I think 70% muay Thai and 30% judo or bjj would be better bc muay Thai is superior on standard fighting and judo/bjj has the best ground work so u would be unstoppable
Definitely. Me being a martial arts fanatic since early childhood, my personal favorite style would consist of Muay Boran/Thai, Lethwei, Judo, BJJ, Hapkido, Savate, Boxing, Krav Maga, Escrima, Kobudo, and Yaw-Yan.
In my opinion, Taekwondo is made for blitzing your opponents rather than going for strength they go for speed and Muay Thai is the opposite going for bone shattering strength over hitting the opponent before they can block.. they just shatter the blocking limb’s bones and go right through. 😂
It depends on the style of TKD you’re talking about. I’m pretty sure ITF could be equal to Muay Thai because I’m pretty sure in my experience, ITF is trained to fight because they’re more used to punches and kicks, similar to kickboxing. WTF is for competitive sparring, though it can be good for self defense too.
As Joe Rogan says, start off with TKD to learn amazing kicks. Then get the rest from Muay Thai. If you can combine the MT with a smattering of TKD you'd be quite unpredictable compared to someone who just did MT
Agree but my version is to learn box for powerful hands and good footwork, then taekwondo for fast and powerful kicks, then must Thai for combining the two and adding knees and elbows, finally for ground work take wrestling and this will make you unstoppable!
@@samone9908that’s good but you don’t need to do one art max it out and move on to the next, just go to an MMA gym where they teach the important parts of the techniques of all arts. Also you said you’d box for powerful hands but power is genetics yk
@@samone9908 If a person learns all this and then also adds Krav Maga (but what is taught in the army in the elite units) *and at the same time he will also be very muscular and fit* (fit and muscular to the extent that he will be very strong and it will not reduce his speed), then he will probably be The strongest person on the planet and there's a good chance he could take down even 2 or 3 people in a fight. Oh and I remembered at the end add BJJ and then he will be invincible at all.
I was 6 years in the national team of Hungary in ITF taekwon-do, right now training in a muay thai gym for 3 months. You are 100% accurate in this vid.
I'm about to restart TKD after 15 years break. I always wanted to pick up another martial art too, but this video just convinced me to go the Muy Thai route later!
Blud was too scared to put defense on the list💀 Edit:it seems like i started a war and nat came by and said hello and imediatly left so someone has to clear this mess up Keep in mind this is a defense competition TKD (taekwondo) VS MT (muay thai) Footwork 1:0 TKD Checks 1:1 MT Guard 1:2 MT Durability 1:3 MT Parry 1:4 MT pullback 1:5 MT you cant even make an argument saying that taekwondo has better defense and the guy in my reply section simping for taekwondo is definitly a 9 year old keyboard warior
@@pegasusrr3156Nah, they don't really have solid defence. Ofc it's depending on practicioner, but taking average muay thai and tkd practicioner, muay thai pracricioner'd have much better defence
@@AgressorSQN i think he means he use multiple martial arts as a combination for his skillset, because i am someone who does the same. I use the footwork and pukches of boxing, the low kick and body kick of muay thai, the highkick from taekwondo and etc... so he probably means that too
@@kar6432yeah, I never know how to call it because I do kickboxing and Kyokushin but I add a lot of taekwondo, capoeira, muay thai, wing chun, bjj and dirty street techniques (poking eyes, striking the neck, kicks to the knee or just sliding someones face across the street lol) because it's not mma by itself, I lack a lot of wrestling
@@valen7142 i dont use street tactics since im still technically practicing in a gym, but i think having a variety of technique is a good way to improve yourselves, like using the flicker jab from boxing is one hell of a way to pressure into a straight hand or a low kick
There isn't a ranking system in muay thai dude. On top of that, the only way to be a "second degree black belt" in ANYTHING in two years is if you go to a McDojo.
In a street fight or street altercation, that few millisecond is crucial. Never let someone aggressive get up close to you and be ready for the TKD back kick. IF the fight happens, then use MT kicks.
