The art is a Korean version of Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu. With a fea things added in. It’s effective because Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu was made for warfare and has been proven effective in a combative situation. Hapkido really mains Aikijujutsu as the base of the style.
Yes, the origin is Daito Ryu, but there are more than a few things added. Hapkido contains a large body of native Korean striking techniques, especially kicks. In addition Hapkido has been stylized according to certain principles, such as the use of circular motion. So I would say that it is no longer Aikijujutsu and has evolved into a unique art.
I'm practicing both taekwondo and hapkido. I can defend using taekwondo but only at a distance, once it become close combat, hapkido is the most practical martial arts
@Tommy Vercitti Exactly. I'd take it a bit further and say Hapkido doesn't seem very practical at all as a defensive technique. I'm watching them flip guys that weigh 130lbs. Great if you only expect to get in a fight in China. What about a more realistic expectation like some drunk 280 lb. a**hole in a bar? You think you're going to flip him or hurt him by twisting his wrist? LOL. Comprehensive training is where it's at. Go do boxing, muay thai, krav maga, BJJ. Get good at everything, then maybe you have a chance.
@@KarmasAB123 exactly, people fight through broken bones often, broken noses, hands, toes etc. Unless you break a rib, snap a leg or an arm that's not gonna guarantee a win
@@coolunusual yeah thats why chokes arent a thing in sambo. Because its not practical since it takes way too long to choke someone unconcious. Break someones leg or arm and they cant put up a fight anymore. Not saying sambo is the most practical martial art. Most grappling stuff doesnt work unless its in a 1 on 1 situation.
I hope that you understand that these comments are for your safety. Hapkido while could be useful, I recommend judo for throwing or BJJ for ground work. Im not the most experience practitioner of judo(only reaching 1st dan), but I can say that it is much more effective than hapkido. However, If you are enjoying hapkido, go for it. Who cares if it works or not, its about the fun of the sport. Dont lets these comments get you down, but also dont expect to win only because of hapkido.
Hapkido's best aspect is that it's a mixed martial art, not rigid, tons of styles. It also has some full contact competitions. The best techniques are the ones where you strike first, useless as defense (no guard, head movement).
Have you ever taken hapkido? They showed only a fraction. Hapkido is basically a mixed martial art. Teaches a strike and guard as basics. At least it did when I took it.
@@Dcwood1979 Yes, only until 2 dan. I don't see how this disagrees with my comment. Hapkido has various styles and is mixed. But only in comparison with other traditional rigid martial arts. It's useless to defend yourself vs a beginner level boxer or mma, unless you trick and attack first.
@@benoitdalle8536 Hapkido’s main base martial art is Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu. But is mixed with Judo, Teakkyeon and Tang Soo Do. But Aikijujutsu is the base and is a combat art.
I'm becoming convinced more and more that Hapkido is the best martial art, Especially the joint locks, I am so impressed also the leg to leg lock defense against a middle front side kick ! I have thought of that defense before when sparring in karate class. It is so logical!! Thank you!!
They teach it in special forces in the US I think lol. Also hapkido practitioner, not sure if its the best but its effective. I wouldn't really say any martial art is the best.
Correct me if I am wrong, but Hapkido seems like a "jack of all trades" martial arts. The masters and students are masters of no one particular skill but very knowledgeable in many skills, including weapons. That's what it seems like to me. Would I be wrong in saying this? Of course, I do know that there are ALWAYS exceptions with a few people. It is always possible for a Hapkido master/student to be a master of kicking while most are not near as good as he is. The same for grappling and weapons.
Well what you say could be true of nearly any art. BJJ specializes in ground fighting, yet they practice takedowns, sweeps, and hip tosses. However, these latter techniques are the core of Judo. And Judo has ground techniques but not as good as BJJ. In Hapkido, the weapons are not taught until you become a blackbelt.
I train Muay thai and BJJ. I think Hapkido is pretty useful against streetfights. A lil combi on what I've learned plus Hapkido, I think I would get away from being stabbed
I don't know about the last part, It depends on how Taekwondo is taught by the person teaching. It can be said about any Martial Art that is taught by anyone..
in real life you don't want to risk kicking higher than the belt level especially not the head... you have less of a chance to land a blow and more attacks can be done on you including you being stabbed.
Having studied both (as a black belt), it's the easy answer to say that Combat Hapkido is probably easier to pick up and make use of for self-defense. Combat Hapkido attempts to reduce some of the less practical aspects of traditional Hapkido. But, as someone mentioned elsewhere in these comments, it comes down to the teacher, most of all, and how they approach the discipline. Both versions can be very effective and I state this after having studied Combat Hapkido first, before studying traditional.
