Köszi a videót, nagyon sokat segített! Én nemrég váltottam a Yau-ra de én a last 2 edges-t mindig valahogy úgy tudtam csak megoldani, hogy a kereszt is kicsit szét jött... most láttam hogy te csinálsz egy x átfogást, U, algó, és végül U' és x' (jobb módszer mint az enyém volt) :D
Örülök , hogy hasznos volt :D Van egy táblázat az utolsó 2 élre Yau-val , hátha segít valamit docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BTMtZ33l6E76kxe67G3DkgAbGWbDmf1M2vAnsaNYYUk/edit
I started doing 5x5 around one month ago and while your last 4 edge cycles were super efficient, most of the rest is similar to my solution. However, you average mid 40s, and I average 1:30. Is there any quicker way to get faster other than doing a lot of solves, or would you recommend other things (i.e. doing slow solves, look ahead exercises, etc.)
First of all, congrats, 1:30 after one month is really good! Personally, I would recommend untimed solves, this is what I do most of the time and I’ve found that is is what helps me the most. You just pick up the cube casually, scramble it (handscrambles are perfectly fine for this type of practice) and try to find efficient ways to solve certain cases. Of course, watching example solves is necessary too, but in order to implement the things that you’ve learned from those videos, doing untimed solves is probably the way to go in my opinion. As for the lookahead, it definitely gets better with by, you need to do a lot of solves to get confident in terms of you decisions during the solve and to select the best cases almost every time. Turning a bit slower during the edges might help too, as for the centers spamming TPS should work just fine (the lookahead is easier during the centers). Also, casually doing 6x6/7x7 could also help, however I’m not sure that at this point it would be the best way to work if you want to concentrate on 5x5
I started 5×5recently I use mgc5 and yau method any things that I should keep in mind so I don't adapt bad habits which will be helpful for the long run?
You should watch example solves, I think that that’s a great way to learn how to do things efficiently. When you’re starting out, I’d say that pausing for a case that you know you could do more efficiently is better than doing the inefficient solution straight away, because this is going to get into your muscle memory as well. Do a lot of untimed solves as well, that gives you the opportunity to be more creative in terms of solutions
These are just rough splits, I don’t know what you strengths are, but these seem the most obvious ones to me: F2C ~ 8 First 3 cross edges ~ 8-10 L4C - 10 LCE ~ 4-5 L8E ~ 15-17 3x3 sub 12 This depends on how good your 3x3 stage is, but if you’re doing well at it, you could cut from the other splits as well
Köszi a videót, nagyon sokat segített! Én nemrég váltottam a Yau-ra de én a last 2 edges-t mindig valahogy úgy tudtam csak megoldani, hogy a kereszt is kicsit szét jött... most láttam hogy te csinálsz egy x átfogást, U, algó, és végül U' és x' (jobb módszer mint az enyém volt) :D
Örülök , hogy hasznos volt :D Van egy táblázat az utolsó 2 élre Yau-val , hátha segít valamit docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BTMtZ33l6E76kxe67G3DkgAbGWbDmf1M2vAnsaNYYUk/edit
Super video, felicitari! :)
Mersi ! :)
this was very helpful can you make a similar video on 6x6
Thank you ! 😀 Yes , I will do one for 6x6 and 7x7 soon
Make 4*4 please
I started doing 5x5 around one month ago and while your last 4 edge cycles were super efficient, most of the rest is similar to my solution. However, you average mid 40s, and I average 1:30. Is there any quicker way to get faster other than doing a lot of solves, or would you recommend other things (i.e. doing slow solves, look ahead exercises, etc.)
First of all, congrats, 1:30 after one month is really good! Personally, I would recommend untimed solves, this is what I do most of the time and I’ve found that is is what helps me the most. You just pick up the cube casually, scramble it (handscrambles are perfectly fine for this type of practice) and try to find efficient ways to solve certain cases. Of course, watching example solves is necessary too, but in order to implement the things that you’ve learned from those videos, doing untimed solves is probably the way to go in my opinion. As for the lookahead, it definitely gets better with by, you need to do a lot of solves to get confident in terms of you decisions during the solve and to select the best cases almost every time. Turning a bit slower during the edges might help too, as for the centers spamming TPS should work just fine (the lookahead is easier during the centers). Also, casually doing 6x6/7x7 could also help, however I’m not sure that at this point it would be the best way to work if you want to concentrate on 5x5
@@janosbereczki7040 Thanks for the detailed advice!
I started 5×5recently I use mgc5 and yau method
any things that I should keep in mind so I don't adapt bad habits which will be helpful for the long run?
You should watch example solves, I think that that’s a great way to learn how to do things efficiently. When you’re starting out, I’d say that pausing for a case that you know you could do more efficiently is better than doing the inefficient solution straight away, because this is going to get into your muscle memory as well. Do a lot of untimed solves as well, that gives you the opportunity to be more creative in terms of solutions
Plz give me the splits for sub 1 5x5 .
F2c ??
First 4 edges??
L4C??.
Last 8 edges??
And 3x3 stage...
These are just rough splits, I don’t know what you strengths are, but these seem the most obvious ones to me:
F2C ~ 8
First 3 cross edges ~ 8-10
L4C - 10
LCE ~ 4-5
L8E ~ 15-17
3x3 sub 12
This depends on how good your 3x3 stage is, but if you’re doing well at it, you could cut from the other splits as well
@@janosbereczki7040 owww Thanxalot....
good
Thank you!
Is the valk good for redux
Also thanks a lot for the helpful tutorial
Yes , I’ve used it before I switched to Yau too , it worked well for redux too