadow the loses feels great and you feel the progress, but switching to another character, and a very different one at that, beeing again at the very beginning, that's new. ^^
@user-ib4vp3ju7z8 ай бұрын
Muscle memory is such a fascinating thing. Recently played from Mahvel 3 again and just kind of autopiloted through combos and set ups i haven't done in over s decade
@RenatoFontes8 ай бұрын
This was awesome, thanks man! :D I've been practicing a lot of things at once, no wonder I take so long to actually improve. I'll try doing this, one node of the tree at a time. :))
@Nawrly178 ай бұрын
He's spittin, this applies to all fighting games. Finding solutions and filling in the gaps in your gameplay is what separates the best from really good players.
@MrFudgemonkey938 ай бұрын
GREAT video! Thanks Brian!
@TonyDupre8 ай бұрын
Easily the best SF6 coaching video I've seen this month!
@KhMaIBQ8 ай бұрын
Awesome video, Brian! I also feel like the OP of that Reddit post you shared. I'm going to incorporate the lessons you taught in this video. Thank you for the tips. Keep up the amazing content!
@ComputerFace248 ай бұрын
Great video, and nice articulation of what goes on mentally here
@anthonygillette8 ай бұрын
It sounds so obvious when you say it out loud, but grinding away online and ranked matches and learning all of this new tech really gives some tunnel vision to the player. I truly was so lost at why I was going from multiple win after win to suddenly losing match after match
@exquisitestatues8 ай бұрын
My issue is learning combos and executing stuff in training with zero latency, then being in the caribbean with no servers our ping connections at best maybe 100ms unless we connect to someone local which is limited. What helped me is creating a new profile , just hitting around plat in ranked and executing combos and punish counters with the latency at the lower ranks where people aren't pressuring you as much at the lower levels and whiffing a lot. Basically learning to execute with the latency instead. This helped A lot ! Now i'm at 1600 MR and improving , see you high level guys soon , haha
@ghhdgjjfjjggj7 ай бұрын
the first 10 seconds of your video is totally relatable. I could pull off the combo 100% of the time in training, but I totally mess up in a match. Even when they're stunned in the corner and I have all the time in the world to position myself :'(
@22canucklehead228 ай бұрын
Can't lose if you don't play
@AhJeez_8 ай бұрын
Hahaha big facts
@yoruzeruel50098 ай бұрын
This is something that happens even more with Ed for me, he has SO MANY options it's hard to keep track of all of them.
@Emiridian8 ай бұрын
Love hearing from the perspective of somebody who’s been participating in the fgc for such a long time and yet still really passionate about fighting games. So cool. Also…I feel like more people should reconsider their own opinion about a character’s strength if somebody like James Chen says they’re strong, lol
@kylehuntxr8 ай бұрын
As a tidbit of advice when incorporating new tools it’s essential to take breaks if you get too frustrated. Muscle memory often builds in the off time. So if one thing is stressing you too much take a break from it and shift to a different piece of the puzzle. Then when you are calmed some you can switch back. Also remember your opponents online aren’t trying to do what you are so some of your losses are just gonna be to people doing what they think works. Stupid as it may be focus on your goal more than the win rate 🙏🏾
@riffingt0n7 ай бұрын
I don't play Street Fighter (not since 2) - though I like watching it and that's how I found this channel. But this is a great great video. The way you break down this topic is very impressive. I'm a musician and everything you said could apply to playing music as well. Just a great, informative, and widely-applicable video. Kudos.
@microwave3028 ай бұрын
My version of this is when i land heavy punch target combo with manon. So many times my opp would neutral jump to avoid a command grab. So i had to practice back heavy punch into command grab to keep them from jumping. But now when i play diamonds and masters, they OD DP cause they don't wanna be in the situation and the meter is worth it.
@LordJorMagi8 ай бұрын
Wow... this video has instructions that i needed to hear for so long! Thanks man! I'll apply this!. I'm 3 star Platinum and stuck in this rank.
@Dsouls98 ай бұрын
for a new player, fighting games that rely on motion inputs will have two different paths of learning. game sense and execution. it's just difficult to focus on both as you learn in a real match environment. but once you nail one down that it becomes second nature, the mastery of the second will follow smoothly. the upside to this is that motion inputs are almost universal in a lot of fighting games that use them. so learning them in one game will carry over to another. (although I'm not sure how long this will continue in the future, with the recent games all having modern control variants, or straight up no motion inputs at all)
@eSKAone-8 ай бұрын
I got a racing analogy: First, as you drive by gut feeling, you'll drive slow but relatively smooth (like in regular traffic). As you learn the ideal line for any turn combination your drive will become more robotic, stiff, un-flowy untill the complete ideal line gets ingrained into your brain and you can see it as almost another track with your inner eye (this happens through lots of repetition). Only then you'll beginn to drive smooth again, and faster and faster 💟🌌☮️
@ace85198 ай бұрын
Just started fighting games in general just a bit ago and was second guessing myself if i was actually getting better, so reassuring to see i was mostly there just got to work on consistency and also great tip to great it down a bit more then add/change things up as a beginner to get the concepts of openings
@vertigo-gc1bu8 ай бұрын
What i found most useful as a beginner to fighting games is i take time to learn the individual moves before i do anything crazy, that way I'm a pinch i know what is at my disposal and can easily improvise in a match to figure it what works, and what doesn't. Switching between sf6 and tekken makes it easier to digest. Especially finding Tekken so fun that i can't even decide on who to main
@adamhart20208 ай бұрын
One of my method learning new combo is to fight cpu lvl 6-8 and try to apply the combo there cause if I can't land it on a cpu, most probably I won't be able to land it on rank match.