I am 165cm and 45kg, still try to increase my weight.. but now i am looking for information about martial arts that suit me.. Any suggestion depends on my body?
Founder of this art was Daito-ryu Aiki jujitsu student under Takeda Sokaku. When Korea became independent, he implemented lot of stuff from Daito-ryu Aiki Jujitsu. Aikido founder was also Daito-ryu jujitsu student Morihei Ueshiba who also learned under the same teacher Takeda Sokaku. So its not surprising when they have lot of similarities.
I mean, yes or no. In Korea the instructors have no problem causing physical pain. It's a different type of instruction than here. Aikido, they tend to exaggerate everything even though there's typically not a lot of pain. There is some exaggeration here for the purpose of the demonstrations, but I don't doubt that these instructors are actually applying real painful locks. They don't have a tendency to hold back. They're quite masochistic in ways
@@straycat1674 That's one thing I noticed. Aikido seems like a cult and do too many theoretical demonstrations without being pressured to the test. Hapkido on the other hand, happen to implement other arts such as TKD and Judo(Yudo) and actually apply theories and techniques of aiki jiujitsu to the test during the sparring. Bcz I have friends who have black belts in both tkd and hapkido bcz they trained them together. I've seen TKD and Hapkido cross trained together but I rarely seen Aikido cross train with any other art. They seem to live in their own lineage world and worship their root forefathers. When I trained in my Muay Thai gym, I've seen people who join from TKD/Hapkido background but for Aikido, we only had one guy who trained in Aikido and then left in less than a month. Guy can barely kick, never sparred full contact once in his life, wasn't really much of a fighter and didnt want to adapt much. But TKD/Hapkido guys were willing to train, adapt and learned conditioning and learned to strike with various limbs other than kicks. Its why I have respect for TKD/Hapkido guys once they cross train or transition to any art.
@@EdDy4RheelZ Don’t get me wrong, aikido guys have a great sense of balance. But they’re taught some very bad habits. Now I understand part of avoiding Andrew in the fall is to go with it, that way when you hit the ground it’s just not a bunch of energy coming to a dead stop. You’re flowing through the technique. But they overcompensate with it. They reach out and hand you their hands and arms. I’ve never really seen as a combat art. I don’t think the founder ever really intended it to be a combat aren’t either. As far as HKD, the biggest issue we have is that the popularity in size of it as well as any martial art makes that you’re gonna have people who just don’t understand what they’re doing, teaching. You have more bad schools than you do good. And again this is the same issue with most martial arts. HKD instructors throughout the years have integrated other things into what they do to try and create something more effective. But when it comes to demonstrations, we’re no different than anybody else. We try to make it look as good as possible showing you theoretically what the fight would look like if it went perfectly for us. It’s just a demonstration is how it goes. And that’s what this video is, a demonstration. Not a real fight. As far as combining taekwondo with HKD, well the problem is traditional HKD kicks differently than taekwondo. They snap at the knee and the power comes from that snap for the most part. Acid comes from the hip. We try to put the hip in the body behind it. Another words as we go to Kik or leg is straightening out during the duration of the entire kick and limit contact it with a straight leg and I still have the power coming from the knee it comes from the hip. Now it’s a little slower of a kick at first. But the practice you develop that speed. As far as HKD being taught in TKD, The problem with that is you’re always going to focus on one art and one arts always going to suffer. And in taekwondo schools, that’s the bread and butter. Children are the bread and butter. So we are getting is not really HKD but HKD based techniques and defenses. In over 40 years I have never had somebody with a black belt in a T Katie @H Katie school come in and I automatically honor their black belt. More often than not they don’t know enough, they don’t do the techniques appropriately for us. Always having to do a lot of correction because far too often many TKD instructors don’t actually take HKD, they do seminars or they have people come by and teach them a few techniques at a time every few months. But the basic fighting ideology, they’re fighting style their movements it’s all TKD. They still fight like a taekwondo practitioner with just some Hapkido thrown in. In HKD, we typically pick on TKD/HKD practitioners big time. We don’t consider them legitimate HKD students. Hell, I’ve had combat H Katie people coming to the old studio back east and was still incredibly disappointed. But that’s a whole Nother story. And unfortunate like I said you’re gonna have a lot of very bad teachers and schools. Far too many seminar masters out there, far too many studio masters and experts. And far too many people who truly don’t understand or grasp what they are doing.
why does everyone think that if something havent been used in MMA , it wont work? MMA is also a sport with rules and weight classes. There are no rules on the street
And where has this ever worked on the streets? What MMA rules would any of these "techniques" break in MMA? These moves work in the WWE and nowhere else
Chan Sung Jung (Korean Zombie) has a 4th degree black belt in Hapkido and Dong Hyun Kim has a 1st degree. Both big names in UFC and MMA in general. MMA = Mixed Martial Arts not everyone is just BJJ and Muay Thai though that is the most common. GSP was kyokushin Karate, Anderson Silva taekwondo, Ronda Rousey Judo and so on. As long as you have a form of stand up like boxing, Muay Thai, karate, taekwondo and a ground game like Jiu Jitsu, wrestling, catch wrestling, sambo, judo then you’re good.
