😎 COOL !!!! I'm a multisports man including combat sports. Like sports, many combat sports 🥊 🤜 🥋 exist and I barely found out about Tang Soo Do because of your mention. It's the base of how Taekwondo was invented according to the Wikipedia. I investigate sports I find out about because of the internet *May it make you feel good always* 😎 👊 I'll see how soon I find out more about it. I just found out it's Chuck Norris style of Karate 🥋 👊 😎 th-cam.com/video/KS3aYPnkEsc/w-d-xo.htmlsi=KX9H2pO3dztDWtus
@@socalautisticman1975 Yep. I know the whole history of Tang Soo Do, It's quite fascinating. It's comprised of northern Chinese Kung Fu, native Korean arts of Subak & Taekkyeon & Shotokan Karate. I don't bother with wikipedia or learning things on the internet, I mostly learned the history by word of mouth by my instructor, but he also let me borrow his books that go into great detail on the history of Tang Soo Do. Quite a rich history indeed. Tang Soo Do is not a sport, it's an art geared towards self defense. 👊🥋🇰🇷
@@HappyCommando92494 of course that of self defense it's good to learn to resist attacks. Some combat sports moves are useful on the streets. Cool that Chuck Norris learned a steet useful martial art 😎
Its bullshido, dont worry about it. There is like one dojo in Arizona teaching it, their grandmaster moves like a beginner. Most likely a marketing tool to sell their classes "oh look we have a style tied to roots of all karate that no one knows beside us currently". Even the name is ridiculous, as if a 12yo named it
I trained in goju for a long time but had to switch to shotokan for geographical reasons. I wouldn't recommend anyone to hang around dojos of these styles at the same time.
@@dakentaijutsu2010 nice brow , i recently Iwent from green to blue so i'm a fresh blue belt , now i'm working to go to brown than black not that the belt means anything to me anymore cause everything i already learned at green belt , there's nothin new , they just make you wear the belt for a long period .
Studied Shotokan, Shudokan, Shorin ryu and now Goju ryu. The thing is, all of these styles never existed a 100 years ago. It wasn't until Funakoshi traveled to Japan that they started naming their systems. The only real "systems" was Naha Te, Tomari Te and Shuri Te. Many Okinawans would travel between dojos or travel to China to train.
Funakoshi had nothing to do with Goju... Goju did exist q00 years ago it just wasn't named yet, but the system was there. Sensei Higaonna wrote a great book called :The History of Karate: about it
@@PpAirO5 Yes. The style Masutatsu Oyama created was called Kyokushinkai. I am not shure when the "kai" left, but guess it was after Oyamas death, and the split of the style. The branch I belong to is called Shinkyokushin. We practise Kyokushin Karate. (like all other branches do)
I'm probably even older. :-) Oyama founded Kyokushin Kaikan in 1964 (officially, "International Karate Organization Kyokushin Kaikan"; prior to that it was simply called "Oyama Dojo" from circa 1956). Kaikan means something like "hall" or "auditorium." It references the organization, not the style. "Kai" as a standalone word can have several different meanings (e.g., "earth," "ocean," "shell") none of which pertain to the martial arts. In that sense, "Kyokushin-kai" is simply a contraction for the name of the organization. I trained in it for a few years in Southeast Asia starting in 1969, then was allowed to spend two months at the school in Tokyo in 1972. At that time, "Kyokushin," "Kyokushin-kai," and "Kyokushin-do" seemed to be used fairly interchangeably...at least informally.
I was train shorin ryu in the Philippines located in Tarlac. There are top 2 strongest karate in Tarlac. They train me to stance, footwork, striking, offense, and defense, kata, joint lock, grappling, close combat, knife to hand combat, and agility like ninja movement like safe roll, and more.
I'm from the Philippines too and I also train shorin ryu, but mostly we train blocks, kicks, and punches, footwork, proper movements, and timing but there are many more to learn.
Well actually, El_Insano, Kyokushinkai karate is actually what Jin Kazama’s fighting style from Tekken 4 through Tekken 7 is based on. But yeah, it could be argued that the Mishimas do mix multiple forms of Karate into their own hybrid style.
Next is Kenpo/kempo styles Shorinji Kempo Kajukenbo Okinawan kenpo Korean kenpo(gwon beup) Quan fa(chinese kenpo) Byakuren kaikan(brand off shorinji kempo and kyokushin mix) American kenpo karate Kara ho kenpo
Shito ryu has the best katas and its fighting style is ranged accurate kicks it has good counters too what I personally do is I use fast foot work to start chain of strong accurate kicks whenever is see an opening or a counter it also has good feint kicks we also practice traditional weapons like nunchaku and bo staff Shito ryu is truly a work of art
Correction: 1:53 This picture shows the kata named Bassai Dai, which is from Shotokan Karate, not Shito Ryu. The one from Shito Ryu is slightly different. Really good video!! :)
So my guess is in 'Karate Kid 2" - while Daniel and Miyagi (characters) used the Goru-Ryu type of Karate, Sato and Chozen (other characters) used a combination of possibly Kyokushin and Shotokan karate. Kyokushin is known as the "bloodsport" of all karate styles. The famous "kumite" type of karate. No protective gear at all in its bouts - only your gi, and any punches to the face in competition - are illegal in this type of karate.
