- Joined
- May 6, 2007
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The power definitely translates. It just is also that everyone is also wearing a steel helmet too, so everyone literally has an iron chin. But being already trained to have good power helps a lot.Yikes, hope it heals well for you.
Yeah the guy I was training with is going to worlds this year in the group fighting and is the same height as me but a few stone heavier so a great training partner.
The hema stuff I've been doing was useful for distance and movement, in striking it helps but there's a difference in power. I've been training technical sparring the last few years pulling my blows so that's something to work on.
It was so odd, everything we were doing, I was in my head thinking, "oh I did this in judo, oh that's like a push pull bull rush from football, this is a footwork upper body pattern from kickboxing etc etc. I'm looking forward to improving the cardio, but I was already able to go for the length of the rounds, which were only 1min.
The lack of weight classes is amazing. Lol. Also the team aspect in 5 on 5 is great. I thrive off the team dynamic and always disliked the solo aspect of many martial arts. I cannot wait to be in full harness and be able to punch someone or kick them, it's going to be exciting to see if the power I had translates to this.
And there are weight classes for the pro-fights/outrance. Duels there is no need, and team fights... well, its everyone lol. Team fights are a blast. The most fun easily. I'm best at the pro-fights though due to my MMA background so I enjoy them too, just more nerve wracking and harder than the team fights. Duels are fun too, I am meh at them so far but am improving.
It's good your cardio is holding up. That's the hardest part in armor. Getting used to the helmet is imo the second hardest. The weight of the armor is probably the next after that. Slowing you down, burning your arms faster, odd weight distribution, and a higher center of gravity.

