Excellent kobudo. Love the Sai kata, similar to one I've seen before and is in my Mind to try to learn. Tonfa, similarly, and terrific execution. The Bo work was also terrific and the paired kata, superb. I may steal that hojo technique ;-). Thanks for sharing.
A karate practitioner using Kabuto weapons are amazing and very incredible is very unique I just wish I could have been doing something like this in my original karate class it would have made me a very strong expert in a very great skilled fighter it's all about no one had to use your weapons the right way and knowing how to use yourself is a weapon you use a weapon and become a weapon yourself it's all about making yourself strong to become an true warrior 🥋🇯🇵💪😉👍🇯🇵🥋
@Oleg Takumi Sir Thank you for posting this video. Is this at the 那覇武道館 (Naha Budo Kan)? And the Martial Artist there doing 古武道 are from 文武館道場? Thank you for your time. Osu
This was all good untill you got to the chucks vs knife. Bs knife attacks.i expected far better from people who are obviously good at kobudo. Definately lacking in reality
Kalarippayattu is, in theory, the ancestor martial art to kung fu and, by extension, karate. However, India also has a checkered past of putting nationalist propaganda ahead of historical accuracy, like with their attempts to manipulate findings at Indus River Valley civilization sites to imply a direct lineage of Vedic religion and yogic practice that runs from then to the present day. Setting that aside, calling kobudo or any form of karate a "copy and paste" of kalarippayattu is like saying you're just a copy-paste of your grandfather. One is descended from the other, but they are not the same.