@@EricTheActor805 well, have you asked people who practice Hapkido if they have used it? As to what rules will it break ? well, breaking bones and dislocating joints for instance. but Okay, if you know everything , then that's fine. Nothing else to say here. you're right .
Hapkido’s techniques that involve catching punches out of thin air never cease to amuse me. But Hapkido does have good kicks and joint locks (though i would add more punches if i was to modify it)
@@KarmasAB123 yeah, but being where it came from (and SK being so small) you actually can have access to a legitimate hapkido dojang, instead of mister overweight and his army of middle schoolers
Good. Day. This. Is. Francisco. Antonio. Ramirez. Garcia. I. Am. Filipino. Citizen. I. Am. Here. In. Republic. Of. The. Philippines. I. Have. Pet. Dog. I. Have. Philippine. Passport. To. Travel. After. Covid. Much. Better. To. Become. Ninja. If. You. Are. Black. Belter. In. Hapkido. Because. Hapkido. Is. The. Way. To. Become. Ninja. Thanks. So. Much
The "flips" are actually break-falls. Falling properly and safely is one of the first things a beginner to HKD must learn, in order to train effectively and safely. The break-fall is the most-advanced fall that most students learn along the way, and one specifically designed to allow them to be "thrown" without suffering torn ligaments, muscles or broken bones. Done for real out in the world, hapkido techniques are quite deadly and very effective, particularly against opponents who are not experienced in hand-to-hand fighting or how to counter such techniques. Even experienced martial artists who are naive to being joint-locked, can sometimes react in a panicked fashion. And a properly applied lock, even if you know what's coming and how to counter or less its impact, still hurts a great deal. Ask me how I know! (been there, done that, got the scars to prove it)
@@GeorgiaBoy1961so you confirmed what I said, flip or get broken lol... go with the flow so to speak because you react against it, you will tear ligaments and break bones.
Japanese Aikido and Korean Hapkido refer to themselves as "sister arts," but not because hapkido comes from aikido. It is because both arts have roots in Japanese jujitsu. Hapkido is its own system, since when Korea separated from Japan after WWII, the founders of modern hapkido took it in their own unique direction.
if martial artists that do [Karate: Kyokushin, Wado-Ryu, & Goju Ryu], American Kenpo, Eskrima/Kali/Arnis, Savate, Muay Thai & MMA learn and bend together with Hapkido it would make them sufficient enough to survive out on the streets!
obviously never had to use for anything else right? Let me guess you watch mma do some grappling and think you are the authority? You are the type to sit there watching a fight.. i would do that.. i would do this i would kick his ass. The first step to any martial art is humility. You have not learned that yet.
Judo/Boxing combination is best, and if you have time, do some BJJ as well. If you dont like boxing, which is really good to learn how to dudge punches, then try taekwondo or kickboxing.
@@taylorbee4010 I know, but it would be weird to have one if you didn't need it to lean on. And if a cop knew about the connection between hapkido and canes, they might think you were looking for trouble.
실전 무도가가 실전을 논하려면 광견병걸린 대형견과 그냥 싸우게 하던가 그냥 칼이나 창을든 살기가 든 사람하고 실전 무도가는 무조건 맨손으로 무규칙 싸움을 하게 하거나 오대일로 무규칙 싸움을 의무화 해야 한다. 사람이 죽을 수는 있지만 실전은 검증됨 이런식으로 십년동안 700번 정도 싸우면
You're telling me that Sunoo is a blackbelter in this martial arts? Daebak. So cool.
Pov: your here to watch cuz sunoo knows how to hapkido
yes i got curios what is hapkido hjdshgshghs
Ba't alam mo? Lol.
Hala mare pano mo nalaman
Pano mo nalaman(3)
Ako lng to guys
Ur telling me sunoo knows how to do this goddamn
The art is a Korean version of Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu. With a fea things added in. It’s effective because Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu was made for warfare and has been proven effective in a combative situation. Hapkido really mains Aikijujutsu as the base of the style.