I think it depends on user if both users are at expert level. But the learning curve for taekwondo is hard. So, Muay Thai user has some advantage if both users are at beginner or below average level. I personally like Taekwondo flashy kicks more tho😅
Elbows and knees are separate things so it should count as two points. But otherwise, I agree with this. Maybe footwork could be 50-50 depending on what you’re trying to accomplish.
If you get a chance to watch Muay Thai boxing ( it is incredible) the conditioning of those fighters elbows and shins is amazing, Taekwondo on the other hand is more about scoring points off of the other guy
In my opinion the best kicks are low kicks, and I've never seen them being used in Taekwondo, whilst they are mastered in Muay Thai. So even if they are not as cool as the Taekwondo kicks, I would give that point to Muay Thai for how effective they are - they also kick with the shins rather than feet, which also adds more points to them. But again, it's just my opinion. I practice Kyokushin, which borrows its low kicks from Muay Thai, so I might be biased :)
@@ruisilva5713 nah he’s right MT defence is much better the stance allows you to check easier unlike the wider TKD stance. Also the hands are higher protecting the head in MT while TKD hands are low at the hips. MT obviously takes grappling as the Thai clinch is constantly used in MMA while none of TKD’s grappling is used. Also sweeps and trips are very useful, used by Volk in his first match with Islam Mackechev
Tae also has knees and elbows in their syllabus. But I understand why you gave the point to MT cos they are not used as often as MT. With experience of both, my bias will put my personal W to tae. Mainly because I feel it's easier for tae to transition to MT but not vice versa. (Not saying it's not possible) At the same time, I absolutely HATE how people start to shit on Tae based on what they watch in the Olympics. Like yeah, WT sparring is in a sorry state, and MT is violent and brutal, but being brutal does not mean it's better. Tae has potential to be brutal af too. The kicks can be just as powerful. But unlike MT, where the power comes from raw strength of the fighter, tae harnesses the power from the speed and momentum of the pivoting of our hips, the snapping notion of their kicks and as well as the spin. Plus, it was widely effective in Vietnam, where US soldiers reported that they had to pick up bodies with "necks broken and caved in ribs" after their korean counterparts fought the viet cong in CQB.
Im sorry but you got it wrong if you think thai kicks only rely on strength. They use the hips much more than any other kicking art, thats where the power come from. Plus, muay thai is as technical as it gets, not only brutal.
for the majority of martial arts, not just taekwondo, power comes from pivoting and hip rotation. If mt was based purely on physical strength, it wouldn't really be a martial art. However, yeah a lot of people don't realize that karate and taekwondo kicks/strikes can be pretty easily modified to have a lot of power. There's just no reason to break your opponent in point sparring.
I think the main reason for muay Thai kicks have so much power is because we land the kick with our Shin. In Karate/Taekwondo usually you land the kick with your foot, which give the taekwondo fighter more range and speed in trade of power.
Actually physics-wise, tkd kicks have a lot more "power," due to the smaller area of impact. However MT deals more "damage." Tkd is a blade and MT is a sledgehammer, per se. @PedroIvoRusso-ms2rw
I used to do taekwondo but realised after months that this martial art won't teach me proper offense and defense so I chose muay thai and I'll take Muay thai all day and every day. (THIS IS MY PERSONAL OPINION. FEEL FREE TO DO ANYTHING YOU PREFER I'M NOT SAYING ONE IS BETTER THAN THE OTHER)
Tae Kwon do is NOT an art that can stand on its own. It’s the one I’ve doing the longest, and can say with full confidence if you only do it you will get mauled. However, it is one of the best things I’ve done and has helped me a lot in my amateur MMA matches. My advice to all TKD practicioners is to keep it up, but mix in wrestling and boxing for a terrifying fighter.
