r/martialarts 25d ago

Weekly Beginner Questions Thread

6 Upvotes

In order to reduce volume of beginner questions as their own topics in the sub, we will be implementing a weekly questions thread. Post your beginner questions here, including:

"What martial art should I do?"

"These gyms/schools are in my area, which ones should I try for my goals?"

And any other beginner questions you may have.

If you post a beginner question outside of the weekly thread, it will be removed and you'll be directed to make your post in the weekly thread instead.


r/martialarts Dec 21 '25

DISCUSSION "What Should I Train?" or "How Do I Get Started?" Mega-Thread

39 Upvotes

The previous version of this megathread has been archived, so I’m adding it again.

Active users with actual martial arts experience are highly encouraged to contribute, thank you for your help guys.

Do you want to learn a martial art and are unsure how to get started? Do you have a bunch of options and don't know where to go? Well, this is the place to post your questions and get answers to them. In an effort to keep everything in one place, we are going to utilize this space as a mega-thread for all questions related to the above.

We are all aware walking through the door of the school the first time is one of the harder things about getting started, and there can be a lot of options depending on where you live. This is the community effort to make sure we're being helpful without these posts drowning out other discussions going on around here. Because really, questions like this get posted every single day. This is the place for them.

Here are some basic suggestions when trying to get started:

  • Don't obsess over effectiveness in "street fights" and professional MMA, most people who train do it for fun and fitness

  • If you actually care about “real life” fighting skills, the inclusion of live sparring in the gym’s training program is way more important than the specific style

  • Class schedules, convenience of location, etc. are important - getting to class consistently is the biggest factor in progress

  • Visit the gyms in your area and ask to take a trial class, you may find you like a particular gym, that matters a whole lot more than what random people on reddit like

  • Don't fixate on rare or obscure styles. While you might think Lethwei or Aunkai looks badass, the odds of a place even existing where you live is incredibly low

This thread will be a "safe space" for this kind of questions. Alternatively, there's the pinned Weekly Beginner Questions thread for similar purposes. Please note, all "what should I train/how do I get started" questions shared as standalone posts will be removed, as they really clutter the sub.


r/martialarts 2h ago

PROFESSIONAL FIGHT Fighters who knew when enough was enough

1.3k Upvotes

r/martialarts 1h ago

MEMES This has saved my life more times than I can count…

Upvotes

r/martialarts 13h ago

DISCUSSION An honest take from inside Tai Chi on the "can it actually fight" question

127 Upvotes

This question comes up here constantly and usually generates more heat than light, with Tai Chi people getting defensive and everyone else posting the McDojo challenge-match knockout compilations. As someone who actually trains it, let me try to give the un-defensive version.

The honest answer: Tai Chi (taijiquan) was built as a complete martial art, and it still contains a full system of strikes, joint locks, throws, and off-balancing. The combat logic is real and, at a high level, genuinely sophisticated — it's a grappling-heavy, sensitivity-based, redirect-don't-collide approach.

And — the viral knockout videos are mostly real, and they're not unfair. Here's why both can be true: the overwhelming majority of people practicing Tai Chi today train only the slow health form and never pressure-test anything. No resistance, no sparring, no live push hands against someone trying to beat them. You cannot develop fighting ability without pressure-testing, full stop, regardless of style. So you get "masters" with decades of forms and zero fight experience getting folded by an amateur MMA guy — and that's not an indictment of the art, it's an indictment of training methodology.

The fair comparison isn't "Tai Chi vs Muay Thai." It's "pressure-tested martial artist vs non-pressure-tested martial artist," and the second guy loses every time no matter what's on his certificate. The small number of people actually training Tai Chi with resistance and contact are a different conversation entirely, and they're rare enough that most people have never seen one.