Yes, you are right. The Chinese characters of HapKido are the same as Akido which also came from Akijujutsu.
So tkd's karate and hapkido's judo with Korean touch? Nice
Yes, the origin is Daito Ryu, but there are more than a few things added. Hapkido contains a large body of native Korean striking techniques, especially kicks. In addition Hapkido has been stylized according to certain principles, such as the use of circular motion. So I would say that it is no longer Aikijujutsu and has evolved into a unique art.
Hapkido also has karate(tang soo do) strikes and police arresting techniques and throws
02:37 Is this Sitting Sweep kick called 앉어 돌아 차기 or 낙이오 몸 돌려 차기 or 아래 뒤돌려 차기 or 아래 뒤후리기 ?
It called 앉아돌아차기
@@Jkkd8832 Ok. It does make sense. Thank you.
A Masterful demonstration of Hapkido. I also observed the symbol of the Koreans Marine Corps on the wall.
same, I'm here just because of Sunoo from Enhypen ksksksk
I love going to the comments for the real martial artists
if you sift out the UA-cam fighters, some folks have some good insight.
Lol...yeah the keyboard warriors who think they know it all
Vyshawn foreman didn’t you know? Keyboard warrior is the most fierce martial art
@@itsmehaven6917 Lmfao
We welcome you to our ua-cam.com/users/thapkido page.
El Hapkido puede servir para un Escolta ?
I love Korean techniques wanted learn it.
I'm practicing both taekwondo and hapkido. I can defend using taekwondo but only at a distance, once it become close combat, hapkido is the most practical martial arts
@Tommy Vercitti Exactly. I'd take it a bit further and say Hapkido doesn't seem very practical at all as a defensive technique. I'm watching them flip guys that weigh 130lbs. Great if you only expect to get in a fight in China. What about a more realistic expectation like some drunk 280 lb. a**hole in a bar? You think you're going to flip him or hurt him by twisting his wrist? LOL. Comprehensive training is where it's at. Go do boxing, muay thai, krav maga, BJJ. Get good at everything, then maybe you have a chance.
@@tommyv5435 I would say any technique which RELIES on pain-compliance is unlikely to work against experienced opponents.
@@KarmasAB123 exactly, people fight through broken bones often, broken noses, hands, toes etc. Unless you break a rib, snap a leg or an arm that's not gonna guarantee a win
@@coolunusual yeah thats why chokes arent a thing in sambo. Because its not practical since it takes way too long to choke someone unconcious. Break someones leg or arm and they cant put up a fight anymore. Not saying sambo is the most practical martial art. Most grappling stuff doesnt work unless its in a 1 on 1 situation.
I hope that you understand that these comments are for your safety. Hapkido while could be useful, I recommend judo for throwing or BJJ for ground work. Im not the most experience practitioner of judo(only reaching 1st dan), but I can say that it is much more effective than hapkido. However, If you are enjoying hapkido, go for it. Who cares if it works or not, its about the fun of the sport. Dont lets these comments get you down, but also dont expect to win only because of hapkido.
What is the throw at 2:02?
Hapkido's best aspect is that it's a mixed martial art, not rigid, tons of styles. It also has some full contact competitions.
The best techniques are the ones where you strike first, useless as defense (no guard, head movement).
Have you ever taken hapkido? They showed only a fraction. Hapkido is basically a mixed martial art. Teaches a strike and guard as basics. At least it did when I took it.
@@Dcwood1979 Yes, only until 2 dan. I don't see how this disagrees with my comment. Hapkido has various styles and is mixed. But only in comparison with other traditional rigid martial arts.
It's useless to defend yourself vs a beginner level boxer or mma, unless you trick and attack first.
@@benoitdalle8536 Hapkido’s main base martial art is Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu. But is mixed with Judo, Teakkyeon and Tang Soo Do.
But Aikijujutsu is the base and is a combat art.
So it's like a bit less popular Asian mma
Excelente video. 😀😀
I'm becoming convinced more and more that Hapkido is the best martial art, Especially the joint locks, I am so impressed also the leg to leg lock defense against a middle front side kick ! I have thought of that defense before when sparring in karate class. It is so logical!! Thank you!!
They teach it in special forces in the US I think lol. Also hapkido practitioner, not sure if its the best but its effective. I wouldn't really say any martial art is the best.
True. I'd say it's all depending on the situation
Hapkido is amazing and painful to learn.
