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Post by K'DaSH on May 15, 2005 18:41:39 GMT -5
There's a bit of a habit of trying to parry everything at first. I found it best to resist this, as it usually ends up with you eating a combo when you mistime or guess high/low wrong. I found the solution is to just use block at first, and start adding in the parries when your opponent gets into predictable patterns. Try practicing against a Ryu or Urien AI, who always fall into predictable patterns! It's usually easier to parry a human though, as they often fall into a certain "rhythm". Kinda hard to explain! Agreed. If you parry consistently, you'll grow a habit to parry in reaction to almost every move. Risking yourself to be left wide open more often. But after learning your opponent's rythm and getting a feel for it, you can anticipate most of if not all of your opponent's movement and act accordingly. But just IMO, other ppl may disagree and have their own ideas on using the parry system "effectively" If you do please post. I don't mind being wrong, or corrected. I'm just interested to learn.
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