Slim Boogie vs Hyugz Pop | Battle Of The Night | Chaos Unleashed VI We would like to thank the CALQ for their implication in the creation of Chaos Unleashed 2015. Thank you for your implication in this 6th edition of Chaos Unleashed.
Its stupid & irritating, knowing that when people go up against someone better than them they have to get up in someone's face and almost touch the person, and try to tip the scales in intimidating them or trying to make them look stupid. That's so weak!....They can try all day though, because Slim Boogie is good at his style and he don't lower himself to their level, and still 90 to 95 percent of the time stomps his opponents and comes out victorious. He's a real expert in his art and even claps for his opponents!....And they still do this stupid hand in face crap!....One day their going to do it to the wrong person and learn the hard way!....God bless you brother Slim for being a real man bro. Love watching your skill Sifu Slim!....O:-)
+godsman4eels your obviously not a real dancer. probably a fanboy.... i mean this is a battle so your comment just sounds stupid. and theres a reason it went to two rounds and thats cause hyugz aint no joke he would school your ass easy with a smile on his face.
For me it does not seem irritating, because if you put in the context of what you are doing, it is a dance battle so this hyugz pop is allowed and it is normal for a battle and slim is not that it is not lowered, Slim knows that the battles are like that since it is an older American school that is where the concept of dance battles was created and since its inception always competed with opponents with those attitudes as well as greeteck that is from Canada and its beginnings were also in competitions in the United States, the 2 were created as poping dancers in that context of battle and that lasts the round and then it is over, I think that much in recent years they are very sensitive guided by the Asian school that has become widespread in the Last years and that their tournament is not so much as a battle, but rather that they are in a context only of competition and that as well as Asian culture they are more inclined respect.