Guys he said that he firstly doesn't like the current commentators which doesn't talk about which moves are being used and what is going on, they talk about other stuff too much for his liking, so maybe he will prefer to commentate solo and secondly he has a son so unless they pay him a good amount, he wont go anywhere and rather spend time with his son at home
The Electric is actually a hard counter against a jump-in. It's a natural anti-air in a way I don't think any other move in Tekken 7 is. Which makes the lore behind the move even more sick IMO.
Awesome pick of fight. Awesome commentary. I wish you commented the tournaments. It's a great pity that they don't care about serious analysis during games like MMA, soccer or any other sport.
There's no time for serious analysis. The play by play in a fighting game is constant, there's no 2 minutes of a fighter standing against the cage trying to stop the other guy from taking him down for them to get in a couple sentences of analysis. Or 90 minutes of teams failing to score a goal in soccer. Then what, you want them to do replay analysis between the matches? Then you need someone that's high level enough themselves to recognize what's happening, while also being a good enough commentator to explain it to the home audience in a way that they can understand, since most of the audience is generally going to be made up of people who aren't high level players. Plus they'd need to be familiar enough with the various members of the game's roster to be able to explain their game plans and why players are making certain decisions, which is made more difficult when games constantly get patched. Joe Rogan never has to worry about a spinning backfist having its frame data changed between pay-per-views. Hell, the viewers might not even play the game you're showing, which is very possible in tournaments that feature multiple games. You need a production staff that know enough about the games to know what parts of the matches to have on standby for analysis, since it's not like Sajam or Markman can commentate AND constantly point out to production crew which clips to keep so that commentators aren't stuck being like "yup, that was a 100% combo alright." "It's a great pity that they don't care about serious analysis during games like MMA, soccer or any other sport." Those other sports also bring in like 1000x the revenue compared to any fighting game event, which means they can have professional analysts, play by play commentators, color commentators, interviewers, etc. For most FGC commentators, doing commentary is not their main job, not even close, so comparing it to events where the people involved are literally professionals is just nonsense. Not to mention in an entire MMA PPV, there's like what...12 fights? So 24 fighters total, aka the commentators and analysts only have 24 fighters they need to do their homework on, and they know who's going to be there months in advance. They can have entire storylines ready to go about these matchups, a luxury not at all available for open format tournaments where anything can happen.
It’s great seeing Heihachi used at high level, Joka definitely got nervous at times but overall he played solid and fair play it was a tough match between both of them. Nice commentary as well, overall enjoyed the video very much.
so this is why Super Akouma was bashing Heihachi in his recent characters overview. Hei can relentlessly spam ff2 against Akouma, and has a really good jab (just like Akouma).
Most of the tournaments I've seen this year have been highly favourable to character specialists. I don't think any season of Tekken has provided as much character variety at tournaments as S4. Maybe slight nerfs on the ss tier characters and the balance will be perfect.
@@TheHabibOfMankind atleast one thing's for sure: every dlc has brought some ridiculous staple top tier character to the game. s3 especially, jesus christ.
Thing about Heihatchi is that to truly embody his spirit you need to play him a LOT even under extreme fire. The Ultimate embodiments of Heihatchi neither fear death nor failure but battle like there is no tomorrow. Heihatchi's return in Tekken 8 proves this statement more than ever before
Appreciate the video. I have a random question though. How often should I replace a grommet in a lever? I've been using a sanjuk v6 for almost two months?
@@kyquinn502 naturally.. yeah the usual time frame is 1 year to 2. Entirely up to you though, you might even prefer a harder grommet. Play around with it.
Practice makes perfect. No lie took me about 3 months of only playing hei and attempting to do them when I needed to. Also drill practice before matches. Then I could get 1 out of like 5. I'm still never 100% depends on the stress lvl. But it was worth the effort when you whiff punish a fool for flailing around half screen :D
And I love listening to them my fav Commentators are Tasty Steve, Ketchup&Mustard, and MainMan, in no particular order, but I do like mainman more than K&M though Ik that much
Comparatively, what's the difficulty of teching a throw in 7 as opposed to the other games? I rarely, if ever, see someone use a throw, and it's even more rare that a throw does damage. Do people not bother trying throws because they're silly easy to break?
At high level play they are pretty easy to break. Low level play they can be good and certain characters can do 50/50's like king but otherwise they are pretty easy to break.