I do Chun Kuk Do and I enjoy it very much and much respect to all styles of karate and other martial arts 👊. I knew of my style and maybe 2 others and I had no idea there were that many. Very good and informative. Thank you 🙏
Shorin Ryu was founded by Bushi Matsamura Shirinkan is a breakaway. the other Shorin Ryu breakaway styles Matsubayashi and kobayashi but they are not mentioned
Matsubayashi Shorin Ryu was founded by him. The Shorin Ryu that descended from Shuri-te was named and founded by Chosin Chibana a student and the inheritor of Ankoh Itousu.
It is. They use a vertical fist similar to wing chun, but the thumb placement is odd. While it's definitely fun and useful, it can be hard if you were taught typical punches beforehand
As an Isshin Ryu sho dan from the mid nineties time frame… The style has the unique thumb place that satisfied two style goals. 1) the thumb placement helped with wrist alignment where we use focus to deliver all the power of the punch through the leading knuckles. 2) The thumb placement helped avoid tangling punches in a gi… and this is a nod to the practicalities of training in a fighting gym where wrestling knowledge was known and practiced.
i never seen a kyoukshin practicioner before but i want to meet one. Kyoukshin looks, sounds and it does everything in a badass way. but iam living in the wrong place probably
Don't let how it looks impress you. Look at the teachers and their knowledge of techniques. Many are shallow, knowing only a few techniques, never getting deep. It only takes one.or 2 moves to end a confrontation.
I've seen videos stating that the original karate masters of Okinawa have addressed the fact that karate has no styles, could "styles of karate" arise from dilution and personal adaptation from practitioners throughout the years?
I mean, this is one of the better text-to-speech voices I've heard. I didn't find it annoying or hard to understand. The script was still written by a person.
Kyokushin looks interesting but not being able to punch the face is frustrating, I remember that in K1 we had Francisco and Glauber from Kyokushin but punches were their weak points.
Didn't they become multiple Champions due to their kyoksuhin skills and also mass oyama bammed face punches due to how dangerous it was and just adding glove doesn't make it karate anymore.
@@crisalcantara7671 I trained Kyokushin in Japan for about 5 years, maybe 6. This story about how banning face punching came about is complete nonsense made up after the fact, and none of the older Japanese practitioners (probably guys in their late 60s or older now) go along with it. I had a former Japanese national champion tell me one day over beers that it happened because the Japanese would no longer be able to beat the foreigners due to having reach disadvantages. The first generation of practitioners under Masu Oyama would beat the living hell out of each other, including face punches.
@@crisalcantara7671Francisco did well in K1 but it's hard for him beat Good Boxers like Jerome, Mike Bernardo and Glauber are a Master of Kicks but Boxers are a Nightmare for him too.
I want to learn Uechi ryu, Kyokushin, Goju ryu, Shotokan and Shorin ryu karate, I'm 30 years old, I'm a fan of kung fu and karate styles. They should've add Shudokan because I want to learn that too
@@crisalcantara7671 Yes, sometimes Kyokushin fighters have beaten Muay Thai fighters and kickboxers, but really, not that often (especially if you look at the crooked fights in Japan sponsored by the yakuza).
@@InagorillasuitGuy Karate Kyokushin fighters also trained Boxing to enter in K1 and improved their striking before facing Muay Thai Fighters and are always a war Muay Thai Fighters are true warriors soo Powerful.
You missed the most important point of all the styles you mentioned here. They are all off shoots of Shotokan, and most of the masters trained under Gichin Funokoshi at some time in their past. With the exception of Goju Ryu.
It is cool to know that most of the ancient karate masters doesn't cared about "styles", karate was karate, no matter where it cames, of course, even so, they were obligated to create "styles", but it is a long, long, long story, lol. Thats why other masters that came after the creation of styles made their own, believing it was the best one (if am I not wrong, Kyokushin Kai literally means something like "supreme path/style" lmao).