People talking about Sunoo, but I’m here because Scorpion used it in 3D Mortal Kombat games, a fictional Japanese ninja.
you're not alone bro
Correct me if I am wrong, but Hapkido seems like a "jack of all trades" martial arts. The masters and students are masters of no one particular skill but very knowledgeable in many skills, including weapons. That's what it seems like to me. Would I be wrong in saying this? Of course, I do know that there are ALWAYS exceptions with a few people. It is always possible for a Hapkido master/student to be a master of kicking while most are not near as good as he is. The same for grappling and weapons.
Well what you say could be true of nearly any art. BJJ specializes in ground fighting, yet they practice takedowns, sweeps, and hip tosses. However, these latter techniques are the core of Judo. And Judo has ground techniques but not as good as BJJ. In Hapkido, the weapons are not taught until you become a blackbelt.
I train Muay thai and BJJ. I think Hapkido is pretty useful against streetfights. A lil combi on what I've learned plus Hapkido, I think I would get away from being stabbed
Hapkido is really underrated. Honestly hapkido is more useful in real life scenarios then taekwondo.
I don't know about the last part, It depends on how Taekwondo is taught by the person teaching. It can be said about any Martial Art that is taught by anyone..
We welcome you to our ua-cam.com/users/thapkido page.
So is a paper bag!
in real life you don't want to risk kicking higher than the belt level especially not the head... you have less of a chance to land a blow and more attacks can be done on you including you being stabbed.
SO, YOU THING THAT A SHIT IT'S BETTER THAN, A GREAT SHIT.
So you're telling me Sunoo's black belter here wt- 😳
Please make more content. This is thé highest form of Martial Art to me. One love from Belgium ❤️
Ang cute ni sunoo tingnan pero kaya ka pala niyang balibagin😭😭👍
Hupkido is my great dream. My first love is martial art.
I want to know the location of this dojo.
the correct kroean word for learning center or "way place" is "Do jang ", "Dojo" is a japanese word with the same meaning
look interesting. i wish there are Hapkido centre here in Sabah. i would like to learn it
I am considering to join hapkido but what is the difference between Hapkido and Combat Hapkido and which one is better?
Having studied both (as a black belt), it's the easy answer to say that Combat Hapkido is probably easier to pick up and make use of for self-defense. Combat Hapkido attempts to reduce some of the less practical aspects of traditional Hapkido. But, as someone mentioned elsewhere in these comments, it comes down to the teacher, most of all, and how they approach the discipline. Both versions can be very effective and I state this after having studied Combat Hapkido first, before studying traditional.
I am 165cm and 45kg, still try to increase my weight.. but now i am looking for information about martial arts that suit me..
Any suggestion depends on my body?
judo, wrestling, boxing.
bjj
sunoo brought me here
Looks to me that there is a little Aikido going on in the reaction of the Uke’s.
Founder of this art was Daito-ryu Aiki jujitsu student under Takeda Sokaku. When Korea became independent, he implemented lot of stuff from Daito-ryu Aiki Jujitsu. Aikido founder was also Daito-ryu jujitsu student Morihei Ueshiba who also learned under the same teacher Takeda Sokaku. So its not surprising when they have lot of similarities.
I mean, yes or no. In Korea the instructors have no problem causing physical pain. It's a different type of instruction than here. Aikido, they tend to exaggerate everything even though there's typically not a lot of pain. There is some exaggeration here for the purpose of the demonstrations, but I don't doubt that these instructors are actually applying real painful locks. They don't have a tendency to hold back. They're quite masochistic in ways
@@straycat1674 That's one thing I noticed. Aikido seems like a cult and do too many theoretical demonstrations without being pressured to the test. Hapkido on the other hand, happen to implement other arts such as TKD and Judo(Yudo) and actually apply theories and techniques of aiki jiujitsu to the test during the sparring. Bcz I have friends who have black belts in both tkd and hapkido bcz they trained them together. I've seen TKD and Hapkido cross trained together but I rarely seen Aikido cross train with any other art. They seem to live in their own lineage world and worship their root forefathers. When I trained in my Muay Thai gym, I've seen people who join from TKD/Hapkido background but for Aikido, we only had one guy who trained in Aikido and then left in less than a month. Guy can barely kick, never sparred full contact once in his life, wasn't really much of a fighter and didnt want to adapt much. But TKD/Hapkido guys were willing to train, adapt and learned conditioning and learned to strike with various limbs other than kicks. Its why I have respect for TKD/Hapkido guys once they cross train or transition to any art.
@@EdDy4RheelZ Don’t get me wrong, aikido guys have a great sense of balance. But they’re taught some very bad habits. Now I understand part of avoiding Andrew in the fall is to go with it, that way when you hit the ground it’s just not a bunch of energy coming to a dead stop. You’re flowing through the technique. But they overcompensate with it. They reach out and hand you their hands and arms. I’ve never really seen as a combat art. I don’t think the founder ever really intended it to be a combat aren’t either.
