Good LORD, man, have you never struck the enter key in your life?! Breaking up this wall of text with Risking's edit of it...
It's 5:41 in the morning and I haven't had much caffeine so bare with me. I am very talented at most of the hobbies I participate in, and being a long time FFR and Stepmania player (I began playing FFR when I was 12, I am now 16.)
I often ponder: Why do skills develop at a much faster rate than other people for some people? Is it perseverance? Or is it purely genetical? Or is because some people have an easier pathway to go through the later they attempt to develop the skill? I believe that the development of a hobby in general corresponds completely to have how fast someone will develop at that hobby.
In FFR, Stepmania, and even DDR the skill hierarchy has changed dramatically recently. A few years ago, even though DDR had been out for a long period of time, an AAA on a 10 foot song was regarded as an insanely good score. There were people who had been playing for years that still could not AAA even the simplest of 10 feet songs on DDR. Back then if you AAAed MAX300 you were one of the best, and people like Yasu and Take who AAAed MAX300 multiple amounts of times, occasionally even consecutively were regarded as godly.
That was a long time ago however. Now if you look around people are starting DDR and AAAing songs rated 10 feet within WEEKS of starting, and usually those people progress ALOT faster than the people who started the hobby (DDR) early, even when they surpass them. I often find that people who begin hobbies early reach a sort of skill plateau in which very little skill is developed no matter how much you try.
Any seasoned FFR or Stepmania player will agree with me. From what I've noticed, in general when you start a hobby you develop your skill at that hobby in huge bouts, eventually reaching a climax. The earliest FFR and Stepmania players are usually not the best, no matter how much they whore the games, it is often the newer players that become the best, until another generation comes, which surpasses the old best players.
It can be seen right now with FFR. cetaka and Dynam0 are semi-fresh FFR players who have been exposed to other rhythm games before joining FFR. Their growth rates were astronomical. Those two are the only examples that I can of off the top of my head, but there are plenty more, just look at the tier lists.
Right now I find that it is, for me, nearly impossible to progress any further at FFR. The only times that I have progressed are when I've started new rhythm game hobbies (the whoring of DJMAX granting me my biggest progression thus far).
When I went to arch0wl.com and was learning Stepmania my slow development tore me apart. Why couldn't I jack like some people? Why couldn't I have insane timing like some people? I often felt jealous of other people. Even now jacks are my worst enemies.
FFR and Stepmania have a lot of sub-skills that must be developed to develop the skill as a whole: The biggest three are timing, speed, and consistency; and from those sub-skills a whole slew of techniques are involved. MAing and PAing are timing techniques, one usually learns to MA and PA as a whole instead of progressing slowly.
Speed seems to be a mix of physical constraint and mental constraint and for most people starts at a certain amount and progresses VERY slowly, unlike MAing and PAing.
Consistency seems to be all mental. Everybody has the potential to reach a certain point with their scores, but some people zero in on this point MUCH easier. These people usually have scores on the same song played that only differ by one or two goods. I, for one, have terrible consistency and so do many other people. Often people will find themselves carrying a combo on every part of a song without being able to string it all together. Consistency is usual what matters most after timing and speed are learned. The believe that how fast you develop at a skill is, for the majority, dependent on the resources developed for that skill, and the techniques and skills that you've already learned and mastered than can be incorporated into that skill. I also believe that the younger you are the easier learning something is (IIRC this has been proven scientifically but I can't cite a source).
I believe that how fast a skill develops is barely dependent on how fast of a learner you actually are in the long run (obviously it makes some what of a difference but barely). What do you believe? How fast did you progress at Stepmania or FFR? Did you ever reach that dreaded skill plateau? Did you surpass it? And if so how? Tell me your stories, I am very interested in what makes up a pro.
Tell me your thoughts about my opinion. Knowledge is power, and although most seasoned rhythm game veterans already know how skill development works in sort of a mangled way I figured it would be good to come to some sort of a consensus from all of our experiences and thoughts, for the FFR and Stepmania community as a whole, and to help those driving to improve but cannot, me being one of them.
This is FFR and Stepmania, no not even Stemania and FFR, SKILL DEVELOMENT on a whole new level. You do not have to limit this thread to discussions on how your FFR and Stepmania skill developed, please feel free to explain and post about other instances that you've developed skill. I apology if a moderator or administrator feels that this is the wrong forum for this thread, please do not hesitate to move it.