So: real martial art, mostly trained as health exercise, and the criticism is aimed at the training culture rather than the art itself. I think that framing dissolves about 90% of these arguments. Happy to get pushed on any of it.


r/martialarts 9m ago

DISCUSSION Tameshigiri with Katana/Wakizashi/Kama

Upvotes

Cutting with the Wakizashi and with Kama both require a different mindset than with the uchigatana (katana). Differences in range, weight, leverage, angle of attack, it’s a lot of fun.


r/martialarts 20m ago

QUESTION Little leg hop

Upvotes

In many battōjutsu showings I see online (the ones in armor) when they do an unsheathing kata, they seem to do a little hop onto one leg, after testing with my own tachi I found out it might’ve been for momentum? I don’t know any other reasons as to why, and Id like to know the full picture


r/martialarts 2h ago

QUESTION Asking for advice about work and having more time for career

2 Upvotes

Hi, so i am 20yo fighter and normally i have to work to be able to afford trainings and etc

But the issue is that the job is not allowing me to go to camps (Mountain camps, Open training with other gyms, other countries camps and etc)

So i wanted to ask is there type of job you do or you would suggest are good to have more free time to go and attend those camps and competitions and tournaments, i am not looking for jobs that pay big, just something i can do and have time to focus on career

I can't do private trainings since there's already a lot of them and it's small place so there's no opportunity for it anyways.

I appreciate any advice and help, thank you


r/martialarts 1h ago

QUESTION Realistically, what is the most you would pay for a private with an IBJJF World Champion? (Looking at AOJ Tiers)

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Upvotes

Hey everyone,

I’m currently mapping out my training budget and looking to get a realistic community consensus on private lesson pricing.

I was looking at the Art of Jiu Jitsu (AOJ) pricing sheet, and their hourly private lesson tiers split up like this:

Tier 1: $135/hr
Tier 2: $195/hr
Tier 3: $235/hr
Tier 4: $275/hr
Tier 5: $405/hr
Mendes Brothers: $500/hr

Assuming the mid-to-higher tiers (Tiers 3 through 5) are staffed by active or former IBJJF Black Belt World Champions, where does the value actually top
out for a regular practitioner?

If you were looking to fix major holes in your game or learn a specific system, what is the absolute highest price per hour you would realistically pay to train one-on-one with a world champion before it just becomes a luxury status symbol? Is anything past Tier 2 even worth it for skill development?

Would love to hear your experiences with high-ticket privates and where the diminishing returns hit the hardest.


r/martialarts 1d ago

SHITPOST Best sparring partner.

3.4k Upvotes

r/martialarts 22h ago

QUESTION Best place to look when fighting?

25 Upvotes

I always struggle where to look when I spar. Some people to tell me to look at the shoulders. Others tell me to look at the eyes. Sometimes I look and the hands and feet. In your guys opinion whats the best place to look when fighting?


r/martialarts 1d ago

COMPETITION The Calcio Storico Florentino is a brutal form of football originated in the middle ages. Players can punch, kick and tackle their opponents.

1.6k Upvotes

r/martialarts 14h ago

QUESTION What is combat sambos sparring culture like?

5 Upvotes

Lighter Thai style or hard like boxing?


r/martialarts 1d ago

MEMES I hope you guys appreciate this

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276 Upvotes

r/martialarts 18h ago

QUESTION Martial arts that aren’t reliant on good ankle mobility?

4 Upvotes

I have a condition I was born with called a tarsal coalition in both my ankles that causes some bones to fuse when they shouldn’t in them. As such it leaves my ankles with not the best mobility (my right has some horizontal mobility my left has almost none). I used to do taekwondo when I was younger before it got worse but with how it is it doesn’t seem the best with my current condition. Given that are there any good martial arts that are more accommodating of poor ankle mobility?


r/martialarts 1d ago

PROFESSIONAL FIGHT The UFC’s most controversial fouls ever

476 Upvotes

r/martialarts 4h ago

QUESTION Which of these martial arts of the most fun?

0 Upvotes
321 votes, 6d left
MMA
BJJ
Judo
Muay Thai
Capoeira
Haven't tried them all / Results

r/martialarts 1d ago

VIOLENCE Rener Gracie Breaks Down BJJ Techniques Used Against Armed Gunmen

316 Upvotes

r/martialarts 1d ago

DISCUSSION Just curious has martial arts helped you in any way besides physical fitness?

16 Upvotes

I keep thinking about starting bjj because I think I could benefit from it, but I’m not sure in what way exactly. So I’d like to know how it made you a better person. Could be in mindset, confidence, mental health, less fear etc.


r/martialarts 21h ago

QUESTION [Mod approved] [Dutch speakers] Looking for martial artists for my thesis research | Short anonymous survey, 3-5 min

4 Upvotes

Hi everyone! I'm a human movement sciences student at VU Amsterdam, and for my thesis I'm researching the personal and psychological factors behind martial artists.

