Hello everyone,
My name is Apoorva and I'm working in a bank and helping people to get home loan in Lucknow. I have bought a 3x3 cube for myself but unable to solve all the sides. Please help me with some tips. Thanks in advance.
I don't think that battle was starting. Even if the most recent post was 3 hours ago rather than 3 weeks, I still don't think this post is necessary, as any argument about that wasn't going to happen.Uh oh, here comes the Roux vs CFOP battle...
Let him decide what method to use, instead of just shoving Roux down his throat by saying all of the good things about Roux without saying anything about CFOP. [...]
I don't agree with (though, maybe some other Roux users might want more people to use it? Personally, I only care that people stop thinking of it as being inferior to CFOP), and none of these posts have been one-sided at all.ZZ, which I haven't mentioned until now, has a lot of the aspects of Roux
I know that a lot of people (I'm talking to you, Roux users) really want more people to use their method
You do realise the first one doesn't apply to Roux, the second to either, and the third to ZZ?Yeah, ZZ does have several similarities of Roux:
It starts by making the puzzle solvable in a certain move set.
It can be used with a normal CFOP last-layer.
It solves a block in its first step.
You don't call those similarities?
Uh oh, here comes the Roux vs CFOP battle...
Let him decide what method to use, instead of just shoving Roux down his throat by saying all of the good things about Roux without saying anything about CFOP. I'm not saying that Roux is bad, but when compared with CFOP, they both have their pros and cons and should be considered carefully. I personally think that Roux wouldn't work for me, because of all of its M, M', and M2 moves, which I am somewhat bad at. Because of that, I use CFOP, which I like because the cross is pretty easy to see quickly, and I like parts of the algorithmic approach myself, although it is easier to forget, you can do them faster without thinking too much.
There are some things that can be said for Roux, as well. It is probably the second most used method, so it should be able to get people fast. Although there isn't anyone who is extremely fast (i.e. they can make the finals at Worlds) that uses Roux, but I'm sure there are many who have some good potential to get that fast. A lot of people are good at M-slice moves, and they can use that skill to become fast at Roux. A lot of people like the Roux-generator [M, U], because it looks impressive. Also, Roux does provide some understanding of the cube that parts of CFOP don't. A lot of the LL cases (OLL and PLL) are not very intuitive, and it is just memorization.
It is pretty clear that there are advantages of CFOP and advantages of Roux. ZZ, which I haven't mentioned until now, has a lot of the aspects of Roux, except more so. EOLine takes a lot of getting used to, but it gives a lot of knowledge of how the cube works. So, honestly guys. Let him decide what method he wants to use. I know that a lot of people (I'm talking to you, Roux users) really want more people to use their method. They will. It is just that these one-sided posts drive me nuts. If anyone notices how reasonable this is, then thank you.
Yeah, ZZ does have several similarities of Roux:
It starts by making the puzzle solvable in a certain move set.
It can be used with a normal CFOP last-layer.
It solves a block in its first step.
You don't call those similarities?
Honestly, why are we even arguing about this? We seriously should stop posting on this thread. Yes, I know that it is mainly my fault for posting here anyway (I didn't notice that it was inactive for 3 weeks) but... I did have a point, especially if you ignore the part about ZZ. I am not an expert on methods. Just don't make it be your fault by continuing to post here. I just don't like it when people only mention Roux and not anything else.
there really was no arguing. just people pointing some of you incorrect statements. i think the first few posts were good, a tutuorial to a beginner cfop and a tutorial for a beginner roux.