Which is more impressive: 1. that exact same same yell twice 2. how those kids are stacked on each other 3. the actual stunt 4. the performance being on a blue platform suspended in void space
Actually you don't use martial arts in a street fight. Anyone that's had any serious martial arts training will tell you that you don't use that kind of fighting style for self defense.
Everytime you are in a fight, the screams boost your Power level by 25% and the flashbacks Will give you another boost of 25%. If you have friends cheering for you and giving you motivational speech its another 50% boost, and If your friend is wounded its 100% boost. If they are killed you become super sayan
Is this some sort of situation where the MC in an anime is about to die and suddenly remembered his past and then beats the crap out of the antagonist? XD
@@mr.meeseeks414 Yep, because the average dude in a "real fight" has fighting experience against belted martial artists. I can't believe the garbage you kids spout on YT and yet still feel confident about it. Oh, and flash news, I'd bet my paycheck 90% of people (no matter what sport or martial art they practice) takes that kick to the head, they're knocked out. But hey, you probably know better than anyone from your 14 years old experience in life behind your computer... oh boy.
And his hands would have to all be on the light saber, this guy would also have to have precise kicks so he'd have to dodge and also kick the hilt of the saber and not get his leg or foot cut off. I'm ruining the joke but here i am anyways
So then he kicks the 3 year old, then the 12 year old then he then he kicks the kid's father and the kid on top of the father's shoulders. That's some serious kicking.
In this case he would miss the child on the father's shoulder, since, after he kicked the father on the head, the child's position would have move before his last kick..
@@ozciva possibly in theory. But the stirike kicking speed at a tenth of a second between the kick to the father's head to the child on top of the shoulders, the child would had very little time to act especially while the child was holding an ice cream cone in his hand.
Man, at this point, it doesn't even matter how thin those boards were. The athleticism and training behind being able get up to the fourth board was the real main course.
@Stream of Consciousness Funnily enough, it's the give of the board that makes the strike go through. The wood flexes inwards from the pressure of the strike, and the martial artist has to hit it fast enough, precise and steady enough, and then strike on through the board in that give time to break it in someone's hand. I don't think board breaking is teaching a specific strike to be used in a fight. I've seen it used as a teaching tool for a student to showcase they have good striking technique, to give them confidence in their strike and how much they've grown as a martial artist, and to provide physical feedback when they fail the break that they need to go back over their mental and physical fundamentals. It's a personal challenge, I'd sum it all up as.
@John Everyman It's enough to knock someone out. Have you taken a kick to the head already? Do you know how it feels? Try it. And no matter how powerful it is, it's the one you don't see coming that lays you down. What you call "a real" fight is probably referring to a street fight, where no martial art nor technique can keep you safe at 100%. Usually the first one to hit is the winner, because like I said, it's the one hit you don't see coming that knocks you out. Not every dude can take massive hits to the head like pro boxers or profession fighters, and yet, these dudes will most probably have brain damages at the end of their career. A guy that can kick that fast and that high, you better get him with a cheap shot or you're gonna get wrecked.
@John Everyman Based on what do you believe this isn't practical? What is your level of expertise? What belt? How many ring fights? How many years of practice? What do you call "this kick"? What you call "this kick" is an acrobatic adaptation of the spin kick, that's not how you perform it during a live fight. It doesn't look powerful on RU-vid simply because it's moving so fast that you'd need at least 120fps to see it moving. Search for TKD spin kicks where fighters use mannequins to perform, you'll see the mannequin being blasted and rocking in every direction, simply because the 360 degree motion (if done correctly) is extremely powerful on point of impact. Performed correctly, and hit in the head, it would break your neck. Why do you believe you'd need to stand still for a spin kick to be effective? You think the TKD fighter doesn't anticipate and doesn't move either during a fight? This is what happens when you have no idea and no fighting experience, and only talk based on watching RU-vid videos and UFC idiots swiping the floor. I'm not defending it, I'm just plain tired of seeing ignorant people spout out nonsense. The internet is a great tool, the problem is that it gives a voice to every fool on this earth. Please educate yourself.
