tbh I was completely unaware of this series until after uni2 dropped (not realising the influence this had on stuff like mugen) and even though I play street fighter and Tekken the most, it made me want to actually try the series and get into the lore as well, so I am now just trying out cl-r
He reminds me of Ryuji and Yosuke from Persona 4 and 5 respectively but more chill and put together. That's just the vibe Tsurugi gives me at first glance.
Graphics and combo's are nice it doesn't need out of this world graphics and 1000 combo strings to be a great FIGHTING game.. it's perfect and tbh I prefer it over Tekken 8 and SFVI because of how simple and great the combo's are.. people are just used to getting what thy ask for and the fact that the developers are sticking to their core with the 2nd one is wonderful.
Melty and Under Night are about the fantastical, surreal, and absurd that lurks just beneath the unassuming, banal, and modern facade of everyday life. This is why magicians, vampires, ancient earth spirits, demons, etc. are walking around in jeans, trench-coats, school blazers, and turtle neck sweaters.
Screw them, then. UN2 is literally my favorite fighting game EVER made! If new players just hate nearly perfectly made fighting games, then they don’t even deserve to play this game to begin with.
That idea stands the test of test, max is such a a general person that he was more interested in keeping the people that put him up then just adding. It’s the best way to grow
If street fighter would go back to 2d fighting and have the same mechanics like most arc systems fighting games, street would be awesome! The problem is, they tryna make street fighter to realistic like mortal Kombat and tekken.
I actually just got the game and I have joined some discord servers. The community has been very very welcoming and I'm really motivated to get better!
I think that being beaten by better players is important because it shows your habits. When you do the same things to win, you become robotic. Running into people that know how to counter your game play forces you to think deeper. Your IQ for the games grows even when you don't realize it.
Bought a Mayflash f500 a month ago been playing on it consistently. About 4-5 times a week for at least 1 hour a day and at most 2 1/2 to 3 hours a day. I played tekken for 4 hours straight the night before last and didn’t have any issues until about the 48 hour mark after that my right forearm feels like it’s swelling up and burns. I can’t tell if it’s the muscles got over worked or if I strained my tendons. It’s pretty uncomfortable which sucks because I want to play so bad but don’t want to push it.
Everyone should try to find at least one friend or relative to consistently learn an unfamiliar fighting game with. Meet up in person or online at least once a week to chill a bit while trying goofy stuff with characters that would never fly in ranked. Learn and grow together. Those are good memories being made along with a solid relationship that will hopefully last a long time. In contrast you will never meet 99.9% of ranked players, and you will be more likely to drop the game if you go it alone and insist that getting endlessly crushed by veterans is the only way to experience it. I plan on looking for a local as well when I have more free time than I do now.
Started watching you from learning Japanese with video games (Animal Crossing: New Leaf on 3DS). Watched your Japan vlogs. Enjoyed the coffee videos. You got me into fighting games. Oh yes, drawing and Hatsune Miku stuff too. Thanks for the content through the years!