@@SamuelSocceresportsAnasatsuken is a fictional style which mixes Shotokan, Kyokushin, and Tae Kwon Do. Originally in Street Fighter , Ken and Ryu learned Shotokan as it was the most internationally popular Japanese karate style of the late 80s/early 90s. However, as criticism of Shotokan’s practicality as a competitive sport became more prevalent, Capcom altered the style to become Anasatuken. This makes sense from a real world perspective, given that high ranking martial artists never stay on one style and seek to explore other disciplines to expand their knowledge. Ryu and Ken’s styles of Anasatsuken are therefore uniquely catered to their personalities. Ryu has a heavier more powerful and methodical version of Anasatsuken which additionally draws on Okinawan karate and Judo, utilising heavy punches and fist based strikes with simple yet effective throws. By contrast; Ken has a scrappier, more frenetically paced version of Anasatsuken, reflective of his fiery nature, that carries heavy shades of Japanese kickboxing and Brazilian Jiujitsu. As for the other Anasatsuken users: - Sakura uses a comprehensive hybrid style of Anasatsuken closer to the Japanese combat sport of Shooto (Shoot Fighting). Given that her training mainly consists of imitating her hero Ryu and the incomplete knowledge of Bullshido artist Dan Hibiki; Sakura version of Anasatsuken lacks much of the finesse of her male counterparts, but makes up for it with her natural explosiveness, agility and usually high damage ratio. - Ken’s student Sean Matsuda uses the Anasatsuken taught to him by his sensei and combines it with his family’s own styles of Matsuda BJJ and Vale Tudo to create a version of the art reminiscent of MMA. In fact, his is the only variant of Anasatsuken to feature shoot tackling and ground and pound. This doesn’t always translate fluidly which, combined with his slacker approach to martial arts, always places him as second best compared to his older sister Laura, despite her only practicing BJJ. - Master Gouken uses an amalgamation of the original five karate styles in his variant of Anasatsuken, along with Kenpo. It is a style reminiscent of Okinawan karate and Kenpo’s original links to Kung Fu. - Akuma’s Anasatsuken is perhaps the most unique of all. It uses lethal and fast movements found in Taijutsu and Shirinji Kenpo combined with deliberately lethal techniques found in Uechii Ryu karate. Given the infamy surrounding Uechii Ryu, it seems fitting that many of its trademark techniques would be adopted by the ruthless arch-villain of the Street Fighter franchise.
@@MrBruce5437Jin’s karate style is indeed Kyokushin. However, it should be noted that he is also trained Kazama style Jujutsu, much like his mother Jun and cousin Asuka. Kazama style Jujutsu is a hybrid mix of traditional Japanese martial arts featuring moves taken from Japanese Jujutsu, Judo, Aikido, Sumo, Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu, Nippon Kenpo, Taijutsu and Taido. Along with his Kyokushin experience, it is widely considered among Tekken scholars that Jin is the most skilled fighter in the franchise by a significant margin.
not sure how Kishimoto Di makes it to the list and not Shigeru Nakamura's Okinawa Kenpo. Nakamura was the reason many of the styles on Okinawa went full contact during the 50s, 60s, and 70s using Bogu Kumite armor.
Being master in karate can mean allot of things but American always oversimplify certain words , like ohw he's karate black belt master , like it's supposed to scare his aponent , anyway, in karate the term is sensei not master , but what they mean by master is someone that has learned all the moves of the style he trains ( mastered), but that doesn't mean sht if you're not a great fighter , being a black doesn't mean that you're unbeatable , it means that you are now at the rank of teacher and can or are allowed to teach others , atlease in karate in japan , I don't know how the mc dojos in usa operate 😅
Hey can you do one video just on Kenpo Karate and everything about it kenpo is my favorite martial arts and I would be very happy if you did a video on it
They're all basically the same or very similar. There's too many katas to remember (over 20), leg stretching is painful, throwing kicks to the head is like punching to the knee.
Thanks for your feedback. This video was a bit of a challenge interms of pronunciation due to so many Japanese name. I will pay close attention in the up coming videos.
What about Isshin ryu by Tatsuo Shimabuku, Seibukan Shorin ryu by Shimabukuro sensei (Kyan's System), Kobayashi Shorin ryu by Chibana, Shobayashi Shorin ryu by Eizo Shimabukuro or Okinawan Kenpo by Nakamura? These systems are practiced all over the world, and are as different as daylight and dark. I'll be seventy in a couple of months and I've been training and teaching since I was nineteen. Seems like this video is more of a tip of the hat to the Kyokushin Kai and the Japanese styles. Uechi ryu and Goju ryu are Okinawan styles, but Wado, Shotokan (Not Funakoshi's name for his system), Shito ryu, Kyokushin all have Japanese origins. You didn't mention JKA. Karate came from Okinawa and these Japanese systems are hybrid arts. When karate came to the United States it too became a hybrid of the Okinawan art. Mas Oyama was Korean and the Korean arts like Mu Duk Kwan by Hwang Kee must have influence him, so why no tip of the hat to Korean karate. How popular is Tae-Kwon-Do and Tang-Soo-Do? What about American eclectic karate? What about Ed Parker's Chinese Kenpo. This was not close to every major style of karate, but you did cram it into eight minutes. .
What other karate styles should have been included in this video?