Yes I agree 100%, I've done boxing for a while and now I've started doing Takewondo, hopefully when I finish that I might do some wrestling or a grappling art like Judo
Also agreed, Taekwando can be good or more as MuayThai (depends on its practioner) however i advice adding some of its concepts to TKD like the knees and power to some degree (kicking wise) But when it comes to punching you need to compensate with some boxing, with that you become a solid amateur alike MMA fighter
@@El_Earth oh absolutely. I don’t do as many knees, but I’ve been specifically training elbows now as well as my boxing, and ending a few combos with a clean elbow across the jaw or to the body
@@Guessedsteak16 yes, would love to learn more about elbows tho, i personally just use some of karate punching techniques to combine them with boxing for "surprise attacks" and unexpected moves, and then focus kicks only with TKD, mainly for flashy and style of the WTF has, and then practice TKD ITF for more in combat based fights kicks with some of the muay thai concepts of the knees
I started out in Taekwondo before expanding to different martial arts like Muay Thai, which TKD has it's roots in Karate, and TKD might get the edge in kicking power if we were to compare the most powerful kickers from both arts.
@@ruisilva5713 Naw, The founder of TKD trained in Karate around WW2. TKD was just a political move because there were many Korean karate practitioners before TKD was develeped and Korea wanted to move away from the Japanese affiliation. There were some changes in Kata's into TKD forms. It wasn't until later that TKD evolved into it's flashy kicking style. There's a reason why they look so similar. Sometimes almost indistinguishable by what style is being used because they both use almost all the same techniques.
Not actually, our foot is conditioned and pointed/aligned perfectly, also it isn’t really only the foot, it is mostly the very bottom of the shin or just at the part above your heel
Imo: practice taekwondo but add some stuff of muaythai for power and for knees, you can keep it pure tho Then practice Boxing for raw punches skills with power You would be insane knowing those two together
As a Taekwondo practitioner since 2014 who also does Muay Thai. I'll definitely have to give speed, flexibility and footwork to TKD. You've never really experienced true pain until you have kicked someone else's shin at high speed 💀💀
Taekwondo-kick speed,footwork,kicks Muay thai-power,grappling,knees,elbows,punching,heavier sport,punch speed,durability(Im doing muay thai rn and I did taekwondo for 3 years and I can easily say that taekwondo gives you nearly no durability),endurance,physical
I did a couple of years of tkd and I'm about 9 months deep into Muay Thai and I definitely love muay Thai much more but I still use a little bit of tkd when sparring to cover distance and to mix stuff up
Keyboard warriors : your karate sucks Your boxing sucks Real fighters: Awesome kicks bro can you teach me some Yeah sure is you show me some of your boxing punches
Id love to find a gym that teaches a traditional martial art with a focus on fighting, thats what attracted me to muay thai, yes you can train it for fun or fitness but in the end its a martial art whos purpose in the end is for fighting, not light contact point matches, or moving through the ranks learning kata.
As a kyokushin i have been kicked by a muay thai and a taekwondo practitioner The taekwondo kick felt like air hitting my body The muay thai roundhouse........ I felt that
Taegukgun is a part of taekwondo where it teaches hand blocks, punches, and kung fu stuff. For example: face punch, back fist body block, face block, leg block, finger thrust, neck blade, (I think) and etc.
Taekwondo: legs as fast as your mom's broomstick
Muay Thai: legs breaker
@@Huck_Solo what?
@@MrApalakaMuai Thai low shin kicks can murder your legs.
@@CAAAAAAAAAAAAP he edited his comment.
@@CAAAAAAAAAAAAPthat's what I do...I'm a practitioner of muay thai
@@MrApalakawhat was the original comment
A combo of 80% Muay Thai and 20% Taekwondo will be lethal.
I think 70% muay Thai and 30% judo or bjj would be better bc muay Thai is superior on standard fighting and judo/bjj has the best ground work so u would be unstoppable
@@sotos2909facts
thats me[ i do both ]
Definitely. Me being a martial arts fanatic since early childhood, my personal favorite style would consist of Muay Boran/Thai, Lethwei, Judo, BJJ, Hapkido, Savate, Boxing, Krav Maga, Escrima, Kobudo, and Yaw-Yan.
