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Shinkyokushin

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Uploaded by on May 1, 2008

WKO Shinkyokushinkai

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  • パワー!

  • Osu from croatia

  • @9tmchichi are u japanese? if u r, then u r right. but if u r not, i dont think u know wat u talking about, I am chinese, kanji is derived from china, and many of the pronounciation are still similar, shin is corresponding to “新” which means new. however, kyokushin does mean"extremely realistic" (obviously make a bit more sense than ultimate truth)judging from the chinese character, but the shin in front of kyokushin is wat the guy before was asking I assume.

  • @9tmchichi I think it means new instead of true

  • i have a question- what means Shin and what is the diffrenence between kyokushin kay karate do and shin kyokushin?

  • OSS Maceió-AL

  • @LoganBruneau You know, that's the nature of competition. Winning doesn't prove superiority, and doesn't necessarily prove superior performance. Sometimes, it's just luck. But that's the way competition is, no matter what the rules are.

  • @BadBlueBoy213 Basically, yes. Usually skill, persaverence, and speed wins but sometimes a big tough but sloppy fighter wins and it ticks me off. This is because of the rule set.

  • @LoganBruneau the fact that people with no technique can win?

  • @BadBlueBoy213 Yeah this is the ugliest part of Kyokushin Karate.

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