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How would you create a martial art that had as it's main purpose to be most effective against UNTRAINED people? Are there any techniques that are useless in a trained context but disproportionally effective when used against untrained people?
Kind of like how in chess there are openings that are principally not sound and easily rebuked by people who know how to play chess, but allow you to easily checkmate a complete beginner (like the scholar's mate).
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>>251389
it would be based on timing counter attacks and exploiting feinting
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>>251389
By combining the basics of most effective martial arts. Being proficient in the 1-2, the front kick, the single leg, osotogari and the rear naked choke will make you leaps and bounds better than the average joe provided you don't have a massive size disadvantage.
Also add: a proper guard and footwork
Keyword: proficient. And also constantly training
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Now that I really think about it, Silat kind of fits the vibe. If you're trained, half the shit doesn't really work or apply, but if you're against an untrained opponent most of the stuff is very "pain compliance" and demoralizing attacks
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Something that relies on reflex or attacking in an unorthodox way or odd areas.
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>>251389
Yeah, literally any martial art in which you've had some training
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That’s just sport bjj. Against trained opponents most sport jiu jitsu goes out the window but against untrained people you can just start doing ridiculous flashy shit and it works because they don’t know what they’re doing. you could literally just pull guard and imanari roll/ bolo them and it works fine.
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>>251389
Low-power but fast strikes are extremely effective on the untrained (front kicks and jabs, for example). When grappling, know that the only way to get them to stop is choking them out.

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