after watching the whole video i gotta say this guide is extremely easy to understand, and can translate well to just about any other fighting game, incredible work!
I am a tekken player so some of these basic things like "which moves are overheads" i've never had to think about. Thank you for breaking things down in a way a beginner can fully understand which aspects of the game are important to focus on.
I cant thank you enough for your 3s videos. I've been playing and continue to play 3s for over a decade and still love to learn about the game. Keep up the great work!
yo, this is amazing stuff, you heavily inspired my guides with your style of breaking the characters down to a few key details to make a video like this is more useful than most new players will ever realize, thank you for your videos! keep up the good work
Im suuuuper new to this all and wanted to thank you for making these. Theyve helped me a ton as a beginner and made me feel a little less lost lol. Id love to see stuff like this in the future every now and then but I understand if thats not on the table
Thanks bro, very based guide, even if It didn't answer my question which was "what to do when cornered/pressured as Makoto" vs an enemy mixing up on your face, especially at low level.
I'm new to 3s, and so far I don't understand what to do. I have watched guides and read the wiki, but when I'm actually playing a real match, I have no clue what is going on. My opponent is using footsies, jumping in, mix ups, using okizeme, throwing. I wish there was an educational video that used a real match as an example or something similar. Most of the time when I tell people that I don't know what to do in a real match, I get the usual response: "Go to training mode/practice more".
Decide for yourself what it is you want to do. Winning is more of a bonus. Tell yourself "I'm gonna try my best to land this new thing" and try to land it. Eventually you will build up a repertoire will still having fun win or lose.
My suggestion - get on Fightcade and ask if someone wants to play unranked games just to help you learn. I did this for a while. Yes, there are lots of trolls and real @$$holes on there, but there are also lots of people willing to just mess around and show you the ropes. Use the in game chat, ask them questions between matches. Play matches focused on practicing parry, matches focused on punishes, matches focused on opening up the opponent's defense. Ask your counterpart how they did something that surprised you, what do you need to STOP doing, what do you need to START doing, etc... You basically just need to find a generous, chill person with time on their hands. Find someone who will fight you with all sorts of different characters, or maybe the characters that you struggle against. Put yourself out there and somebody will be willing to help. It's about having fun anyway, right? I still suck at 3S for the most part, but I would be absolutely clueless had I not done this. Discord groups help, and get on Twitch and finding the 3S streamers who are actually cool.
after watching the whole video i gotta say this guide is extremely easy to understand, and can translate well to just about any other fighting game, incredible work!
I am a tekken player so some of these basic things like "which moves are overheads" i've never had to think about. Thank you for breaking things down in a way a beginner can fully understand which aspects of the game are important to focus on.
I cant thank you enough for your 3s videos. I've been playing and continue to play 3s for over a decade and still love to learn about the game. Keep up the great work!
yo, this is amazing stuff, you heavily inspired my guides with your style of breaking the characters down to a few key details
to make a video like this is more useful than most new players will ever realize, thank you for your videos! keep up the good work
You’re a prince amongst men for making this
Im suuuuper new to this all and wanted to thank you for making these. Theyve helped me a ton as a beginner and made me feel a little less lost lol. Id love to see stuff like this in the future every now and then but I understand if thats not on the table
Good video!! I'll probably go back to it as I improve. 🎉
Thanks bro, very based guide, even if It didn't answer my question which was "what to do when cornered/pressured as Makoto" vs an enemy mixing up on your face, especially at low level.
One of the most important modern fighting game videos on the internet.
Edit: The most important fighting game video on the internet.
good video 😺
I'm new to 3s, and so far I don't understand what to do. I have watched guides and read the wiki, but when I'm actually playing a real match, I have no clue what is going on. My opponent is using footsies, jumping in, mix ups, using okizeme, throwing. I wish there was an educational video that used a real match as an example or something similar. Most of the time when I tell people that I don't know what to do in a real match, I get the usual response: "Go to training mode/practice more".
Are your issues exclusive to third strike or any fighting game?
@@Breeze06 exclusive to older fighting games such as third strike
Decide for yourself what it is you want to do. Winning is more of a bonus. Tell yourself "I'm gonna try my best to land this new thing" and try to land it. Eventually you will build up a repertoire will still having fun win or lose.
My suggestion - get on Fightcade and ask if someone wants to play unranked games just to help you learn. I did this for a while. Yes, there are lots of trolls and real @$$holes on there, but there are also lots of people willing to just mess around and show you the ropes. Use the in game chat, ask them questions between matches. Play matches focused on practicing parry, matches focused on punishes, matches focused on opening up the opponent's defense. Ask your counterpart how they did something that surprised you, what do you need to STOP doing, what do you need to START doing, etc... You basically just need to find a generous, chill person with time on their hands. Find someone who will fight you with all sorts of different characters, or maybe the characters that you struggle against. Put yourself out there and somebody will be willing to help. It's about having fun anyway, right? I still suck at 3S for the most part, but I would be absolutely clueless had I not done this. Discord groups help, and get on Twitch and finding the 3S streamers who are actually cool.
Which version of the game do you recommend? I played the PS2 when I was a kid, but I intend to emulate and play on a keyboard.
Fightcade on PC is excellent. 30th Anniversary edition is OK
@@feuras I'll look into it, thanks.
How do you get frame data on screen?
github.com/Grouflon/3rd_training_lua
Good tutorials