Muay thai uses they shin which...
Its like being hit by an iron pole...
Taekwando is deadly.. Muay thai is more deadly...
In my opinion, Taekwondo is made for blitzing your opponents rather than going for strength they go for speed and Muay Thai is the opposite going for bone shattering strength over hitting the opponent before they can block.. they just shatter the blocking limb’s bones and go right through. 😂
It depends on the style of TKD you’re talking about. I’m pretty sure ITF could be equal to Muay Thai because I’m pretty sure in my experience, ITF is trained to fight because they’re more used to punches and kicks, similar to kickboxing. WTF is for competitive sparring, though it can be good for self defense too.
@@Thunder_Trackskarate causes NO harm😂😂 is bullshit
muay thai isn't a martial art, its a way of funding funeral mourners.
@@gasca2033 tell that to Leo Machida
Taekwondo - Super fast and cool kicks 😎
Muai thai - shortcut to heaven kicks 😈
They’re slower though. Taekwondo will catch you off guard more.
@@lonelylama5222 Yea and TKD stance crosses over very well in kickboxing and MMA and is hard to take down unlike Muay Thai.
What’s weird is tkd kicks are way stronger than mt kicks
@@lonelylama5222they are slow but if u get hit the next hit will send u straight to hospital
Nah
As Joe Rogan says, start off with TKD to learn amazing kicks. Then get the rest from Muay Thai. If you can combine the MT with a smattering of TKD you'd be quite unpredictable compared to someone who just did MT
Agree but my version is to learn box for powerful hands and good footwork, then taekwondo for fast and powerful kicks, then must Thai for combining the two and adding knees and elbows, finally for ground work take wrestling and this will make you unstoppable!
I sparred with one guy who trained TKD on muay thai class he knows the flashiest kicks ive ever seen it was interesting expirience 😄
@@samone9908that’s good but you don’t need to do one art max it out and move on to the next, just go to an MMA gym where they teach the important parts of the techniques of all arts.
Also you said you’d box for powerful hands but power is genetics yk
@@samone9908 If a person learns all this and then also adds Krav Maga (but what is taught in the army in the elite units) *and at the same time he will also be very muscular and fit* (fit and muscular to the extent that he will be very strong and it will not reduce his speed), then he will probably be The strongest person on the planet and there's a good chance he could take down even 2 or 3 people in a fight. Oh and I remembered at the end add BJJ and then he will be invincible at all.
I’d say learn muai thai first. Get your foundation first, then learn the kicks from taekwondo.
Muay Thai gang here.
Eyyy
here
I love both martial arts. Personally, I train in muay thai, but if given the chance to learn taekwondo, I'd learn it too.
same but I would take any chance to learn Muay Thai
I was 6 years in the national team of Hungary in ITF taekwon-do, right now training in a muay thai gym for 3 months. You are 100% accurate in this vid.
I'm about to restart TKD after 15 years break. I always wanted to pick up another martial art too, but this video just convinced me to go the Muy Thai route later!
Az igen, a Monyával nem bírni
TKD dances to impress your date
Muay thai protects your date by destroying a bad dude
The real point is to beat people without training. Which both will absolutely do
Blud was too scared to put defense on the list💀
Edit:it seems like i started a war and nat came by and said hello and imediatly left so someone has to clear this mess up
Keep in mind this is a defense competition
TKD (taekwondo) VS MT (muay thai)
Footwork 1:0 TKD
Checks 1:1 MT
Guard 1:2 MT
Durability 1:3 MT
Parry 1:4 MT
pullback 1:5 MT
you cant even make an argument saying that taekwondo has better defense and the guy in my reply section simping for taekwondo is definitly a 9 year old keyboard warior
defense to taekwondo
@@pegasusrr3156nah i do itf taekwondo and it got little defence
@@pegasusrr3156Nah, they don't really have solid defence. Ofc it's depending on practicioner, but taking average muay thai and tkd practicioner, muay thai pracricioner'd have much better defence
@@pegasusrr3156bro is actually smoking crack, while Muay Thai have no significant defenses taekwondo has NO defenses and it shows
@@Yamada-gk8jw endurance isnt defense
Dont get that confused
And defense doesnt have to be just blocking
As a freestyle fighter using what moves he knows, i’d say it depends on the practitioner
So basically you just a street fighter
are you metal bat from one punch man?
