personally I prefer the Aoshi WRM i enjoy the Meilong V2M but it is MUCH less stable and the middle slice magnet strength is WAY more pronounced/too strong xompared to other inner layer alices than on the WRM... (at least on my cubes here haha)
@@cubestur8157 I found that my comp nerves are relatively worse in the morning and I end up preferring the more stable cube, while in the later parts afternoon when the comp drags on (and more so if I'm staffing) I start getting more tired I start preferring the cube that takes less effort to turn. Kind of experienced this with the Aochuang WRM and Valk before getting the Hong, where my Valk was unmodded and faster (naturally a rock-solid cube that I decided against core-magnetizing), while my Aochuang had been core-magnetized with rods like a Gan 12 and was comparably stable while offering better corner cutting and allignment, so the Aochuang became the a.m cube while the Valk became the p.m. cube. The Meilong 6 seems better than the Aoshi in speed and size, but the stability issues kind of prevented a total takeover like the Meilong 7 did to the Aofu. (rectified the stability a bit with the core magnets and Angstrom setup) I think the Aoshi adds up to be the better cube overall, the Meilong should have come with slightly stronger springs. Somehow on my Meilong 6 the 2nd and 3rd layers feel the same while the outer is the weakest, which in my opinion is the perfect combo
Noice one bro, WTG! 😎
also, I am curious:
why do you say morning versus afternoon affects which cube you would solve with?
personally I prefer the Aoshi WRM
i enjoy the Meilong V2M but it is MUCH less stable and the middle slice magnet strength is WAY more pronounced/too strong xompared to other inner layer alices than on the WRM... (at least on my cubes here haha)
@@cubestur8157 I found that my comp nerves are relatively worse in the morning and I end up preferring the more stable cube, while in the later parts afternoon when the comp drags on (and more so if I'm staffing) I start getting more tired I start preferring the cube that takes less effort to turn.
Kind of experienced this with the Aochuang WRM and Valk before getting the Hong, where my Valk was unmodded and faster (naturally a rock-solid cube that I decided against core-magnetizing), while my Aochuang had been core-magnetized with rods like a Gan 12 and was comparably stable while offering better corner cutting and allignment, so the Aochuang became the a.m cube while the Valk became the p.m. cube.
The Meilong 6 seems better than the Aoshi in speed and size, but the stability issues kind of prevented a total takeover like the Meilong 7 did to the Aofu. (rectified the stability a bit with the core magnets and Angstrom setup) I think the Aoshi adds up to be the better cube overall, the Meilong should have come with slightly stronger springs.
Somehow on my Meilong 6 the 2nd and 3rd layers feel the same while the outer is the weakest, which in my opinion is the perfect combo