As a Gief player…would you guys be willing to share info on how to get past Sim’s limbs? I find it very difficult to get in on Sim.
There’s really no easy way. You just have to remember that they have a hurtbox and try to either use your best poke (cr.jab?) or use armored stuff against them. The big slow ones you can jump over, but any good Sim is going to just shut you down for the most part. I honestly feel bad for geifs when I play them.
I know snake eyez has played Fchamp at wnf so look up some of those videos.
Gief will always eat some damage trying to get in, it’s the nature of the charter when playing against a zoner. Gief can air throw Sim’s limbs when jumping in though, so if the Sim player’s predictably anti-airing, that’s a great option. Gief can also counter poke limbs (through guess work) as NeoBlood said.
The matchup is in Sim’s favour, but watch out for patterns in the Sim player’s pokes and counter, don’t be afraid to take some damage to get in, and you can do okay. Once Gief is up close the tables turn, and especially in the corner gief can be quite scary with his options and high damage.
As for individual moves, I would go to training mode to find at exactly what’s best against what.
Also remember that teleports without a fireball are unsafe and drills that don’t hit below the knees can be spd’d.
Snake eyez also said in a recent interview at dreamhack that he’s looking at dropping gief (maybe for Alex) as he’s not happy with him in this game.
When THE gief player says that, you know that if you choose to play him, you will sadly always be in for an uphill battle, at least in some matchups.
Still, time will tell if he actualy switches.
I’ve finally decided to (re)make the transition from pad to stick and got myself a TES+. I’ve played on stick in the past so it’s not something foreign to me, but I’m currently having some execution issues with Dhalsim (to be expected considering how execution heavy he is compared to the rest of the cast).
Mainly, I’ve been failing on my low drills and IATs. I’m not sure if there is a technique behind low drills or if it’s just a matter of practice. However for the IATs, I’ve been experimenting with a few different notations.
Using numpad notation:
-62369+PPP/KKK. (f, d, d/f, f, u/f)This is the motion most natural to me since I’ve gotten used to DP’ing with a 623 motion. However, I’m not used to TK’ing on stick as I am on pad, so I get a lot of jump normals. Also it has a pretty long motion, so I worry the input time is way longer than it should be.
-32369+PPP/KKK. (d/f, d, d/f) aka the DP shortcut into TK IAT. I hate this motion so much, but I’ve heard from a local Dhalsim recently that this is the notation he prefers using and has the most success with so just putting it up here for consideration.
-6369+PPP/KKK. (f, d/f, f, u/f) I’m surprised this actually works! This is the notation I have the most success with in training plus the input time is pretty quick, however it feels so unnatural pulling it off that in a real match, I end up using the first method out of muscle memory.
I just wanted to ask what notations you guys prefer using for IATs if none of the above and if you have any tips for transitioning to stick with Dhalsim.
I always f, d, d/f, f, u/f. I’ve done dpm so many times over the years it’s pretty natural, and all you’re doing is carrying it on. If it’s most natural to you too I’d stick with it, not that there’s anything wrong with the others.
You’ve actually got quite a lot of time to do the motion, as if you teleport too low to the ground no attacks will have time to come out. I reckon you need to do it in about 15 frames (complete guess).
As for a piece of advice - Te sticks still use jlf sticks afaik. I used a jlf for a year and could do all sf4 trials on it, but still had execution errors and found it hard. I then got an ls-32 (easy install) to replace it and the difference was huge instantly. Everything was much easier and felt more precise. I now play on an ls-40 which is pretty similar just a shorter throw (if anything a little too short unless you need to be doing standing 720s etc.), but that works too. Obviously milage may vary, but I can’t stress enough how much easier it made execution for me!
Thanks for the tips man. I’ll keep practicing the same input and try to get it faster and more consistently.
I’m afraid swapping parts isn’t as simple in my region (Middle East) so swapping out the stick may end up being too expensive or just not possible at all. I had to order my stick from Amazon UK and part of the reason I chose to get the TES is because I wanted a stick with reliable parts that hopefully won’t need replacement parts for years to come. When the time comes, I hope I would be up to the task of replacing the parts myself lol
I did complete the SSF4 trials as well on my old stick a few years back (the cheapest PS3 Hori stick I could get my hands on at the time) and despite not playing on stick for ages, the difference in quality on the TE is very noticeable and I’m enjoying every second of it. It’s still not as comfortable as I remember but I’m still getting adjusted back to arcade stick after years of dpad play.
No worries, hope you get it consistent soon.
Yeah, shipping can be expensive if you don’t have a supplier in your country. http://www.arcadeworlduk.com/products/Seimitsu-LS-32-01-Arcade-Joystick.html does shipping for £11.50 to the middle east, meaning an ls-32-01 would be £24.50 (+ import tax if your country has that), but depending on exchange rates maybe that’s still a lot.
Still, plenty of top players use jlf’s (and pads) so no reason you can’t get good with anything, and the jlf is designed to go in arcades and take a lot of abuse so it’ll certainly last years. I just found I learnt a lot quicker with a seimitsu stick.
Yeah, TEs are pretty sturdy, and much easier than pad to learn on, I know moving from pad with sf4 was the single biggest thing to really bring my game on.
I recommend the f/df/f/uf motion for instant air ports in SFV. You’ll avoid getting accidental supers.
So really newbie question (but then I am new to this game)… what are my general options against wake up command grabs? Right now I’m just teleporting away when I can tell it’s coming and hoping I don’t get punished. Had a ~3 week break from playing due to work, but been playing this evening and last night and was going fine until I played a Mika and a Laura. Got trashed by both because of command grab loops.
edit: …come to think of it, I suppose teleport > gale might be okay. Can’t get TK gale on wakeup to work; maybe it’s just my execution?
edit2: Aha, TK gale does work, I was just sucky :). If anyone has alternate options though I’d love to hear them.
guys is there any difference between those 2 options for IATS:
f, d, d/f, f, u/f and f, d/f, f, u/f ?
I can’t figure out… most of time I am doing f, d/f, f, u/f ,but I can’t get in constantly
There’s no difference. Make sure there’s a slight delay between hitting uf and ppp/kkk or you’ll still be in prejump frames. Any other issues, turning on input display in training mode should help.
Is there some going on with insta-air teleport in to HP? I can’t land it for the life of me and I am usually fairly decent.
Does the execution require you to follow through with an actual U or can you shortcut at it UF?
Yeah ending on UF is fine. The tricky part is the timing; you need to delay the PPP/KKK button press a bit longer than feels natural (especially if you played SF4 Sim since you used to not have to delay it so much)
Pay attention to the timing of the follow-up attack as well; it’s easy to input j.HP too early since you need to delay it until the end of the teleport animation.