Hi there. I am a really bad player. I am more of the thinking time and this thing requires a quick reaction time, I think. However, I love Leifang. In the very small amount of times I've played any game of the series, I've always picked her. But I'm just mashing, and this might have worked on Street Fighter, but not anymore.
I don't want to become top of the world, just learn to use Our Cherised Cheeky Chinese Chick (yay for alliteration!) to a decent level. It is OK to lose, but being a 'Greats for Everyone' dude is a totally different thing, hehe.
My questions are many. How does people learn those 100+ moves? And the 100+ moves from the other characters? Or is that not necessary? I'd say you need to know who you are fighting against and adapt accordingly, right?
Is Leifang an unrecommended character to someone that, to all effects, hasn't played any fighting games? (Not regularly since the first Mortal Kombat, IIRC). How would you suggest a learning procedure? I love the several discussions here, but they tend to be rather technical, talking about frames, and safeness of a certain move, or things like that, that are very interesting, but maybe a bit hard to grasp the importance for an outsider like me. You talk of a certain move or combo doing 60 damage, but how much is full health? It's this sort of technical data that I'm missing and am interested in.
I'm more of a theorist, so a detailed explanation of all these technical things (that maybe are second nature to you guys, I don't know) would be very attractive to me if I manage to not drown in the sea of information.
I'm hoping for great useful info for what seem very good players out there with a lot of knowledge. Even if I only get to play occasionally, with my friends, not tournament scene or the like, or even if I just get a lot of theory to learn and discuss, this thread will have achieved its goal.
Final question: Can you hate Jann Lee and still call yourself a Leifang fan? I think Jann Lee is quite an arrogant guy, boasting about how strong he is, how worthless you are if you are weak, and pretty much centering his universe on himself. Leifang can do much better than end with him, IMHO.
That's it for now. Sorry for the wall of text, and thank you for the time you take to reply to this.
I don't want to become top of the world, just learn to use Our Cherised Cheeky Chinese Chick (yay for alliteration!) to a decent level. It is OK to lose, but being a 'Greats for Everyone' dude is a totally different thing, hehe.
My questions are many. How does people learn those 100+ moves? And the 100+ moves from the other characters? Or is that not necessary? I'd say you need to know who you are fighting against and adapt accordingly, right?
Is Leifang an unrecommended character to someone that, to all effects, hasn't played any fighting games? (Not regularly since the first Mortal Kombat, IIRC). How would you suggest a learning procedure? I love the several discussions here, but they tend to be rather technical, talking about frames, and safeness of a certain move, or things like that, that are very interesting, but maybe a bit hard to grasp the importance for an outsider like me. You talk of a certain move or combo doing 60 damage, but how much is full health? It's this sort of technical data that I'm missing and am interested in.
I'm more of a theorist, so a detailed explanation of all these technical things (that maybe are second nature to you guys, I don't know) would be very attractive to me if I manage to not drown in the sea of information.
I'm hoping for great useful info for what seem very good players out there with a lot of knowledge. Even if I only get to play occasionally, with my friends, not tournament scene or the like, or even if I just get a lot of theory to learn and discuss, this thread will have achieved its goal.
Final question: Can you hate Jann Lee and still call yourself a Leifang fan? I think Jann Lee is quite an arrogant guy, boasting about how strong he is, how worthless you are if you are weak, and pretty much centering his universe on himself. Leifang can do much better than end with him, IMHO.
That's it for now. Sorry for the wall of text, and thank you for the time you take to reply to this.