@@AgressorSQN i think he means he use multiple martial arts as a combination for his skillset, because i am someone who does the same. I use the footwork and pukches of boxing, the low kick and body kick of muay thai, the highkick from taekwondo and etc... so he probably means that too
@@kar6432yeah, I never know how to call it because I do kickboxing and Kyokushin but I add a lot of taekwondo, capoeira, muay thai, wing chun, bjj and dirty street techniques (poking eyes, striking the neck, kicks to the knee or just sliding someones face across the street lol) because it's not mma by itself, I lack a lot of wrestling
@@valen7142 i dont use street tactics since im still technically practicing in a gym, but i think having a variety of technique is a good way to improve yourselves, like using the flicker jab from boxing is one hell of a way to pressure into a straight hand or a low kick
Perfect. Second degree black belt and two years in Muay Thai so far.
You plan on fight for mma?
There isn't a ranking system in muay thai dude. On top of that, the only way to be a "second degree black belt" in ANYTHING in two years is if you go to a McDojo.
@@stonelion99he meant that he’s a second degree black belt in tkd and just two years in Muay thai
@@Alcapone34e4 Ah
In a street fight or street altercation, that few millisecond is crucial. Never let someone aggressive get up close to you and be ready for the TKD back kick. IF the fight happens, then use MT kicks.
elbows and knees in taekwondo are so underrated
Never seen them used in taekwondo sparring, only once or twice only on pads.
@@silent_march8130its only in tradicional taekwondo
muay thai has better ones because are developed more in sparring and fighting
True. In the real Taekwondo use knees and elbows too. But much less.
@@alvaroprietotorres4508 it actually does, ITF teaches, you just dont use in sparring
The one that satisfies you better during practice
On a statistical level Muay Thai has been proven to be the most effective martial art
effective where? how did they conclude this. is there even statistics supporting this or did you just pull it out of your ass
I think it depends on user if both users are at expert level. But the learning curve for taekwondo is hard. So, Muay Thai user has some advantage if both users are at beginner or below average level. I personally like Taekwondo flashy kicks more tho😅
Elbows and knees are separate things so it should count as two points. But otherwise, I agree with this. Maybe footwork could be 50-50 depending on what you’re trying to accomplish.
It also depends on the person how good they are
I say steal a move from every art if u can master it and make it work for you
If you get a chance to watch Muay Thai boxing ( it is incredible) the conditioning of those fighters elbows and shins is amazing, Taekwondo on the other hand is more about scoring points off of the other guy
Muay Thai base is much better, but taekwondo as a 2nd or 3rd is a great tool to have
The bro with Muay Thai+Taekwondo+boxing is practically unstoppable
It's not always about the art... it's about the fighter
Very Accurate Points i totally agree
Power - Muay Thai (0-1)
Speed - Taekwondo (1-1)
Agility - Taekwondo (2-1)
Durability - Muay Thai (2-2)
Footwork - Taekwondo (3-2)
Range - Taekwondo (4-2)
Endurance - Muay Thai (4-3)
Conditioning - Muay Thai (4-4)
Punches - Muay Thai (4-5)
Kicks - Taekwondo (5-5)
Grappling - Muay Thai (5-6)
Offense - Muay Thai (5-7)
Defense - Muay Thai (5-8)
Elbows & Knees - Muay Thai (5-9)
Sparring Intensity - Muay Thai (5-10)
Winner: Muay Thai mid diff
In my opinion the best kicks are low kicks, and I've never seen them being used in Taekwondo, whilst they are mastered in Muay Thai.