@killagram22618 ай бұрын
This video could not have come at a better time. From a fellow Ed player, thanks.
@Raxyz_08 ай бұрын
One thing I really hate about learning SF is how jump-ins work for low to mid level play. In high level, jumps are extremely risky and only ever worth going for if it's a setup or if you've heavily conditioned your opponent. In everyday-Joe level you get like 10% damage if you fail a jump in and 50+% damage if you succeed. The risk-reward is definitely in your favor when you _know_ people won't get it 100% of the time. It's not unusual to get people trying 3 jump-ins back to back, and it frustrates me to say that I don't stop them all. lol
@z1u5128 ай бұрын
Thats called being predictable, all you gotta to is turtle up and anti air them until they stop
@user-cx5vl9sq4e8 ай бұрын
hello Brian F, your videos are awesome and help me stay motivated. I have played fighting games for a long time but never invested the time to properly invest in my own skills until very recently and amazing channels like yours are what made me realize I could become good too. thank you for your awesome content
@tanzolo44878 ай бұрын
I needed this.
@300cmysrt88 ай бұрын
Sometimes your muscle memory betrays you. Your fingers do something before your brain can realize it was the wrong decision and send the stop command to those damn digits.
@xcreenplay72648 ай бұрын
My solution for me is to slow down tempo wise and actually speak out loud what i should be doing 😊
@Tassadar4Ever2 ай бұрын
That heat of the battle thing is wild, so happens! You get punched and your plan goes out the window.
@unreasonableJameson3 ай бұрын
9:26 that message lmao
@withoutthejuice71938 ай бұрын
Learning the right timing for punishment in Tekken is so satisfying. I got 3-0’d by a Jin, realized he was spamming an unsafe launcher, figured out which move punished it best, then I 3-0’d him twice in a row.
@davidgood8408 ай бұрын
This advice is also very helpful for me in my AoE2 journey . Thanks man !!
@rayhaanmustafa62958 ай бұрын
its just info overwhelm and how it translates to execution. its like practicing music/sports/performance in general
@AdamJorgensen8 ай бұрын
Such a helpful video, generally applicable too ❤
@witheesoul7 ай бұрын
additional tip to improve your muscle memory: go into arcade mode and try what you want to learn against the cpu if you're not comfortable to go into online yet. i swear it did wonders for me because it made me focus on applying what i learned instead of winning the match
@marcelomurisk8 ай бұрын
Me hearing the first part “😢 I still make this s***it mistakes after years 😂”
@futer19878 ай бұрын
My favorite part of brian’s videos is seeing luke curl his toes for 20 minutes
@DonQuixe8 ай бұрын
Great video! 👍🏾
@CrispAndBurnedАй бұрын
I feel like it's fine to train multiple things simultaneously to break up the monotony as long as you don't expect yourself to implement it all at once. I like to pick one main skill and one "sub skill" that's easier to do so that I get some successes while I'm waiting on the main goal to come online.
@kingslayer36478 ай бұрын
When you finally accept losses as your own fault you unlock the key to victory.
@faerojae51928 ай бұрын
them luke toes zoomed in when brian talks challenge my focus
@Eighty8k8 ай бұрын
This is the reassurance I needed
@DeadlyDAssassin8 ай бұрын
Keep up the videos brian amazing as always
@TheThirtyFourth8 ай бұрын
Last night i was playing FT10 with my bud, he's way better at the game than me+i was super rusty after a 3 month break from SF6, so he wiped the floor with me, to the point that i got super tilted. I disnt flame him (not without muting my mic a few times, cant help it, im emotional), but after that we labbed some stuff and just had a nice post game chat about what should i improve in my game, and it all came down to this: I play in a very predictable pattern, which hasn't changed much in a long time and he, basically, could anticipate most of my moves, but the fact is, with my garbage tier flow-chart, i got up to diamond, and most of the time i tried to learn some new stuff, be it a setup, combo, proper punish or something as simple as good pokes, it didn't work out for me in game, i dropped it and went back to my basic stuff. We talked about it over discord, with my phone near me and Chrome opened on my PC at the same time. And here i am, literally getting vid about this very topic recommend to me the next day. Funniest thing is: i wasnt a subscriber and i haven't watch any FGC content for the time of my break from SF, even FGC channels i was subscribed to weren't getting into my recommend list. Funny how the internet works, eh? Anyway, great vid, gave me something to think about +its good to know that i aint the only crazy trash player with this kind of problem. Step 1 is identifying it, right? Now i just need to identify the solution and do all the other steps :D
@deadfr0g8 ай бұрын
Wait, nooo, Brain Genius! The video thumbnail, the axes on the graph are all fumbled up, nooooo!! 🤓🤣😭
@BrainGeniusEditor8 ай бұрын
It's measuring change in rank as skill increases. What is incorrect?
@deadfr0g8 ай бұрын
@@BrainGeniusEditor Wait, my bad, it’s fine then, I made that comment on like 3 hours of sleep! But the story your trendline is telling is wayyyy more depressing now, hahahah.
@Retrofun698 ай бұрын
Hitting the plateau is hard stuff. You go from winning to losing most of your matches. Its a difficult feeling.
@jamesbutler56308 ай бұрын
Ive always played fighting games my whole life as only a casual. Beat the story mode play a few online matches then shelve the game. Sf6 i wanted to become great at the game. I started at the lowest rank and now im gold. I practice everything so much except anti airs alot and i hate getting jump killed. This video is so gold thank you