Isshin-ryū
Tatsuo Shimabuku was a student of Chōtoku Kyan (Shōrin-ryū), Chōjun Miyagi (Gōjū-ryū), Motobu Chōki (Motobu-ryū) & Taira Shinken (Ryukyu Kobudo).
You forgot to mention the American Kenpo Karate of Sensei Seth
@@Tungdil_01 nice I am also a big fan of Sensei Seth.
machida karate that was founded by lyoto machida
@@kmmahmud7177 I think this is also the style of Wonderboy Thompson (MMA fighter)
I train in Tang Soo Do (Korean Karate) respect to my brothers & sisters in other styles. 👊🥋🇰🇷
I am with you, Tang Soo!!!
😎 COOL !!!! I'm a multisports man including combat sports. Like sports, many combat sports 🥊 🤜 🥋 exist and I barely found out about Tang Soo Do because of your mention.
It's the base of how Taekwondo was invented according to the Wikipedia.
I investigate sports I find out about because of the internet
*May it make you feel good always* 😎 👊
I'll see how soon I find out more about it.
I just found out it's Chuck Norris style of Karate 🥋 👊 😎
th-cam.com/video/KS3aYPnkEsc/w-d-xo.htmlsi=KX9H2pO3dztDWtus
@@socalautisticman1975 Yep. I know the whole history of Tang Soo Do, It's quite fascinating. It's comprised of northern Chinese Kung Fu, native Korean arts of Subak & Taekkyeon & Shotokan Karate. I don't bother with wikipedia or learning things on the internet, I mostly learned the history by word of mouth by my instructor, but he also let me borrow his books that go into great detail on the history of Tang Soo Do. Quite a rich history indeed. Tang Soo Do is not a sport, it's an art geared towards self defense. 👊🥋🇰🇷
@@HappyCommando92494 of course that of self defense it's good to learn to resist attacks.
Some combat sports moves are useful on the streets. Cool that Chuck Norris learned a steet useful martial art 😎
Tangsoo!!!
I must have been living under a rock. I've been practicing karate for over 50 years. And this is the first time I ever heard of Kishimoto-Di.
Its bullshido, dont worry about it. There is like one dojo in Arizona teaching it, their grandmaster moves like a beginner. Most likely a marketing tool to sell their classes "oh look we have a style tied to roots of all karate that no one knows beside us currently". Even the name is ridiculous, as if a 12yo named it
I do Shotokan and Goju-Ryu. Lots of respect!
I trained in goju for a long time but had to switch to shotokan for geographical reasons. I wouldn't recommend anyone to hang around dojos of these styles at the same time.
@@stettan1 it's definitely confusing doing both at the same time. But I do genuinely enjoy doing both.
@@stettan1 what do you mean by geographical reasons ? i don't know what you mean ?
@@crisalcantara7671 more than 200 kms to the nearest goju dojo😄
I'm impressed with this video, I practice Kyokushin currently!
Glad you liked it!
Nice brow,. what belt are you at now I'm at blue belt
@@crisalcantara7671 I've been training in Kyokushin off and on for 8 years, and I'm currently Green belt (3rd kyu)!
@@dakentaijutsu2010 nice brow , i recently Iwent from green to blue so i'm a fresh blue belt , now i'm working to go to brown than black not that the belt means anything to me anymore cause everything i already learned at green belt , there's nothin new , they just make you wear the belt for a long period .
@@crisalcantara7671 If you go from green to blue it is not Kyokushin. It is
White (can also be orange instead)
Blue
Yellow
Green
Brown
Black.
I trained in Wado ryu for 27 years and loved it
Studied Shotokan, Shudokan, Shorin ryu and now Goju ryu. The thing is, all of these styles never existed a 100 years ago. It wasn't until Funakoshi traveled to Japan that they started naming their systems. The only real "systems" was Naha Te, Tomari Te and Shuri Te. Many Okinawans would travel between dojos or travel to China to train.
So true.
Funakoshi had nothing to do with Goju... Goju did exist q00 years ago it just wasn't named yet, but the system was there. Sensei Higaonna wrote a great book called :The History of Karate: about it
I actually used to do Wado-Ryu. Your description on it was incredibly accurate. Cool vid 👍
I am so old I still call it Kyokushinkai. And call our fighting style "Knockdown," not fullcontact. Like it was in the good ols days. Osu!
I thought i had made up Kyokushinkai, but nowadays only hear Kyokushin 😅 So it was named Kyokushinkai before ?