So even if they are not as cool as the Taekwondo kicks, I would give that point to Muay Thai for how effective they are - they also kick with the shins rather than feet, which also adds more points to them.
But again, it's just my opinion. I practice Kyokushin, which borrows its low kicks from Muay Thai, so I might be biased :)
Defense and Grappling MT? Are you high? You either never practiced TKD or you were at a McDojo
@@ruisilva5713 mt short ranged
@@ruisilva5713 nah he’s right MT defence is much better the stance allows you to check easier unlike the wider TKD stance. Also the hands are higher protecting the head in MT while TKD hands are low at the hips.
MT obviously takes grappling as the Thai clinch is constantly used in MMA while none of TKD’s grappling is used. Also sweeps and trips are very useful, used by Volk in his first match with Islam Mackechev
@@hpm1014I'm also a karate practitioner and I completely agree with this
Practitioner matters the most, and I also think it depends on environment.
bro broke the bag with that kick
Taekwondo kicks: fast and spinny
Maui Thai kicks: oopsies u can’t kick anymore
Tae also has knees and elbows in their syllabus. But I understand why you gave the point to MT cos they are not used as often as MT. With experience of both, my bias will put my personal W to tae. Mainly because I feel it's easier for tae to transition to MT but not vice versa. (Not saying it's not possible)
At the same time, I absolutely HATE how people start to shit on Tae based on what they watch in the Olympics. Like yeah, WT sparring is in a sorry state, and MT is violent and brutal, but being brutal does not mean it's better. Tae has potential to be brutal af too. The kicks can be just as powerful. But unlike MT, where the power comes from raw strength of the fighter, tae harnesses the power from the speed and momentum of the pivoting of our hips, the snapping notion of their kicks and as well as the spin. Plus, it was widely effective in Vietnam, where US soldiers reported that they had to pick up bodies with "necks broken and caved in ribs" after their korean counterparts fought the viet cong in CQB.
Im sorry but you got it wrong if you think thai kicks only rely on strength. They use the hips much more than any other kicking art, thats where the power come from.
Plus, muay thai is as technical as it gets, not only brutal.
Learning techniques is complete useless if you don’t regularly do them in full contact sparring.
for the majority of martial arts, not just taekwondo, power comes from pivoting and hip rotation. If mt was based purely on physical strength, it wouldn't really be a martial art.
However, yeah a lot of people don't realize that karate and taekwondo kicks/strikes can be pretty easily modified to have a lot of power. There's just no reason to break your opponent in point sparring.
I think the main reason for muay Thai kicks have so much power is because we land the kick with our Shin.
In Karate/Taekwondo usually you land the kick with your foot, which give the taekwondo fighter more range and speed in trade of power.
Actually physics-wise, tkd kicks have a lot more "power," due to the smaller area of impact. However MT deals more "damage." Tkd is a blade and MT is a sledgehammer, per se. @PedroIvoRusso-ms2rw
Taekwondo: fancy, fast and efficient kicks
Muay Thai: powerful and more practical kicks
Taekwondo+Muay Thai=very strong and fast high and low kicks at the same time
Fully agree. Fully agree.
Muay Thai,✈️✈️✈️☀️☀️☀️❤❤❤
Taekwondo: The legs are more flexible than the hands and can kick the opponent at incredible angles
😀😀🦵🦵
Muay Thai: 878 pounds of punch ? 🙀
both, they are both very strong in their own ways
I started in taekwondo and it helped a lot after learning Muay thai.
If taekwondo is a school student, muay thai is the principal of that school.😊
I used to do taekwondo but realised after months that this martial art won't teach me proper offense and defense so I chose muay thai and I'll take Muay thai all day and every day.
(THIS IS MY PERSONAL OPINION. FEEL FREE TO DO ANYTHING YOU PREFER I'M NOT SAYING ONE IS BETTER THAN THE OTHER)
Valid, at least you're respectful
Tae Kwon do is NOT an art that can stand on its own. It’s the one I’ve doing the longest, and can say with full confidence if you only do it you will get mauled. However, it is one of the best things I’ve done and has helped me a lot in my amateur MMA matches. My advice to all TKD practicioners is to keep it up, but mix in wrestling and boxing for a terrifying fighter.
