Treebranch Posted April 17, 2003 Posted April 17, 2003 Best Martial Art, Bekindjutsu. "It is easier to find men who will volunteer to die, than to find those who are willing to endure pain with patience.""Lock em out or Knock em out"
JIUJITSUFIGHTER Posted April 17, 2003 Posted April 17, 2003 they are a few best ones that i can think of, bjj, muay thai, jujutsu, silat, kajukenbo, jeet kune do, combat submission wrestling, kali etc.... jiu-jitsu is invicinble
Treebranch Posted April 21, 2003 Posted April 21, 2003 Togakore Ryu Ninpo Taijutsu, the most complete martial art out there. 9 schools of fighting in one, covers every possible scenario. "It is easier to find men who will volunteer to die, than to find those who are willing to endure pain with patience.""Lock em out or Knock em out"
WC-Strayder Posted April 24, 2003 Posted April 24, 2003 Run-fu, shotgun-fu, maybe some abramtank-fu or B-52-fu?. A style is only as good as it's practitioner, you know that!. Everyone, me included, thinks that they’re style is the best and most complete, right!. I don’t know a thing about any other style, but hey, mine is still the best, so don’t ya say nothing else, ya hear!. Kinda stupid, isn’t it??. I mean, the great majority off us really doesn’t know any other style than the style we practice daily, so basically we should shut-up and hold it for our self, but we just HAD to say it, doesn’t we?. So repeat after me; “My style is only as good as I make it and I really glad there is other styles to practice out there, or else this forum would be a waste!”. Thank you very mush!. PS: Nothing beats my snowball-fu, just come to Norway and I will show you If the first lesson was a failure, then you know that skydiving isn't for you!
Wing Chun Posted April 24, 2003 Posted April 24, 2003 yeah it cant cover every possible scenario. infact that would be a weakness to learn how to get out of every situation in a fixed way. its about learning concepts and principles that would suffice at every situation. also thers no point in knowing the basics of loads of different arts, that is good but only if you have a strong core art first. i think the best martial art is the individual martial art that makes the martial artist complete and so he has no weakness. crosstraining is another way of phrasing it however.
Treebranch Posted April 24, 2003 Posted April 24, 2003 Look into it, Togakore Ryu Ninpo Taijutsu it's one of the only systems that teaches survival skills, and how to read people, accessing a situation before you go into it. Swimming techniques, fighting on hard terrain, multiple attackers, restraining someone, gun techniques, countless weapons, and I don't really mean it's the best, it's just really complete and really amazing. Basically it's a very wholistic approach to combat, that mixes old traditions with new concepts and it's always evolving. Yes and it does cover grappling, any new art that claims it is the best at something is looked into and studied to find it's weaknesses and possible counter to that art. You can learn a lot from an Martial Art that's 1000 years old and still evolving. "It is easier to find men who will volunteer to die, than to find those who are willing to endure pain with patience.""Lock em out or Knock em out"
Anzie Posted April 24, 2003 Posted April 24, 2003 I happen to like Shootfighting alot Not only is it fun to watch (IMO), it's also effective on the street for what I know. Maybe someone would prefer muay thai/bjj instead though. Although we don't have any bjj's in my place(Oslo, capital of Norway, Northern Europe), which sucks actually. Grappling enthusiast!Shootfighting as well.
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