by the way, naa hapkido diri sa cebu?
mapildi jud tong tapulan mu praktis. kato sigi lng kumbati sa computer unya wala sa lihok..
opppsss. murag ako man ron.. hahaha.
experience plays a very big part on mastering martial arts. maski unsa nga discipline
I'm new to this forum and sorry for bumping this topic. But, I just want to know if there's a Hapkido dojang here in cebu? Thanks.
ahehehe dli mana ma kumpara ang mga arts....
ang mo gamit ana moy i kompara.... depende sa mo gamit...
tanan deadly.... walay most most most... ehe
yup...mu agree jud ko ana...depende ra jud na xa sa usa ka martial artist if unsaon nya pagdala...
both are very good martial arts. their differences are largely based on the focus of the training. Hapkido trains students in many facets of combat like kicks, punches, strikes and they have a very wide arsenal of locks, throws and even grappling. Other arts largely influenced by Hapkido is Kuk Sool Won and Hwa Rang Do. Taekwondo in turn focuses most of its training on sports sparring. but it doesnt mean that thats all they can do. if u have seen the Phil Taekwondo Association Syllabus, it indeed teaches not only sparring but even defence, although most instructors focus more in sports. Teakwondo is superb when it comes to free sparring as Hapkido is mostky practiced in pre arranged way.
So for me it would actually depend on the practitioner, specially with his ability to adopt with the opponent and capitalize on the best range where his art would work best. By the way in Korea, Hapkido people adopts a lot of taekwondo style training specially with their kicking drills, and taekwondo in turn adopts some self defence join lock techniques in its mandatory self defence 3 Step and 1 step sparring.
Another Korean art worthy of mention is Soo Bahk Do ( Tang Soo Do)
there was one Hapkido school in Cebu before in AS Fortuna. I have talked with the Korean Instructor and according to him, the tuition is 2thousand 5hundred. Unfortunately, it closed a few months ago as few students can afford. A Gay Bar has replaced the Hapkido Studio instead........ wahahahaha
martial arts never beat martial arts, people beat people. so whoever had the better training and conditioning, and yes, maybe the luck element could play as to who could land the first solid (and maybe fatal) blow would win.. that if it's a no holds barred fight/match.
kung sport or formal match, well, if it's a taekwondo match, naturally, the TKD practitioner would win and so as if it's a hapkido match, then the hapkido practitioner would win.
there is no such thing as superior martial art, there is a better practitioner. it's how one trains, not what one trains
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