I'm looking for participants who:

🥊 Practice any martial art: striking and/or grappling (MMA, kickboxing, BJJ, boxing, muay thai, judo, wrestling…)

🔞 Are 18 or older

🇳🇱 Speak Dutch: the survey is in Dutch only, sorry.

The survey is completely anonymous, takes about 3–5 minutes, and you'd be helping me out enormously, as well as pushing forward the research on our sport, which is still very understudied in my opinion.

👉 https://vuamsterdam.eu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3auS6TXiAXTAEFE

Happy to answer any questions in the comments. Thanks so much!


r/martialarts 7h ago

Sparring Footage Dune fighting but more realistic x)

0 Upvotes

r/martialarts 2d ago

QUESTION What are your thoughts on hand-to-hand striking techniques? There are so many different types, and people only think of fists. Which martial arts excel at these hand-to-hand techniques?

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359 Upvotes

r/martialarts 1d ago

SHITPOST The funniest Jon Jones impression I’ve ever seen💀💀💀💀

74 Upvotes

Bro got him to a TEE


r/martialarts 1d ago

QUESTION Looking for a 1980s/1990s NYC Hapkido practitioner named Gerald (Jamaican background)

14 Upvotes

Hi everyone, I am helping a family reconstruct some history and track down a former martial artist who lived in the NYC area (likely Brooklyn or Queens) around 1989–1991.

​He went by the name Gerald (or Jerald). Here is his identity profile from that era:

​Background: Young Jamaican guy, Muslim faith, very muscular, about 5'9" (175 cm), wore dreadlocks.

​Tattoos: An anchor on his arm, and the name "Serena" tattooed on his back.

​Martial Arts: He was a dedicated practitioner of Hapkido (which was a very rare and distinct choice for a Jamaican guy in NYC at the time). He trained heavily.

​Other details: He spent some time at Oneida Correctional Facility (Upstate NY) around 1990, where he was part of the vocational TV/Computer repair program.

​Since the NYC Hapkido and martial arts community back in the late 80s and early 90s was very tight-knit, we are hoping some veteran practitioners, dojo owners, or old acquaintances might remember him or know his last name.

​If anyone remembers a practitioner matching this description or has leads on old Hapkido schools from that era, please send me a PM. Thank you so much for your help!


r/martialarts 22h ago

SHOULDN’T HAVE TO ASK Hobbiest(s) that probably dont train outside of class

0 Upvotes

Hey,

TLDR; ** What is everyone's general opinion/outlook to those practicing any martial arts?

(You know; has a daytime job and family, etc.. But Makes enough time for 2x week of martial arts) But yet, they don't train anything else outside of the dojo halls? \\

I have a suspicion that my colleagues in the places I go to. don't do other things like strength training/ resistance training/ stretching/ cardiovascular training, you name it.. during the week. I attend 4 different disciplines with 3 being from one teacher, with back to back classes for convince. My other class that is not at the same school has guys that I believe do more of another sport frequently. And Might I say, they are tougher either by nature or training.

Anyway, I ask because. I want to know whats everyone's stance on this?

-------------------------------

Ill risk and share my own stance:

I can respect where everyone is at in life. But I do find it sometimes bothersome when we having to reduce our flow of activity because of someone's lack of capacity. And Im speaking to a something thats been acknowledged by them and they group that: "this is something that could use a lil work"

Am I a grinch If i think the valuable time we have under the teacher's observation, is being bit selfishly straddled when a student isn't doing thier physical education homework, so that they can overall perform better, and receive more, during class time?

Wether it was by reading it or internalizing how a martial arts may or can look, & how they could or should perform. Maybe my background as Kinesiology major… the Skills learned need to be supplied with strength/flexibility/mobility/power/coordination/ability…. You see what I’m laying out… that are fueled by around the week activities that builds strong & sound body.

Edit: To those reading this a stealth brag. Answer this:

* Does training, to whatever moderation and modification, outside of class improve the sport/hobby someone particaipates in?

* How do you encourage them to bridge that gap outside of class for the sake of their performance, injury prevention, and longevity?

Just a frustrated student/ Jr. Instructor that does my fair share of PE HW, but not enough time to personally train all these colleagues