@@PpAirO5 Yes. The style Masutatsu Oyama created was called Kyokushinkai. I am not shure when the "kai" left, but guess it was after Oyamas death, and the split of the style. The branch I belong to is called Shinkyokushin. We practise Kyokushin Karate. (like all other branches do)
I'm probably even older. :-) Oyama founded Kyokushin Kaikan in 1964 (officially, "International Karate Organization Kyokushin Kaikan"; prior to that it was simply called "Oyama Dojo" from circa 1956). Kaikan means something like "hall" or "auditorium." It references the organization, not the style. "Kai" as a standalone word can have several different meanings (e.g., "earth," "ocean," "shell") none of which pertain to the martial arts. In that sense, "Kyokushin-kai" is simply a contraction for the name of the organization. I trained in it for a few years in Southeast Asia starting in 1969, then was allowed to spend two months at the school in Tokyo in 1972. At that time, "Kyokushin," "Kyokushin-kai," and "Kyokushin-do" seemed to be used fairly interchangeably...at least informally.
🤣
@@ed.williams Nice clarifying. And you are older than me. I am 64, 2.Dan, still train and instruct. Osu.
I practiced Goju Ryu Wado Ryu Shotokan and Uechi Ryu all four works with me and I factor in with my kickboxing.
I was train shorin ryu in the Philippines located in Tarlac. There are top 2 strongest karate in Tarlac. They train me to stance, footwork, striking, offense, and defense, kata, joint lock, grappling, close combat, knife to hand combat, and agility like ninja movement like safe roll, and more.
Now that's what i called old school karate , old school karate was just like modern day mma , 😎
I'm from the Philippines too and I also train shorin ryu, but mostly we train blocks, kicks, and punches, footwork, proper movements, and timing but there are many more to learn.
Where’s Mishima style Karate? lol jk.
It basically Mix martial art karate if you see there’s a lot similar movements from others
Fax ❤❤❤
@@hubertbagtas9029Es más parecido a kyokushin karate
Well actually, El_Insano, Kyokushinkai karate is actually what Jin Kazama’s fighting style from Tekken 4 through Tekken 7 is based on. But yeah, it could be argued that the Mishimas do mix multiple forms of Karate into their own hybrid style.
@@ianjohnson7761Did you forget about 8?
Next is Kenpo/kempo styles
Shorinji Kempo
Kajukenbo
Okinawan kenpo
Korean kenpo(gwon beup)
Quan fa(chinese kenpo)
Byakuren kaikan(brand off shorinji kempo and kyokushin mix)
American kenpo karate
Kara ho kenpo
There's also Shaolin Kenpo
Shito ryu has the best katas
and its fighting style is ranged accurate kicks
it has good counters too
what I personally do is I use fast foot work to start chain of strong accurate kicks whenever is see an opening or a counter
it also has good feint kicks
we also practice traditional weapons like nunchaku and bo staff
Shito ryu is truly a work of art
I tried to do kyokushin but I dont have any dojos near me but I do Uechi Ryu deadly strikes. respect to all fighting styles
Forgot to mention that few of those style heads practiced shotokan
Correction: 1:53 This picture shows the kata named Bassai Dai, which is from Shotokan Karate, not Shito Ryu. The one from Shito Ryu is slightly different. Really good video!! :)
Hold on, hold on! Where is Eagle Fang Karate?
Oh yeah, and wheres Cobra kai
and Miyagi Do?
@@burstrow And Topanga???
@@ThatCobraKaiFella-i4xthey are tang so do
@@burstrowGojo ryu
So my guess is in 'Karate Kid 2" - while Daniel and Miyagi (characters) used the Goru-Ryu type of Karate, Sato and Chozen (other characters) used a combination of possibly Kyokushin and Shotokan karate.
Kyokushin is known as the "bloodsport" of all karate styles. The famous "kumite" type of karate. No protective gear at all in its bouts - only your gi, and any punches to the face in competition - are illegal in this type of karate.
Isshinryu?
Kinda important.
0:09 Really ???? A Miyagi 😎
I do Chun Kuk Do and I enjoy it very much and much respect to all styles of karate and other martial arts 👊. I knew of my style and maybe 2 others and I had no idea there were that many. Very good and informative. Thank you 🙏
Thanks for sharing
kyokushin practitioner here ✋ great video, Osu.
Glad you like video.
Imagine being a black belt in Goju-Ryu, Shotokan, Ashihara, and Kyokushin Karate
Michael Jai White did that, except for Ashihara. He also practiced Tang Soo Do, Taekwondo, Wushu, Kobudo, and Jiu-Jitsu
@@reijiminato8762 Thanks for letting me know man
I have not heard of some of these styles!😮
This is awesome!😎
Shorin Ryu was founded by Bushi Matsamura Shirinkan is a breakaway. the other Shorin Ryu breakaway styles Matsubayashi and kobayashi but they are not mentioned
Matsubayashi Shorin Ryu was founded by him. The Shorin Ryu that descended from Shuri-te was named and founded by Chosin Chibana a student and the inheritor of Ankoh Itousu.