As far as HKD, the biggest issue we have is that the popularity in size of it as well as any martial art makes that you’re gonna have people who just don’t understand what they’re doing, teaching. You have more bad schools than you do good. And again this is the same issue with most martial arts. HKD instructors throughout the years have integrated other things into what they do to try and create something more effective. But when it comes to demonstrations, we’re no different than anybody else. We try to make it look as good as possible showing you theoretically what the fight would look like if it went perfectly for us. It’s just a demonstration is how it goes. And that’s what this video is, a demonstration. Not a real fight.
As far as combining taekwondo with HKD, well the problem is traditional HKD kicks differently than taekwondo. They snap at the knee and the power comes from that snap for the most part. Acid comes from the hip. We try to put the hip in the body behind it. Another words as we go to Kik or leg is straightening out during the duration of the entire kick and limit contact it with a straight leg and I still have the power coming from the knee it comes from the hip. Now it’s a little slower of a kick at first. But the practice you develop that speed. As far as HKD being taught in TKD, The problem with that is you’re always going to focus on one art and one arts always going to suffer. And in taekwondo schools, that’s the bread and butter. Children are the bread and butter. So we are getting is not really HKD but HKD based techniques and defenses. In over 40 years I have never had somebody with a black belt in a T Katie @H Katie school come in and I automatically honor their black belt. More often than not they don’t know enough, they don’t do the techniques appropriately for us. Always having to do a lot of correction because far too often many TKD instructors don’t actually take HKD, they do seminars or they have people come by and teach them a few techniques at a time every few months. But the basic fighting ideology, they’re fighting style their movements it’s all TKD. They still fight like a taekwondo practitioner with just some Hapkido thrown in. In HKD, we typically pick on TKD/HKD practitioners big time. We don’t consider them legitimate HKD students.
Hell, I’ve had combat H Katie people coming to the old studio back east and was still incredibly disappointed. But that’s a whole Nother story. And unfortunate like I said you’re gonna have a lot of very bad teachers and schools. Far too many seminar masters out there, far too many studio masters and experts. And far too many people who truly don’t understand or grasp what they are doing.
@@EdDy4RheelZ yeah i definitely think there is legitimacy to hapkido. Wrist locks in general are very underrated. Theyre banned in ufc for a reason.
why does everyone think that if something havent been used in MMA , it wont work? MMA is also a sport with rules and weight classes. There are no rules on the street
And where has this ever worked on the streets?
What MMA rules would any of these "techniques" break in MMA?
These moves work in the WWE and nowhere else
Wich is exactly why the mma fighter would fuck you up even worse on the street
Chan Sung Jung (Korean Zombie) has a 4th degree black belt in Hapkido and Dong Hyun Kim has a 1st degree. Both big names in UFC and MMA in general. MMA = Mixed Martial Arts not everyone is just BJJ and Muay Thai though that is the most common. GSP was kyokushin Karate, Anderson Silva taekwondo, Ronda Rousey Judo and so on. As long as you have a form of stand up like boxing, Muay Thai, karate, taekwondo and a ground game like Jiu Jitsu, wrestling, catch wrestling, sambo, judo then you’re good.
People who can fight with rules can fight w/o them and better than the person that practice “self defense” martial arts. Like Hapkido 😌
@@EricTheActor805 well, have you asked people who practice Hapkido if they have used it?
As to what rules will it break ? well, breaking bones and dislocating joints for instance.
but Okay, if you know everything , then that's fine. Nothing else to say here. you're right .
I'm studying ASVAB to join the military police while I am under quarantine through the Covid-19, I would love to practice Hapkido and Karate
dont waste your time with Karate, but if you're willing to commit yourself study hapkido and stick with it. You will be deadly
Beautiful nice Hapkido
Anyone know of a legitimate Hapkido school in Los Angeles?
Wowww massa
Imagine nakipag away ka kay sunoo tapos ganto ginawa sayo
Hapkido skills korean fighting techniques
It looks same like aikido isn't it ?
Nothing beats korean martial arts
so this is Baekhyun's sport where he's level three black belter and won gold medals on national competition. Wow!
how did u know?
Hapkido’s techniques that involve catching punches out of thin air never cease to amuse me. But Hapkido does have good kicks and joint locks (though i would add more punches if i was to modify it)
I need to go to Korea...
They have it all over the world.
@@KarmasAB123 too big of a risk of going into a mcdojo
@@BrenoGF144 There're McDojos in Korea, too.
