Pretty freakin stale to watch IMO ,almost as stale as sleepfighter...I mean street fighter
Obviously. Who could deny that. I was js, if you haven't played any of the other tekkens its no reason to let it discourage you. ttt2 is the only one ive really tried to learn and im learning and getting better and better.Okay.
Tekken has characters with at least 80 moves to learn. No, not all of them are used, but it's extremely easy to get caught off-guard with some rarely-used string or move because you simply never see it. Mind you, there's 50+ characters in Tekken now. You have to compete against players have like a decade's worth of experience vs these movesets, which don't receive entire overhauls in most cases. Who have 10 years worth of BDC and wavedash execution as well. And know the system like the back of their hand.
There is quite a lot to learn and to catch up with. If you are just starting out, you have a LOOOONG way to go.
srry. dk howWhy don't you post in the right subforum?
moved to Tekken
Dude tekken can be real hype to watch at real high level play. I love the art and gameplay. It doesn't really require any legacy knowledge. And it wouldn't be impossible to be the best in America if more people would actually play it so we could have better competition, and we'd also have good feuds.
TTT1 was the peak imo, although DR was definitely good times.It's still a good game, but it probably peaked in the modern era with DR. My opinion, at least. That's the last Tekken that I truly had fun with and actively wanted to play. I imagine the other old-schoolers like Slips, Bit, Blackula, and whoever else here played DR back in the day would mostly agree.
Agreed... that's what I meant to convey. TTT was certainly the pinnacle of both amazing matches and popularity, but I'd say DR was the last time I was truly having fun playing. T6 was such ass that I quit playing after 2 weeks, even though I'd been a die-hard Tekken guy since T3.TTT1 was the peak imo, although DR was definitely good times.