System & General Resources
✅ Summary of “How to use Training Mode to become BETTER at Guilty Gear Strive!”
This video teaches how to use training mode as a problem-solving lab to answer the key question behind every loss:
“Why did I get hit, and what can I do next time?”
Instead of memorizing combos, the creator emphasizes recreating real match situations, testing options, and discovering practical solutions through trial and error. Using Leo as an example, he demonstrates how to:
Recreate corner throw situations
Test escape options (Yellow Burst, jumps, Blue Roman Cancel, lows, delays)
Understand Leo’s parry mind game
Learn what challenges are guaranteed or fake
Test left/right mixups and debunk assumptions
Use training mode as an exploration tool rather than a punishment tool
Training mode becomes a sandbox for discovering truths, building confidence, and breaking down stressful mixups into clear, manageable decision points.
✅ Condensed Bullet-Point Version
Training mode is for recreating the situations that beat you, not just practicing combos.
Ask: Where did I get hit? How? Why? What were my options?
Recreate Leo’s corner throw → overhead/strike/throw pressure.
Test defensive responses: Yellow Burst, jump → Blue Roman Cancel (BRC), challenge buttons.
Leo’s overhead does not automatically give your turn back—must test options.
Leo can parry after overhead; you can bait or delay to punish.
If you guess wrong vs parry, you get blown up → accept the mind game.
Test mid-screen throw situations → discovered left/right wasn't real.
Training mode = trial and error → discovering hidden counterplay.
Continually test, adjust, and rebuild your knowledge.
✅ Chunked Summary With Questions, Answers, and Action Steps Chunk 1 — Training Mode's Purpose: Recreate Losses
The creator stresses that every loss contains data. You should identify how you were hit and recreate those exact moments in training mode. Training mode allows you to simulate situations repeatedly until you understand your responses.
Questions
What is the primary purpose of training mode according to the video?
Why is recreating situations important?
What mindset should you have when entering training mode?
Answers
To recreate real match scenarios and discover solutions.
Because repeated scenarios reveal what works, what doesn't, and why you lost.
A problem-solving mindset rather than a combo-grinding mindset.
Action Steps
After a loss, write down one situation that confused or overwhelmed you.
Recreate it in training mode using recording slots.
Test at least three different responses and log which ones succeed.
Chunk 2 — Example: Leo’s Corner Throw Pressure
Leo puts opponents into repeated guess situations with throw → 5K → strike/throw/overhead. The video shows how to recreate that exact sequence in training mode.
Questions
What sequence is used in the example?
Why is this a commonly hated scenario?
What does recreating it help reveal?
Answers
Leo throws you in the corner, then pressures you with 5K mix.
Because it forces overwhelming guesses with big consequences.
It reveals your defensive options and what actually works.
Action Steps
Record Leo doing throw → 5K → overhead/strike/throw.
Practice: Yellow Burst, backdash, mash, jump, BRC down.
Compare risk/reward for each option.
Chunk 3 — Testing Defensive Tools (Yellow Burst, Jump → BRC)
Yellow Burst creates space and ends Leo’s momentum. Jump → downward Blue Roman Cancel freezes time and gives a punish opportunity.
Questions
What benefit does Yellow Burst offer?
What does jump → BRC down allow?
Why test multiple options?
Answers
It pushes Leo far away and resets neutral.
A freeze-frame punish scenario.
To find both optimal and situational tools.
Action Steps
Practice reacting to Leo’s pressure with Yellow Burst on throw.
Drill jump → BRC down timing to consistently punish.
Chunk 4 — Understanding Leo’s Parry Mind Game
Blocking Leo’s overhead does NOT give you your turn. He can parry your retaliation, forcing a mix between:
Challenging with a delay
Low crushing his parry
Not pressing a button
Risking being wrong and getting hit
Questions
Why isn’t it automatically your turn after blocking Leo’s overhead?
How do you beat parry?
What happens if you guess parry but he doesn’t parry?
Answers
Because Leo can cancel into parry, which beats immediate challenges.
Delay your button or hit low.
You get hit by Leo’s offense for taking the wrong risk.
Action Steps
Practice delayed buttons after blocking overhead.
Test different timing windows to avoid parry without being punishable.
Record Leo doing overhead → parry vs overhead → strike and practice reacting.
Chunk 5 — Testing True/Fake Left-Right Mixups
Mid-screen throw left/right mixups seem strong, but the creator tests them and discovers:
Soul’s 3f jab can contest the side-switch attempt
This means the mixup is fake and not guaranteed
Training mode uncovers truths even the player didn’t know
Questions
What assumption is tested?
What does switching to Soul reveal?
What does this teach about training mode?
Answers
That mid-screen throw → dash-through is a real mixup.
The 3f button interrupts Leo before he crosses.
That training mode exposes misinformation and teaches you real data.
Action Steps
Record mid-screen throw attempts from characters who dash through.
Test if your character’s fastest button interrupts → write the results.
Add these findings to your matchup notes.
Chunk 6 — Training Mode Philosophy
Training mode is trial and error, not a punishment chamber. You shouldn’t feel bad when something doesn’t work—your goal is simply to discover truth.
Questions
What mindset should you avoid?
What mindset should you adopt?
Why is training mode essential?
Answers
Avoid self-blame or expecting instant mastery.
Adopt curiosity and experimentation.
Because it reveals your do’s and don’ts through controlled repetition.
Action Steps
Treat every failed experiment as data, not failure.
Create a small notebook labeled Training Mode Discoveries.
Each session, record one thing you learned.
✅ Super-Summary (Under 1 Page)
This video teaches players to use training mode as a scientific lab for problem solving, not just a place to drill combos. After every loss, ask: Why did this hit me? What could I have done? Recreate the situation in training mode and test every defensive option.
Using Leo’s pressure as an example, the creator demonstrates how to simulate corner throw scenarios, test Yellow Burst, jump → Blue Roman Cancel, delayed buttons, and how to answer Leo’s post-overhead parry mixups. He emphasizes that your turn doesn’t automatically return after blocking an overhead—each option must be checked in the lab.
Mid-screen left/right mixups that seem real may not actually be legitimate; training mode revealed that Soul’s 3f jab interrupts a supposed guaranteed side-switch. This discovery reinforces the central philosophy: training mode exposes the truth.
The ultimate goal is to approach training mode with curiosity and experimentation. Trial and error is normal. You don’t need to know the matchup beforehand—the lab will teach it to you. By replaying situations, asking the right questions, and documenting what works, you slowly build genuine matchup knowledge and practical counterplay.
✅ 3-Day Spaced Review Plan Day 1 — Immediate Review
Reread the bullet points and chunk summaries.
Recreate one scenario from your own matches in training mode.
Day 2 — Application
Recreate the Leo examples (throw → 5K → mix).
Drill: Yellow Burst, jump → BRC, delayed buttons.
Test a “fake mixup” in your own matchups.
Day 3 — Integration
Add discoveries to your FGC Codex.
Play sets focusing specifically on applying your lab findings.
Identify a new confusing situation to bring into training mode.