@@mactherealestateman I practice the teachings from Shōshin Nagamine form of Matsubayashi Shorin-ryū
I did kyokushin and now I'm doing go Jo ryu which your description for was quite accurate
In the Wado Ryu section you show a picture of Gozo Shioda, he's the founder of Yoshinkan aikido.
Otsuka resembles Shioda Sensei.
WADO RYU = Karate Shito Ryu & Shotokan + JiuJitsu 👌👍
As someone who’s been doing wado ryu for 8 and a half years I couldn’t agree more
What about Isshin ryu, I hear it is unique because they punch a different way.
It is. They use a vertical fist similar to wing chun, but the thumb placement is odd. While it's definitely fun and useful, it can be hard if you were taught typical punches beforehand
As an Isshin Ryu sho dan from the mid nineties time frame… The style has the unique thumb place that satisfied two style goals. 1) the thumb placement helped with wrist alignment where we use focus to deliver all the power of the punch through the leading knuckles. 2) The thumb placement helped avoid tangling punches in a gi… and this is a nod to the practicalities of training in a fighting gym where wrestling knowledge was known and practiced.
i never seen a kyoukshin practicioner before
but i want to meet one.
Kyoukshin looks, sounds and it does everything in a badass way.
but iam living in the wrong place probably
Don't let how it looks impress you. Look at the teachers and their knowledge of techniques. Many are shallow, knowing only a few techniques, never getting deep. It only takes one.or 2 moves to end a confrontation.
I've met Kyokushin guys. They're exactly what you're probably picturing in your head right now.
Ashihara kaikan is Grappling, Muay Thai or Karate ? They have a belt system and use Karate GI but use Muay Thai skills and Throws of Judo too.
And still makes it Karate, so what's your point?
I've seen videos stating that the original karate masters of Okinawa have addressed the fact that karate has no styles, could "styles of karate" arise from dilution and personal adaptation from practitioners throughout the years?
Goju ryu✊✊👊
Instead of using a computerized and automated voice to narrate, why not use a human voice that understands the subject of the video?
Maybe he has a terrible voice. He could have a Woody Allen voice.
Uh what’s wrong with using computerized automated voice to narrate ITS HIS FUCKING LIFE LET HIM MAKE HIS DECISIONS
Cheaper and easier duh
I mean, this is one of the better text-to-speech voices I've heard. I didn't find it annoying or hard to understand. The script was still written by a person.
@@barrettokarate you're funny ass hellll 😀😀
Make a video whit the diferent style of kung fu, is very cool your videos ❤
Coming soon!
My vote goes to this too!!
Great video and very educational I practice Shorin Ryu respect my friends 👊🥋
You ate 2 very important ones, shindo Jinnen en Ryu and shotokai.
Kyokushin looks interesting but not being able to punch the face is frustrating, I remember that in K1 we had Francisco and Glauber from Kyokushin but punches were their weak points.
Didn't they become multiple Champions due to their kyoksuhin skills and also mass oyama bammed face punches due to how dangerous it was and just adding glove doesn't make it karate anymore.
@@crisalcantara7671 I trained Kyokushin in Japan for about 5 years, maybe 6. This story about how banning face punching came about is complete nonsense made up after the fact, and none of the older Japanese practitioners (probably guys in their late 60s or older now) go along with it. I had a former Japanese national champion tell me one day over beers that it happened because the Japanese would no longer be able to beat the foreigners due to having reach disadvantages. The first generation of practitioners under Masu Oyama would beat the living hell out of each other, including face punches.
@@crisalcantara7671Francisco did well in K1 but it's hard for him beat Good Boxers like Jerome, Mike Bernardo and Glauber are a Master of Kicks but Boxers are a Nightmare for him too.
@@InagorillasuitGuyThank You I don't know that story my father are a Black Belt of Kyokushin but he doesn't know explain why no head punchs.
because u would kill a person
Kudo, Ashihara, Enshen, Kyokushin karate OSU
Gensei-Ryu
Hawaiian Kempo, American Kenpo, Shaolin Kempo, Kajukenbu, were all missed, and are some of the most popular fighting arts in the USA.
I just started taekwondo
I think I did Goju Ryu style as a kid, but can't really remember. I do recall it being at a 'USA Karate' though 😅
Shotokan has an older version called Shotokai perhaps described as a softer version of Shotokan.
I want to learn Uechi ryu, Kyokushin, Goju ryu, Shotokan and Shorin ryu karate, I'm 30 years old, I'm a fan of kung fu and karate styles. They should've add Shudokan because I want to learn that too
@astac. Pick one style and get real good at it.
Kyokushin could be a rival to Muay Thai if it had punches to the face, It's a tough style a Karate for man but with an absurd nerf.
Kyokushin fighters have beeten many muay Thai and kickboxers all you need to do is have a higher guard
True.
@@crisalcantara7671 Yes, sometimes Kyokushin fighters have beaten Muay Thai fighters and kickboxers, but really, not that often (especially if you look at the crooked fights in Japan sponsored by the yakuza).
