Seriously apart from what happened in the battle, we have to accept that what Larry and Candyman are have been recycling moves over and over again for many years, they obviously have musicality, but it's the same over and over again. Larry hasn't added anything significant to his move pool and neither has Candyman. That's not to say they aren't good dancers, but they've been doing the same thing for far too many years. (I really like them and for me they have been one of the best, only they have recycled for a long time)
exactly my thoughts on Larry... But on the other hand Laurent has kinda level up ... he's experimenting, and is fun to watch...but idk wassup with larry these days
@@lel8740 I think that's the same thing, brother, and in another video I made a comment about how Laurent today is a thousand times better than Larry, because in the last two years Laurent has brought new movements and is experiencing other things and the truth is he The performance that Laurent showed in the last competitions is brutal, without a doubt, Laurent has improved a lot.
Well the difference between those two is that candyman has better timing and changes of rhythms than larry which makes more enjoyable to watch him do the “same moves” over again
Do people don't realize candyman looks repetitive only because he's locking? He's maybe one of the most original lockers out there, hip hop is way less limited with its foundations
@@wolib8271 hip-hop ain't limited with foundations, it's just as Link said - is Lacking. Hip-hop dancers go too much in their own styles how they dance, instead of giving hip-hop - foundations, variations. Going with new way of hip-hop is okay, but you don't have to forget the roots, foundations. Can anyone name at least one hip-hop foundation or variations used in this battle - in hip-hop?
Candyman had better round than Kuty and while that wasn't Rubix greatest round ever, he did more than Candyman IMO for round 2 I mean Candyman tired or not, used just over half the time Rubix did. So in my opinion Kuty and Rubix should have won based on tie-breaker but also should not have made it to the tie-breaker.
because LCG CORP are working on those beats to release a good final work, Asapju knows that the first and second beats are in high demand but it's not the time yet
the last beat that is from Asapju, Adel, Namu Serpentard and RileyVI I think it is not finished yet 😵 but most of these Unreleased beats correspond to LCG CORP and because the Dj that is NIKOPS is part of LCG CORP
Candyman is a great dancer, but he just has a very repetitive movement. All the battles I see from him the movement is already foreseen, although it has a good flow. Rubix always surprises, although I wasn't excited about the last round. But I think it was 1-0 for Rubix. Even so, it is difficult to understand the decision of the French judges. Always contradictory.
Locking is limited in foundation for sure, but Candyman has mastered the style at such a level that it'd be dishonorable to downplay his dance just because he locks. Not to forget, the guy is a master at House too.
@Sené_3005 dude did you watch rubix since few years ? Yep of course now he is doing this and try to master and add to the style but if you gonna watch him from few year you can see how his style is evolving and getting new forms open had a bit... last time we can see keep trying to masters spinning even more but also he is adding more house movement sometimes. Watch for example last battle with le k this motherfucker made most crazy spean that I ever sawd and if this spinning style gonna go that way soon he gonna blow every mind 😉
Corny that people use that logic. Who cares about what your style is, that shouldn't hinder you as a dancer. If your style is repetitive, then add to it and make your own.@@snagc4b427
bruh am i missing something? i am a big dance fan, watched a lot of stuff. I do like rubix and can admit when they lose, ive seen candyman and his talents / beat kills. How the fuck do Badness they win there tho xD? I understand mastering a small set of moves is important as is musicality but i guess im missing something. Maybe Rubix just lets the dude get into his head when battling, it shows. But to be honest, is dude wrong for trashing someone for doing 3 things? Doesn't creativeness in move-set count for anything? Please explain.
Locking in Foundation is limited. But Candyman adds to that great patience, timing, precise technique and impeccable footwork. He should not be underestimated
@@snagc4b427 that is a fair point! I'm not a dancer myself, i admire what they can do for sure. Cheers for responding my guy. I guess thats why im not a judge :')
if im being honest the last round was below mid on both ends rubix was full of tricks & small portion of musicality & candyman was recycling the same moves & cadence to every beat
@@Sene_-wf2py them are not signature moves.. thats literally how he dance, that jumping split from da floor i can agree with but anything else is natural movement for him i can’t lie
wait at 5:59 doesnt that mean RUBIX KUTY won? I think two of the judges voted for them. But in the last round Rubix definately lost. Normally he does unbeatable round in tiebreakers. But this one was his worst tie breaker round
first round was Rubix undeniably, second round Kuty would fully win if he didn't cut it off so quick (imo he still won), and the last round i counted how many critical moves each of them did and Candyman did like maximum 4, while Rubix around 7 so do your calculations 🤌🏽
same tracks everytime, i don’t even understand how these dancers are not tired about it. ( ps: can we stop with this MC, he’s ruining lots of battle and we can’t even hear the beat clearly because of him )
@@totalunconcern The judges are not big fans of the dancing style of the Criminalz dancers (New Hip Hop style). They consider that it has little flow and many tricks. Candyman is also very well known, but he never changes his moves.