It's 5:41 in the morning and I haven't had much caffeine so bare with me. I am very talented at most of the hobbies I participate in, and being a long time FFR and Stepmania player (I began playing FFR when I was 12, I am now 16.)
I often ponder: Why do skills develop at a much faster rate than other people for some people? Is it perseverance? Or is it purely genetical? Or is because some people have an easier pathway to go through the later they attempt to develop the skill? I believe that the development of a hobby in general corresponds completely to have how fast someone will develop at that hobby.
In FFR, Stepmania, and even DDR the skill hierarchy has changed dramatically recently. A few years ago, even though DDR had been out for a long period of time, an AAA on a 10 foot song was regarded as an insanely good score. There were people who had been playing for years that still could not AAA even the simplest of 10 feet songs on DDR. Back then if you AAAed MAX300 you were one of the best, and people like Yasu and Take who AAAed MAX300 multiple amounts of times, occasionally even consecutively were regarded as godly.
That was a long time ago however. Now if you look around people are starting DDR and AAAing songs rated 10 feet within WEEKS of starting, and usually those people progress ALOT faster than the people who started the hobby (DDR) early, even when they surpass them. I often find that people who begin hobbies early reach a sort of skill plateau in which very little skill is developed no matter how much you try.
Any seasoned FFR or Stepmania player will agree with me. From what I've noticed, in general when you start a hobby you develop your skill at that hobby in huge bouts, eventually reaching a climax. The earliest FFR and Stepmania players are usually not the best, no matter how much they whore the games, it is often the newer players that become the best, until another generation comes, which surpasses the old best players.
It can be seen right now with FFR. cetaka and Dynam0 are semi-fresh FFR players who have been exposed to other rhythm games before joining FFR. Their growth rates were astronomical. Those two are the only examples that I can of off the top of my head, but there are plenty more, just look at the tier lists.
Right now I find that it is, for me, nearly impossible to progress any further at FFR. The only times that I have progressed are when I've started new rhythm game hobbies (the whoring of DJMAX granting me my biggest progression thus far).
When I went to arch0wl.com and was learning Stepmania my slow development tore me apart. Why couldn't I jack like some people? Why couldn't I have insane timing like some people? I often felt jealous of other people. Even now jacks are my worst enemies.
FFR and Stepmania have a lot of sub-skills that must be developed to develop the skill as a whole: The biggest three are timing, speed, and consistency; and from those sub-skills a whole slew of techniques are involved. MAing and PAing are timing techniques, one usually learns to MA and PA as a whole instead of progressing slowly.
Speed seems to be a mix of physical constraint and mental constraint and for most people starts at a certain amount and progresses VERY slowly, unlike MAing and PAing.
Consistency seems to be all mental. Everybody has the potential to reach a certain point with their scores, but some people zero in on this point MUCH easier. These people usually have scores on the same song played that only differ by one or two goods. I, for one, have terrible consistency and so do many other people. Often people will find themselves carrying a combo on every part of a song without being able to string it all together. Consistency is usual what matters most after timing and speed are learned. The believe that how fast you develop at a skill is, for the majority, dependent on the resources developed for that skill, and the techniques and skills that you've already learned and mastered than can be incorporated into that skill. I also believe that the younger you are the easier learning something is (IIRC this has been proven scientifically but I can't cite a source).
I believe that how fast a skill develops is barely dependent on how fast of a learner you actually are in the long run (obviously it makes some what of a difference but barely). What do you believe? How fast did you progress at Stepmania or FFR? Did you ever reach that dreaded skill plateau? Did you surpass it? And if so how? Tell me your stories, I am very interested in what makes up a pro.
Tell me your thoughts about my opinion. Knowledge is power, and although most seasoned rhythm game veterans already know how skill development works in sort of a mangled way I figured it would be good to come to some sort of a consensus from all of our experiences and thoughts, for the FFR and Stepmania community as a whole, and to help those driving to improve but cannot, me being one of them.
This is FFR and Stepmania, no not even Stemania and FFR, SKILL DEVELOMENT on a whole new level. You do not have to limit this thread to discussions on how your FFR and Stepmania skill developed, please feel free to explain and post about other instances that you've developed skill. I apology if a moderator or administrator feels that this is the wrong forum for this thread, please do not hesitate to move it.



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