LightFlame_
Member
I have gotten comfortable with the time that I am at now with my beginner's method, and would like to become better. Should I learn Yau or Hoya for 4x4?
Hoya isn't that hard to learn, it was actually easier for me.Yau is a more developed method, so I would just learn Yau. Also, I think it is easier to learn, Hoya seemed to have more steps when I watched a tutorial.
That step is common to both Yau and Hoya.3-2-3 edge pairing
Hoya has 1 more step than Yau.Yau is a more developed method, so I would just learn Yau. Also, I think it is easier to learn, Hoya seemed to have more steps when I watched a tutorial.
Yau:Hoya has 1 more step than Yau.
I have gotten comfortable with the time that I am at now with my beginner's method, and would like to become better. Should I learn Yau or Hoya for 4x4?
Yau is a more developed method, so I would just learn Yau. Also, I think it is easier to learn, Hoya seemed to have more steps when I watched a tutorial.
hoya:Yau:
1) first two centers
2) first three cross edges
3) last 4 centers
4) last cross edge
The rest
Hoya:
1) first four centers
2) cross
3) last two centers
The rest
This is the way I see it
I guess if you want to call the second two centers a separate step from your first two then it’d seem to me they have the same number of steps. First four centers seems like one step to me though. You don’t even have to start with two opposite centers
maybe it was because you were used to solving it in a hoya way?( i tried transitioning to roux from cfop and it was annoying too)I used Hoya when I first learned 444. Then I played around with CN Yau for fun. I can definitely say Yau was more annoying to get comfortable with but I did better with it.
maybe it was because you were used to solving it in a hoya way?( i tried transitioning to roux from cfop and it was annoying too)