@@Stormanet1 I agree. Muay Thai don't really focus on training many skills, but training on some important skills to make them deadly. (Like low kick or knee jump kick)
@@BrokenX15 Titan was basically a cyborg demon , so we can construct an AI that is as large as Titan and can do the same moves using that Giant Desolator
Yeah you can get a good surprise out of it. My personal favorite is a good old roundhouse, but that's cause there's just something different about making a guy's knees bend a way they shouldn't... Muay Thai hits hard.
I'm a black belt, in a Korean Martial Art called, Tang Soo Do. In my martial art I was taught a lot of techniques, but my favorite technique is the butterfly kick.
Boxing, Muay Thai and MMA have no grading systems. They teach the most effective full contact fight techniques from the start. All those kata and form moves, namely static stances and ineffectual blocks only work in the movies. The grading system is just designed to take your money for several years. Traditional styles that enter MMA have to adapt to MMA, to the point where there is no resemblance to the original style. Being hit in the face while someone is trying to overwhelm you changes everything.
I’m a recommended black belt in teakwondo and it was very cool to see a different style of martial arts and the different names for them (we call the “tornado” a jump a butterfly kick and some others are different for us as well)
In taekwondo we do all of the kick from up to the purple belt for karate, at just white belt and so this makes me scared of what holds for me in the future…
I also do karate and in my karate school,the order is like this: white yellow orange green Blue Red brown Black I’m a red belt and if you have ever done karate you will know it will take a while to get all these belts.
White belt has the most usable kick. In a real life scenario on the street where your opponent could be a boxer, crackhead or kravmaga user you generally dont wanna turn your eyes of him.