Caleb Miller
Member
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2015
- Messages
- 7
Hello everyone. I am finally getting around to posting this on the forum.
Earlier this year I created a tutorial series that breaks down every single F2L case and covers all of the various ways to solve each case from every angle. This is all done without any rotations and without any algorithms. This series is for people who want to learn how to solve every angle of every F2L case by understanding how the pieces are moving on the cube instead of memorizing a bunch of algs. This series focuses heavily on understanding what the pieces on the cube are actaully doing.
Each video covers a pair of cases (#5/6 for example - or the oriented and non-oriented versions of a case), how to solve each one without any rotations. The videos also include case recognition, any alternative insertions that may be helpful for a specific case, and how to execute each case efficiently (fingertricks, etc).
It has been out for around 8 months and so far I have received a very positive response on it and would like to see how it stands up to a little more scrutiny from the people of this forum.
Below is the link to the introduction video that discusses the goals of the series, what the series will cover, things to know before getting into the series etc. Feel free to comment with any suggestions or questions on the videos themselves, as I rarely check the responses directly on the forum.
Thank you for your time and I hope this series helps someone out there!
Thanks - Caleb Miller.
Earlier this year I created a tutorial series that breaks down every single F2L case and covers all of the various ways to solve each case from every angle. This is all done without any rotations and without any algorithms. This series is for people who want to learn how to solve every angle of every F2L case by understanding how the pieces are moving on the cube instead of memorizing a bunch of algs. This series focuses heavily on understanding what the pieces on the cube are actaully doing.
Each video covers a pair of cases (#5/6 for example - or the oriented and non-oriented versions of a case), how to solve each one without any rotations. The videos also include case recognition, any alternative insertions that may be helpful for a specific case, and how to execute each case efficiently (fingertricks, etc).
It has been out for around 8 months and so far I have received a very positive response on it and would like to see how it stands up to a little more scrutiny from the people of this forum.
Below is the link to the introduction video that discusses the goals of the series, what the series will cover, things to know before getting into the series etc. Feel free to comment with any suggestions or questions on the videos themselves, as I rarely check the responses directly on the forum.
Thank you for your time and I hope this series helps someone out there!
Thanks - Caleb Miller.