|
Post by daikirai on Jun 20, 2006 17:46:34 GMT -5
Hi, My names Yoshio I'm 17 I play DDR, SM, and FFR Hardest song i beat on DDR was Max 300, So Deep, and yea So yea since this thread is new everyone introduce yourself
|
|
|
Post by cjmaster on Jun 20, 2006 19:37:42 GMT -5
Welcome to the forum. Glad to have you with us. If you want to get better, I suggest practice stepmania, ditch ffr, and use the speed C500 to start. If you don't know what a Cmod is, see this thread.
|
|
|
Post by daikirai on Jun 21, 2006 16:25:54 GMT -5
oh those are the hardest songs I can do on feet I can do alot better on fingers
|
|
|
Post by skabreaker [Administrator] on Jun 21, 2006 18:03:25 GMT -5
play on the computer and ull get alot better because there are way more competative stuff tahn just maxx 300...
|
|
|
Post by karlravioli on Jun 21, 2006 21:54:53 GMT -5
ditch ffr?!
|
|
|
Post by cjmaster on Jun 21, 2006 22:21:33 GMT -5
The best idea is to play songs you fail. I know it sounds stupid, and I know you'll be saying "BUT I CAN'T READ THEM AND ALL I CAN DO IS MASH AND NOT KNOW WHAT IM PRESSING"
My girlfriend says the same thing. And she'll be thanking me when she gets really good ^_^
|
|
|
Post by Silver Brian on Jun 25, 2006 19:15:43 GMT -5
Then just don't mash. C500 is really fast for most people. C300, which FFR is at, is pretty manageable, and you can just play the easier songs. When you're really good at FFR, then you can go to SM and mash there. XD
|
|
|
Post by cjmaster on Jun 26, 2006 1:02:44 GMT -5
yeah, the idea is to try your hardest. once you find something that's challenging to you, stick with it and try to work on it. but for the beginners. work on stream first. jumps will be a challenge for a while. stream will be pretty challenging too, but work on like streamy songs, and once you get used to the placement and patterns, jumps will come more naturally.
|
|