I mean this is basically it though, it's the step I was doing at raves 10+ years ago, and it's a move that only looks good at the DnB tempo. But it looks f'ng cool af on a drum and bass beat IMO. I think I pull it off with a little more bounce, and a little cleaner than this dove - but obviously the comely brunette makes it look much much better, as the ladies always do! Most of the reason I mastered this move back then was so I could teach it to the girls in our scene - watching em doing fancy uptempo footwork on beat is like a gift from God. So cool. So hot.
@@justanothergamer1723I found it difficult. Not as hard as Hard House or Happy Hardcore but wasn't able to really dominate the dance floor with DnB. More of a stompy skank rather than a slick shape throwing machine. Absolutely no idea how Jump Up is supposed to work. Doesn't appear to be anyway to not end up looking like a bellend.
Me trying my heart out to learn these steps and FAILING MISERABLY. Until i’m on the dancefloor and all of a sudden my feet just hop trough these steps like i know them for ages. HOWW?😂
i have the same issue it most prolly has to do with the atmosphere , i try to learn stuff at home and it doesnt always work as planned but when im in a venue it just flows so idk XD
DnB is not very popular in the Americas, but I do see some really good DnB Dancers from time to time. Its an awesome style!! The music style is sick!! You are doing a great job aaroman9!! That tiptoe variation is the first I've seen in DnB dance!!
and for good reason. watching americans dance to drum and bass is like watching a fish trying to climb a tree. You dunno how it got there and you're not sure what it's doing but it's funnier to watch then offer to help out.
Somehow dubstep/brostep was renamed dnb when it became unpopular to like dubstep/brostep. Search all the "top" charts of dnb today and it's filled with wub wubs and devoid of the lovely, old 90s and 2000s beauty.