Yes I agree 100%, I've done boxing for a while and now I've started doing Takewondo, hopefully when I finish that I might do some wrestling or a grappling art like Judo
Also agreed, Taekwando can be good or more as MuayThai (depends on its practioner) however i advice adding some of its concepts to TKD like the knees and power to some degree (kicking wise)
But when it comes to punching you need to compensate with some boxing, with that you become a solid amateur alike MMA fighter
@@El_Earth oh absolutely. I don’t do as many knees, but I’ve been specifically training elbows now as well as my boxing, and ending a few combos with a clean elbow across the jaw or to the body
@@Guessedsteak16 yes, would love to learn more about elbows tho, i personally just use some of karate punching techniques to combine them with boxing for "surprise attacks" and unexpected moves, and then focus kicks only with TKD, mainly for flashy and style of the WTF has, and then practice TKD ITF for more in combat based fights kicks with some of the muay thai concepts of the knees
I mean korean soldier been doing well with them (for fight with no restriction of course)
Taekwondo speed kicks and muay thai hard kicks combination 🔥
Taekwondo: Inner peace
Muay Thai: Reat in peace😈
I started out in Taekwondo before expanding to different martial arts like Muay Thai, which TKD has it's roots in Karate, and TKD might get the edge in kicking power if we were to compare the most powerful kickers from both arts.
TKD doesn’t have its roots in Karate lol it’s the other way around
@@ruisilva5713no? General Choi Hong Hi was proficient in Karate before founding Taekwondo
@@ruisilva5713 Naw, The founder of TKD trained in Karate around WW2. TKD was just a political move because there were many Korean karate practitioners before TKD was develeped and Korea wanted to move away from the Japanese affiliation. There were some changes in Kata's into TKD forms. It wasn't until later that TKD evolved into it's flashy kicking style. There's a reason why they look so similar. Sometimes almost indistinguishable by what style is being used because they both use almost all the same techniques.
Taekwondo fighters don't kick anywhere on the same lvl of power as thai fighters do.
@@lI_Demonata_Il putting a point at the end of your phrase doesn't make you right
A lot of people say it depends on the practitioner. but if they are both on the same level, muay thai wins its soo much more complete
Yea, Taekwondo focus too much in kicks but if u learn both u get muay thai stuffs+Very strong and fast low/high kicks at same time
Ah yes. Taekwondo. The art of kicking with the blade of your foot so that in an actual fight you break your toes or foot.
Not actually, our foot is conditioned and pointed/aligned perfectly, also it isn’t really only the foot, it is mostly the very bottom of the shin or just at the part above your heel
Taekwondo will make you fast as fuck
Muay thai will make you break bones
Taekwondo ain’t go no punches 💀💀💀
of course it does, but not on sports bruh
Source: Trust me bro
Yes it does. If you do old school tkd it has hooks uppercuts crosses and jabs
TKD do have punches, but WT says no and just deletes punches from the competitions
As a muay thai person, taekwondo wins.
As Muay Thai person why not both😎
Y
as a taekwondo person, muay thai wins😅
You and me arent doing the same Muay thai
Taekwondo not bad But muay thai can take his life at any time
The better and more experienced fighter wins.
Idk which ever is more deadly 💀
Taekwondo kicks: Wooden stick
Muay Thai kicks: Bat
Learn them both. Become the winner
Imo: practice taekwondo but add some stuff of muaythai for power and for knees, you can keep it pure tho
Then practice Boxing for raw punches skills with power
You would be insane knowing those two together
He broke the chain supporting the bag in the beginning
Mixing both and add wrestling can make a deadly combo
I’ll go for learning both styles, and figuring out what moves work from there
Muay Thai usually claps
Just having the chance to train anything is awesome
As a Taekwondo practitioner since 2014 who also does Muay Thai. I'll definitely have to give speed, flexibility and footwork to TKD.