Definitely a Mario fan. When he was born it was something like this. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Q8ukcO_Oc8s.html Then this happened as he was learning to jump. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Q8ivkP-qs04.html
@@bills6093 Not to say they couldn't have been; but with the kind of trickery that often goes on in stylized martial arts, I wouldn't be surprised if you were 100% correct
If a dude squares off at me calmly like this, and then suddenly screams like a banshee out of purgatory, he is either crazy and will try to eat my nose like a pickle; or he's gonna do some Bruce Lee stuff. Either way, I'm thinking to myself "I can't mess around, here."
I do taekwondo as the ones in this video and screaming is one of the first thing you learn. It's very helpfull in combat to release air and stress when needed. Also frightens the enemy and clears your mind.
This was my opening move when I fought General Grievous in MMA. I kicked all four lightsabers out of his hands then when on to win by fatality. I can’t credit this channel enough to how instrumental it was to my training.
Thug: give us your money or the 4 of us are gonna hit you with these wooden boards Him: 0:08 4 men were found dead in an alley behind Sizzlers this morning, each with a broken neck and covered in shattered wood
POV: You got a B+ on a test 0:08 Your parents find out 0:12 Gives the whooping 0:15 Parents are still mad I can’t believe it. Thank you so much. 544 Likes! Please get my comment to 1K
I've been a martial artist most of my life and taught Hapkido professionally for a time. There are two different things about this kick that I think are worth talking about. I'll start with the negative one: there's only one hit of the four (the last one) that has power. Demonstrations like this use very thin, soft boards that are super easy to break with any touch. Not to mention, this kick would be extremely impractical to land in any real combat situation. So those are the negatives. That said, here are the positives: This kick is really freaking difficult to do. These guys train really hard and are amazing athletes. I could never do this kick. Not even close. It's an incredible gymnastic/martial arts stunt. The jumping height, rotational speed, balance, spotting multiple times, landing the actual kick part, and just believing you can do it in the first place (that's what they screaming is for) are all difficult by themselves, much less when integrated like this. Even setting up the boards right requires training. Moreover, I wouldn't want to get hit with the rotational power at the end of it because that one will knock you tf out (if you stand there and let it hit you). Anyway internet, there you go. Cool video!
I've always felt that a lot of the stuff you learn and do in traditional arts is just for training so people need to stop trying to figure out how you use everything in a fight.... you don't and that's fine.
I know that the boards breaking doesn't matter much, that part is fixed to demonstrate the actual contact. But the amount of training and practice that had to go into this must have been long and frustrating. To land all 4 kicks like this is just mind blowing. Well frickin done man.
Well that is really the whole point. This kick is just to demonstrate his level of body control; showing his body coordination, visual space, rotation, accuracy, and the shape of his technique along with some other checks. Why use thin boards for a high level technique? Because it would be impractical. The same way why TKD practitioner's would never use this outside. If taught right there is a clear difference between sport sparring or demoing, and how we fight outside which would be more military TKD. Thicker boards would be used more for power breaking like Side Kicks, Back Kicks, Axe Kicks and so forth to focusing more on your basic techniques. That's why its called "Power Breaking" :D and to someone mentioning the first kick... the first kick is suppose to look like that being that its your leading kick that starts your jump. Its not suppose to be all that powerful. And as thing as those boards are, I've seen many times when the thing boards didnt break... You wanna know why? Because holding the thin board one handed is actually harder to break because it requires more accuracy to the point for it to break. its no longer really in the middle of the board and your technique for the most part needs to be on point. The holder is just as important as the person doing the technique. There are incidents where someone couldn't break a board because of a bad holder.
yeah, just looking at it in slow motion, his feet aren't really pointing the right way, just an arbitrary smack rather than a kick. but again, like you said, it's difficult to do anyways, and although impractical, it was still cool :D
It's a precision thing, not a power thing. He's able to place his kicks where he wants them. If he wants to kick your shin he can do that. Same for your torso, your head or your 10-gallon hat.