@@InagorillasuitGuy Karate Kyokushin fighters also trained Boxing to enter in K1 and improved their striking before facing Muay Thai Fighters and are always a war Muay Thai Fighters are true warriors soo Powerful.
Kishimoto di sounds interesting
naruto author ?
I do shotokan karate i am green belt
how about Genseiryu??
It doesn’t matter what you style you train. JUST SPAR. Figure out what works and what doesn’t
You missed the most important point of all the styles you mentioned here.
They are all off shoots of Shotokan, and most of the masters trained under Gichin Funokoshi at some time in their past. With the exception of Goju Ryu.
Where's Ameridote?
It is cool to know that most of the ancient karate masters doesn't cared about "styles", karate was karate, no matter where it cames, of course, even so, they were obligated to create "styles", but it is a long, long, long story, lol. Thats why other masters that came after the creation of styles made their own, believing it was the best one (if am I not wrong, Kyokushin Kai literally means something like "supreme path/style" lmao).
Thank you so much :)
You're welcome!
What happened to KEMPO karate?
Not really karate
Wado-ryu right here
Where's the kazama style?🗿
Kazama karate based on kyokushin
You mean the " Mishima Fighting Method" lol
How about ansatsuken lol...
@@SamuelSocceresportsAnasatsuken is a fictional style which mixes Shotokan, Kyokushin, and Tae Kwon Do.
Originally in Street Fighter , Ken and Ryu learned Shotokan as it was the most internationally popular Japanese karate style of the late 80s/early 90s. However, as criticism of Shotokan’s practicality as a competitive sport became more prevalent, Capcom altered the style to become Anasatuken.
This makes sense from a real world perspective, given that high ranking martial artists never stay on one style and seek to explore other disciplines to expand their knowledge.
Ryu and Ken’s styles of Anasatsuken are therefore uniquely catered to their personalities. Ryu has a heavier more powerful and methodical version of Anasatsuken which additionally draws on Okinawan karate and Judo, utilising heavy punches and fist based strikes with simple yet effective throws. By contrast; Ken has a scrappier, more frenetically paced version of Anasatsuken, reflective of his fiery nature, that carries heavy shades of Japanese kickboxing and Brazilian Jiujitsu.
As for the other Anasatsuken users:
- Sakura uses a comprehensive hybrid style of Anasatsuken closer to the Japanese combat sport of Shooto (Shoot Fighting). Given that her training mainly consists of imitating her hero Ryu and the incomplete knowledge of Bullshido artist Dan Hibiki; Sakura version of Anasatsuken lacks much of the finesse of her male counterparts, but makes up for it with her natural explosiveness, agility and usually high damage ratio.
- Ken’s student Sean Matsuda uses the Anasatsuken taught to him by his sensei and combines it with his family’s own styles of Matsuda BJJ and Vale Tudo to create a version of the art reminiscent of MMA. In fact, his is the only variant of Anasatsuken to feature shoot tackling and ground and pound. This doesn’t always translate fluidly which, combined with his slacker approach to martial arts, always places him as second best compared to his older sister Laura, despite her only practicing BJJ.
- Master Gouken uses an amalgamation of the original five karate styles in his variant of Anasatsuken, along with Kenpo. It is a style reminiscent of Okinawan karate and Kenpo’s original links to Kung Fu.
- Akuma’s Anasatsuken is perhaps the most unique of all. It uses lethal and fast movements found in Taijutsu and Shirinji Kenpo combined with deliberately lethal techniques found in Uechii Ryu karate. Given the infamy surrounding Uechii Ryu, it seems fitting that many of its trademark techniques would be adopted by the ruthless arch-villain of the Street Fighter franchise.
@@MrBruce5437Jin’s karate style is indeed Kyokushin. However, it should be noted that he is also trained Kazama style Jujutsu, much like his mother Jun and cousin Asuka. Kazama style Jujutsu is a hybrid mix of traditional Japanese martial arts featuring moves taken from Japanese Jujutsu, Judo, Aikido, Sumo, Daito-Ryu Aikijujutsu, Nippon Kenpo, Taijutsu and Taido.
Along with his Kyokushin experience, it is widely considered among Tekken scholars that Jin is the most skilled fighter in the franchise by a significant margin.
Thanks for knolage
What about kudo
Yeah true. I was so surprised that it wasn't mentioned. It is huge in japan and russia. Meanwhile kishimoto-di seems like a weird aikido style
U forget shidokan karate
You can make multiple videos on different kung fu styles alone
No Isshinryu?
Practice kyokushin and japanese Jujutsu
No Kenpo mentioned
Anyone dropping in here spend any time with Shugoro Nakazato from 1974-1976? I have some photos, if anyone is interested.