You've never really experienced true pain until you have kicked someone else's shin at high speed 💀💀
In my opinion, Karate wins😂❤
Muay thai+Taekwondo=Sending people to heaven with super ultra kicks
Every game have their own masters ❤❤
For real life self defence situations, which is one of the biggest reasons to learn martial arts, Muay Thai all the way.
Depends on practitioner
It is not the martial art, is the artist...
Taekwondo-kick speed,footwork,kicks
Muay thai-power,grappling,knees,elbows,punching,heavier sport,punch speed,durability(Im doing muay thai rn and I did taekwondo for 3 years and I can easily say that taekwondo gives you nearly no durability),endurance,physical
I did a couple of years of tkd and I'm about 9 months deep into Muay Thai and I definitely love muay Thai much more but I still use a little bit of tkd when sparring to cover distance and to mix stuff up
I'd say with enough mastery of the basics, both are a force. So, I'mma say both are lethal, and I wanna learn Taekwondo
my logic said muaythai, but the green belt in me said taekwondo 😂
If you do Taekwondo AND Muay Thai, you are the fastest bone breaker 💀
As a Muay Thai trainee I would like to say LES GOOOOO!!
Both should be incorporated, TKD has a creative set of kicks.
Lesson is, learn both and get even better.
I do boxing, but i really want to learn taekwondo/muay thai.
I engage in both but i would say they are surprisingly even when done right. TKD is really really fast and can be surprisingly tanky.
Combine both and you got "Muay Taikwondo"
deadly combo 🔥🔥
Keyboard warriors :
your karate sucks
Your boxing sucks
Real fighters:
Awesome kicks bro can you teach me some
Yeah sure is you show me some of your boxing punches
Id love to find a gym that teaches a traditional martial art with a focus on fighting, thats what attracted me to muay thai, yes you can train it for fun or fitness but in the end its a martial art whos purpose in the end is for fighting, not light contact point matches, or moving through the ranks learning kata.
As someone who did Taekwondo for some years, it’s all about the legs, and that’s why me legs are stronger than my arms
In a fight, muay thai as soon as the fighter gets a good hold or close range, but in general both are good
Taekwondo because it’s the most iconic and closer to karate, and i won’t get my legs broken or injured
While keeping ones own system it's good to know other systems to know how to may deal with them
Taekwondo is great and very useful but you first need great hands and good takedown defense to make it work.
as a studier of both, why pick one when both makes the deadliest mma combo ever
Shins goes to muay thai so taekwondo 3 muay thai 5
Combine the 2 and have the best of both. We need to stop comparing arts and just train both.
As a kyokushin i have been kicked by a muay thai and a taekwondo practitioner
The taekwondo kick felt like air hitting my body
The muay thai roundhouse........ I felt that
Lethality in Maui thai is insane elbows knees are just incredible strong and the leg shots are made to damage some one
Taekwondo is deadly.. but Muay Thai Is death itself 💀
The difference in todays TKD is that they train you to be an athlete not a fighter while the old skool they train you to be a fighter
Taekwondo is great. The style I did for a bit seemed like a combo of shotokan and kyokushin
Biggest advantage Muay Thai has is defense
Boxing 🥊🥊💥💥
Idk who wins but both are cool asf
Tkd-cool kicks like heaven
Muay thai-it takes you there
Id give anything to know what his dojo or training room smells like, OOFF I'll bet it has a heavenly scent.
Bro was pointing randomly in the air
Taekwondo: Minigun
May thai: Sniper
TKD is an ranger class while Muay Thai is probably a berserker class.
I did MT and boxing and MMA. I feel like the most complete fighter
I’ve only done wrestling, y’all got all the cool movie shit and ngl, I’m a lil jealous
Taegukgun is a part of taekwondo where it teaches hand blocks, punches, and kung fu stuff. For example: face punch, back fist body block, face block, leg block, finger thrust, neck blade, (I think) and etc.