@@Vagabond-92 it's useful for suppress the opponent's spirit( will to fight). The same reason why tigers,lions, dog ,cat and any predator do the roar while fighting.
Me: (going to the dentist) Also me : mum I’m scared Mum : no it’s nothing baby Also kid in the dentist room 0:07 (And is no one gonna talk bout it in our recommendation and its published on 2017 bruh 🤦🏻♂️)
Gabriel Elijah 😅😅😅😂😂😂😂😁😛☺️😝😏🤣😃😎🤣🙃🧐🤣😎🧐Hopefully the tsunami of emojis will help you understand this message. Bruce Lee was the world’s first mixed martial artist and during that time almost all dojo’s in America were complete jokes. The original Chinese schools did not have a belt system instead it was based on seniority. Chinese martial artists would train so much it was basically another job where they worked double overtime. Bruce Lee had skill, speed, and power. His fist were so fast that you couldn’t see them on camera. He had to physically hold back and they had to slow down the footage to see them. There was no reason for him to enter American sport because he would’ve swept the competition. It would’ve been similar to asking a Major League Baseball player to play in a little league game. The Chinese held no love for the Americans and them taking their martial arts but Bruce Lee insisted on teaching Americans and won the right to in a fight. You have no understanding of the time or the circumstances. I know you probably won’t read the whole thing and instead will continue in your ignorance. Your next reply will likely hold many superfluous emojis, probably more just to spite me, maybe less. It will continue in ignorance of fact instead calling one of the most prominent figures in martial arts a fake. Let me ask you this to make a point. Have you ever heard of the White Death? If you haven’t he was a finish sniper during the winter wars. He was a living legend and had many confirmed kills with many more unconfirmed. Did the white death ever win a shooting competition? A hunting competition? Or anything of that sort? So how do you know that he was a brilliant sniper? Competitions aren’t the only measure of skill.
Gabriel Elijah You can literally search on RU-vid and find footage of a real duel with him. Many UFC fighters credit him and his skill saying he was the world’s first mixed martial artist. For Pete’s sake shaolin monks don’t even use belts. The practice of belts came from the fact that after training for so long the belt would become black with sweat. There are many famous historical Chinese martial artists that never held belts and never fought in a competition. Bruce Lee literally trained every part of his body. His kicks could send a man flying, his one inch punch send a man to the floor. Not only that but Bruce Lee was a philosopher. The things is that he isn’t the bet martial artist ever, it’s that he helped revolutionize martial arts. He identified many problems with martial arts during his time. You can see the same thing happen at the beginning of the UFC. People realized that one martial art wouldn’t cut it. That it was better to combine striking forms and grappling forms to be more unpredictable, one of Bruce Lee’s philosophies: “To have no form”. If Bruce Lee were
This same guy does another board breaking demo where his foot doesn't touch the board. It's impressive that he can jump and spin so well, but these demos are less martial art, more gymnastic feat.
Well, sure, but general gymnastic/athletic ability doesn't hurt a martial artist either. You may not need to kick like that in a real fight, but having that kind of explosive power and body control can translate to some more practical techniques as well.
@@Iocun agreed! This demos of flashy kickings aren't necessarily needed in any fight but they are usable even in mma (at least for the tornado kick). They are merely demonstrating their kicking flexibility, using it in any fight is up to the fighter.
@@mahamadkader488 yep definitely 5, that one guy holding the other one up, as well as the 4 holding boards, you can tell because of thumb orientation that their are all holding the boards with their right hand
@@nezra3514 no lmao, locked-at-home wheelchair gamers might have even faster response time than trained martial artists. The difference is just a trained martial artist's body follows what their mind says better.
Why not see this man spent time to physically hone and condition his body to make this look as effortless as breathing. The boards are just to emphasize his precision and technique.