"Shorin Ryu has unique punching style" *shows picture of not-shorinryu fist* :/
Could you please do a video about every Shorin-Ryu branch? There are soo many it's ridiculous! 😅
Thank you for your suggestion. I will add it to my list.
Same with Goju Ryu lol
In that case, do one on the 3 Okinawan styles, Shuri-te, Naha-Te, and Tomari-Te, and what they became.
not sure how Kishimoto Di makes it to the list and not Shigeru Nakamura's Okinawa Kenpo. Nakamura was the reason many of the styles on Okinawa went full contact during the 50s, 60s, and 70s using Bogu Kumite armor.
I love martial arts, i just sorry that i has no talent to become a master.
Not everyone need to become a master. Reach to the level up to your capability.
Your ancestors are disappointed
Being master in karate can mean allot of things but American always oversimplify certain words , like ohw he's karate black belt master , like it's supposed to scare his aponent , anyway, in karate the term is sensei not master , but what they mean by master is someone that has learned all the moves of the style he trains ( mastered), but that doesn't mean sht if you're not a great fighter , being a black doesn't mean that you're unbeatable , it means that you are now at the rank of teacher and can or are allowed to teach others , atlease in karate in japan , I don't know how the mc dojos in usa operate 😅
@@LittleBpaulmuller-Ownersi know i am😂
And where's Taidō? I've heard that it came from Karate
Taido is a different Martial Art like Kenpo. It's not Karate.
Hey can you do one video just on Kenpo Karate and everything about it kenpo is my favorite martial arts and I would be very happy if you did a video on it
You got it. Added to my list.
Did this guy know about ryukyu?
Can you try to make video on a bit more less known styles such as Soryu style?
You got it. Thanks for the suggestion.
shukokai - the way for all
Why didn't you list Tadashi Nakamura's Seido Karate?
What about Ansatsuken? 😉
If you practice long enough you realize that all of them are the same.
Wow is this my vid idea Bc 1 month ago I said every karate style and wch is the best and I said yes
what about Kojo ryu karate Ryobu kai karate Ryuei ryu karate ?
What Goshin Jutsu karate?
So Ashihara & Enshin are basically MMA before MMA became a thing... huh...
They're all basically the same or very similar. There's too many katas to remember (over 20), leg stretching is painful, throwing kicks to the head is like punching to the knee.
What??? No Eagle Fang?
😂😂
Gensei Ryu??
where is Kudo
What about Kempo/ Kenpo?
Bruh I didn't know kyokushin is that powerful 😅
Got 20 seconds in. The least the narrator could do is pronounce the words correctly.
Thanks for your feedback. This video was a bit of a challenge interms of pronunciation due to so many Japanese name. I will pay close attention in the up coming videos.
It's AI brow ,you know that its hard for it to pronounce some words or do you want to fight the AI in a kyokushin match 😂😂
Yeah, that was kind of painful
u forgot kudo
hey can please do kung fu styles like you with karate style.
It's out there already.
Where's shukokai karate?
Niesi Goju Ryu GM Frank Ruiz, Master Rex Lee
What about Isshin ryu by Tatsuo Shimabuku, Seibukan Shorin ryu by Shimabukuro sensei (Kyan's System), Kobayashi Shorin ryu by Chibana, Shobayashi Shorin ryu by Eizo Shimabukuro or Okinawan Kenpo by Nakamura? These systems are practiced all over the world, and are as different as daylight and dark. I'll be seventy in a couple of months and I've been training and teaching since I was nineteen. Seems like this video is more of a tip of the hat to the Kyokushin Kai and the Japanese styles. Uechi ryu and Goju ryu are Okinawan styles, but Wado, Shotokan (Not Funakoshi's name for his system), Shito ryu, Kyokushin all have Japanese origins. You didn't mention JKA. Karate came from Okinawa and these Japanese systems are hybrid arts. When karate came to the United States it too became a hybrid of the Okinawan art. Mas Oyama was Korean and the Korean arts like Mu Duk Kwan by Hwang Kee must have influence him, so why no tip of the hat to Korean karate. How popular is Tae-Kwon-Do and Tang-Soo-Do? What about American eclectic karate? What about Ed Parker's Chinese Kenpo. This was not close to every major style of karate, but you did cram it into eight minutes. .
Ishin Ryu??!?
Canada has some karate i forgot there names and chuck norris has a style I'm to lazy to look upit's name. What about Korean karate
Tang Sun Doo is the Norris one
@@deathspawn54 I heard he created his own style
@@hotpopcorncake American Tang Soo Do and "Chuck Norris System" are the ones he created.
@@barrettokarate Nope i google it. since you didn't it called Chun Kuk Do
@@hotpopcorncake😂
falto el american kenpo karate
Perez Sharon Martinez Helen Davis Edward
Where's kenpo karate the American style and Japanese style?
Ryuei Ryu? Shudo kan? Lima Lama? Kempo?