@@KarmasAB123 yeah, but being where it came from (and SK being so small) you actually can have access to a legitimate hapkido dojang, instead of mister overweight and his army of middle schoolers
Muito bom!! 🇧🇷👊🇰🇷JJ
ㄹㅇㅋㅋ
Perfect
Good. Day. This. Is. Francisco. Antonio. Ramirez. Garcia. I. Am. Filipino. Citizen. I. Am. Here. In. Republic. Of. The. Philippines. I. Have. Pet. Dog. I. Have. Philippine. Passport. To. Travel. After. Covid. Much. Better. To. Become. Ninja. If. You. Are. Black. Belter. In. Hapkido. Because. Hapkido. Is. The. Way. To. Become. Ninja. Thanks. So. Much
Here bcs of sunoo oh Lord he can do this😭
🇰🇷と聞けばテコンドーが有名だから似たようなものかと思ったら全然違った‼️😮
これは興味あるなぁ😃
実戦的な感じがする。日本では習えないのかな❓️
@U.Cさん、 返信ありがとうございます。
へぇ、まったく知らずに生きてきた😮もう歳だから無理だろうけど、興味はあります😃👍
Hapkido also involves powerful kicks and punching it’s a pretty complete martial art for self defence
could the average hapkido student use this in a real street fight where stufff is happening fast and random. or even against a MMA fighter?
Depends on the student-how he’s taught, how he trains, and how quick he is.
MUITO SHOW
So Park Jimin is doing this. He is deadly. OMG Baby Mochi!
I like 👍♥
We welcome you to our ua-cam.com/users/thapkido page.
0:28 합기도 하면 맨날 보는 사진인데 무슨 기술인지는 모른다는 그 기술 ㅋㅋㅋ 1:08 여기도 또 나옴
Boxing+TaeKwonDo+Hapkido+Shuai Jiao is my martial path 🥋
Actually ITF Tae Kwon Do or MooDuk Kwon, boxing & Kodokan Judo is the way to go
합기도를 한자로 적으면 일본의 아이끼도와 같은 한자입니다
합기도는 일본에서 아이끼도를 배운 분들이 만드셨다고 합니다
발차기가 없는 아이끼도와는 다르게 발차기가 접목된것이 제일 큰 차이입니다
정확히 아시네요 닮은 부분도 있지만 엄연히 다른무술이고 각자무술마다 매력이 있죠!
lol i'm here bc of sunoo
꺽기난 던지기 기술들이 스파링을 할 때도 사용이 되어야 하는데...
맞습니다. 저도 합기도관장이지만 겨루기대회를 보면 저게합기도인지 태권도인지 모르겠네요 오히려 태권도보다는 유도처럼 맞붙어서 술기로만 대련을해야 빠르고힘있게 호신술을 상대방에게 쓸수있다고 생각합니다 그래서 저는 술기로만 겨루기를 시키고있습니다
@@프리덤조로 Very good work!
@@프리덤조로 관장맞으세요? 관절기를 어떻게 안전하게 대련에 적용시킬건가요?
Aikido vs hapk9do ???
Some of those flips look exaggerated, but if you don't flip, the joint they're attacking will break
Good point
that's the entire point, you jump your own butt or get broke.. choices hmmm make it fast you got less than a second to make that decision.
The "flips" are actually break-falls. Falling properly and safely is one of the first things a beginner to HKD must learn, in order to train effectively and safely. The break-fall is the most-advanced fall that most students learn along the way, and one specifically designed to allow them to be "thrown" without suffering torn ligaments, muscles or broken bones. Done for real out in the world, hapkido techniques are quite deadly and very effective, particularly against opponents who are not experienced in hand-to-hand fighting or how to counter such techniques. Even experienced martial artists who are naive to being joint-locked, can sometimes react in a panicked fashion. And a properly applied lock, even if you know what's coming and how to counter or less its impact, still hurts a great deal. Ask me how I know! (been there, done that, got the scars to prove it)
@@GeorgiaBoy1961so you confirmed what I said, flip or get broken lol... go with the flow so to speak because you react against it, you will tear ligaments and break bones.
I got my 2nd degree black belt in TKD at the kukkiwan. Just do BJJ for close up, Thai boxing for mid range.
Just hilarios!
0:29
Lmao
Hapkido for 合氣道 is Korean pronounciation and Akido for 合氣道 is Japanese pronounciation.
Actually , Korean Hapkido was from Japanese Akido.
