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I've always wondered how comparable they are. What's your opinion?

2006-10-29 03:37:04 · 14 answers · asked by The Shadow 3 in Sports Martial Arts

I don't think it works the other way round. I've been great at games for years but i still can't do a fireball or propel myself across the room rolled in a ball in real life :(

2006-10-29 03:47:41 · update #1

14 answers

Not in the least. Boring moves are what work in real life, not this fancy Kung Fu, TKD garbage.

2006-10-29 13:04:50 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

not reallt no. in retrospect, it may help in certain aspects such as that of reaction times and reflexes. some more advance fighting games that involve skill and timing may be examples of these. like being able to block and counter. also maybe the knowledge of combinations. but i dont think it really gives a great advantage seeming as you can get this skill by playing the game loads anyway.

as for the other way round, no not at all. i can see how playing a game can increase your ability as a martial artist at all.

2006-10-29 04:57:47 · answer #2 · answered by bruce lee 1 · 0 0

devil Jin í Jin Kazama from Tekken 3 -> 4, the imaginy Mishima Karate type, do not ideas about Kazuya or Heihachi, that unreal and muscle emphasised too a lot, not appropriated even for the problem-loose martial artwork, that is waisting capacity and attack speed. Tekken 5 and six, Jin Kazama is in all likelihood classic Karate, which all the thoughts completely on the brink of genuine existence difficulty-loose Karate, i'm preparation Karate and that i visit in basic terms study Jin Kazama to prepare Karate effectively. the in basic terms unreal of Jin Kazama karate is his one kick/punch can toss the opponent backward or to air in distances, that require many situations of inner capacity than a classic human body, even as in genuine strive against a classic fighter might want to continually strive against aggressively in an precise stance to achieve that efficient inner capacity.

2016-12-05 08:26:59 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No. You could be a martial artist with thousands of hours of training and lose to your 8 year old nephew with several hundred hours of tekken.

2006-10-29 06:21:06 · answer #4 · answered by MBG 2 · 1 0

It does accually help you in the way you anticipate an attack... afterall martial arts do help in making the mind sharper... But im sure it doesn't help in fighting better in the vitual world lol

2006-10-29 05:06:33 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Being good in martial arts doesn't mean that you would be good in games.

2006-10-29 04:25:44 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

it doesnt work either way, unless you are naturally (or through practise) good at both.

just like playing the playboy mansion games wont make you hot or a hit with real girls.

2006-10-29 14:13:47 · answer #7 · answered by SAINT G 5 · 1 0

personally, i trained in tae kwon do and have a poom belt in it but i suck playing as hwarang in tekken. (hwarang fights in tae kwon do style) so in my opinion, nope doesn't help at all even if you learned the style the character is using. (even though knowing the exact attack that the character is using is pretty cool.)

2006-10-29 06:32:12 · answer #8 · answered by Jas Key 6 · 0 0

Not that I have found but who's to say I am any good

2006-10-29 04:22:16 · answer #9 · answered by northcarrlight 6 · 0 0

No. But it certainly makes me appreciate them more. Movies, too.

2006-10-29 03:52:18 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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