Martial arts custom

I have this nascent idea of building a martial arts custom that would make one more easily master the defensive aspects of combat.

Preliminarily, I’m thinking
Spartan, Aegis Initiative and Muay Thai Mastery X in the same custom. But Limitless also has the following parts that catch my eye

Spatial Intelligence: This type of intelligence allows you to visualize objects in space, crucial for fields like architecture, design, and engineering.

Body-Kinesthetic Intelligence: Coordination and physical movement are as much a part of intelligence as anything else. This attribute helps you harness your body’s potential.

Would this be worth trying to fit into one custom, or would the purpose be better served by splitting it into two? I’m in no rush to make this custom, so feel free to comment. Especially @Yazooneh , I’d love your input

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Not Yazooneh but I’m almost sure that there are specific modules in the store that could do the things that you’re mentioning about limitless doing. The visualization and the balance and much more.

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I’d just throw in the standard modules and then some modules that you prefer personally to make the “training” and “learning” process easier

For instance I’d use the lines and the single point in my next martial arts strategy custom but I’m a deep thinker who gets lost in his mind

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My recommendation:

I’d split into two, with Limitless being the one with the lower priority. Build the foundations with Spartan and Muay Thai Mastery X or Boxing Mastery X – possibly even some Emperor Fitness. Once you feel that you have that part down to a good degree, you can use Limitless to enhance bodily intelligence, especially since it’s a small part of the larger product. Might not even need it at that point.

Interestingly enough, titles like Singularity helps with fighting, as one “unifies the opposites” within combat strategies to understand things like softness versus hardness, etc. I’ve been waiting for a BJJ practitioner to report on Singularity within their practice, for example.

Muay Thai (which I trained excessively in for years), like all martial arts contains elements of soft and hard, but more traditional teachers are going to present it as a war of attrition (take a shot to give a shot), which I found very limiting and was ultimately why I stopped training, as I preferred using slick footwork and evasion skills from the decade that I trained in a traditional Karate style that incorporated Kenpo footwork to avoid getting hit and acting as a counter fighter. That got me in trouble with my Muay Thai instructor because he was very traditional and was basing the training off of competition scoring, where points are docked for being evasive.

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