Incorrect....hapkido and aikido are both derived from Daito-ryu Aikijujitsu
Japanese Aikido and Korean Hapkido refer to themselves as "sister arts," but not because hapkido comes from aikido. It is because both arts have roots in Japanese jujitsu. Hapkido is its own system, since when Korea separated from Japan after WWII, the founders of modern hapkido took it in their own unique direction.
çıkardığım tek şey asyalılarla düşman olmamalıyız
if martial artists that do [Karate: Kyokushin, Wado-Ryu, & Goju Ryu], American Kenpo, Eskrima/Kali/Arnis, Savate, Muay Thai & MMA learn and bend together with Hapkido it would make them sufficient enough to survive out on the streets!
It’s actually a higher evolved more complete self defense art than daito ryu aikijujutsu it incorporates an arsenal of kicking and hand techniques
Very amusing for exhibitions .
obviously never had to use for anything else right? Let me guess you watch mma do some grappling and think you are the authority? You are the type to sit there watching a fight.. i would do that.. i would do this i would kick his ass. The first step to any martial art is humility. You have not learned that yet.
Почему на состязаниях любое красивое искусство превращается в банальное рубилово?
70년대 궁중무술 국술원 합기도 그거네.. 검은도복에 요새 태권도하는애들처럼 공중회전많이하던.. 부채술 지팡이술 그런거에 중국 쌍절곤도 돌리고..
Judo/Boxing combination is best, and if you have time, do some BJJ as well. If you dont like boxing, which is really good to learn how to dudge punches, then try taekwondo or kickboxing.
Azawajal pbuh saw swt rijal eman subhanah wataala
KIM CHILE EN - лучший мастер.....
합기도하면 지한재씨 아닌가요. 1974년 이소룡사마유희에 등장했던
❤❤
Anna Williams and Nina Williams!!!
Shou de bola!!
POOOOOOOOOOP
The flips are real because if you don't follow through with it you can break your wrist or joints.
Amazing !!
We welcome you to our ua-cam.com/users/thapkido page.
합기도는 필요없는 수가 너무 많다
꼭 필요한 수만 섭렵 시켜라
필요없다고 생각하는 수가 필요할지 어케아냐
@@lomo659
그럼 많이 해라
원래 시범단 시범이랑 실제랑은 차이가 있지. 태권도 시범이랑 실제 겨루기 경기랑 다른 것처럼.
2:09 sapuan
So do these people just walk around with canes for self-defense? That hasn't been a stylish thing for like 80 years.
They can be used where guns aren't allowed though.
@@taylorbee4010 I know, but it would be weird to have one if you didn't need it to lean on. And if a cop knew about the connection between hapkido and canes, they might think you were looking for trouble.
Appalachian trail.
@@jwhippet8313 What about it?
@@KarmasAB123 , everyone on the Appalachian Trail carries a stick.
Like the aikido
1:16 lmao the guy was striking the air???
Some of the locks from my hapkido class are also taught in my BJJ class. But theres a lot of fluff in the hapkido class that is far less useful
We welcome you to our ua-cam.com/users/thapkido page.
UFC Bellator and MMA time!!!!!!!!!
Alessio Peluso
master Hapkido
Europe Hapkido Organization
Italy
실전 무도가가 실전을 논하려면 광견병걸린 대형견과 그냥 싸우게 하던가 그냥 칼이나 창을든 살기가 든 사람하고 실전 무도가는 무조건 맨손으로 무규칙 싸움을 하게 하거나 오대일로 무규칙 싸움을 의무화 해야 한다. 사람이 죽을 수는 있지만 실전은 검증됨 이런식으로 십년동안 700번 정도 싸우면
Hapkido is the best martial art in the world
합기도, 다른 무술에 비해 손기술도 약하고 발기술도 약하고.. 관절 기술은 자기네 대련에서도 못써먹고... 환골탈태하지 않으면 도태될 겁니다.
La case de papel!
sweetie this is a post about hapkido not money heist 😂😂
They sai Aikido, but good catch!! I thought of the same thing. The person above couldn't figure out the connection, tho
Тай4вандо клясь тозе
Похожи карате кун7фу даже стиль тайквандо итак далее похожи даже давит который занемался кемпо
Tudo já combinado
hapkido JJK, GM LEE Chang Soo , originel style, i like
전통은 아니지 안나 애초에 아이키도에서 한국화된건데
저도 그렇게 알고 있어요 ㅋㅋㅋ
These guys look very rough. I like it though. :D
This is an imitation of the Aikido and Karate.
@@nouvalrachman But they don't seem to understand Aikido-jutsu and Jiu-jitsu at all = an imitation remains an imitation
이런거 아직도하나ㅋ
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