• gnomesaiyan@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Uechi-Ryu adapts some Chinese styles and forms, including tiger, crane, and dragon. The stance isn’t so wide and favors a more 50-50 weight distribution. My old school when I was a kid was a little different, labeled as “Okinawan karate” and was a little more diverse, including some kung fu, kenpo and tai chi, so I believe it was Uechi-Ryu.

    I’m not sure about punching through armor? Something like that has never been discussed as far as I know.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 days ago

      Ah, I see… interesting!

      A lot of people… or at least Westerners… don’t know that Tai Chi is more than just meditative stretching, that it is an actual martial art.

      A blend of all those you describe would be interesting to see.

      As best I can tell, Uechi Ryu is Okinawan in the sense that its founding master was based out of Okinawa…

      But yeah, seems to be a different lineage than Goju-Ryu and Shito-Ryu, which again, best I can tell, were both formed by two students of Higaonna Kanryo, who were good friends, both born in Okinawa.

      But ah, the point of that ‘lunge punch’ I mentioned is not to… break the armor, penetrate it.

      It is to hit with so much force that it staggers the opponent.

      As opposed to something like a lighter, faster, flurry of blows, ala kung fu.

      Like uh, if you are wearing kevlar / plate body armor… a .22 may make you flinch.

      But a 7.62 from the same range? Even if it hits the plate armor, doesn’t pen it… that force still goes into you, knocks you on your ass.

      Also, it seems I have the worst timing, I just updated my older comment with some more… potentially related errata that came to mind.