@T22Jarrod@CrimsonDesert_ All you have to do is hold down, and rotate the camera with the horse wherever it kicks, you fill the meter up almost instantly.
@PedoPanderer@GameBoostCom Elden Ring and Crimson Desert are both great games. But crimson desert has numbers still because the studio nerfed the difficulty for players like yourself. So uncles can enjoy a causal play. Elden Ring only attracted the hardcore gamers and those willing to adapt.
@PedoPanderer@GameBoostCom Took her 533 attempts, and 1 year of playing to do this. Elden Rings biggest critic was it was too difficult, it lost most it's population due to this. It's literally all over news articles from 2022. Crimson deserts difficulty gets nerfed, and it's now the goat, casual.
@KylewhiteNew Usyk
Lomachenko
Beterbiev
Golovkin
It may seem Iβm picking the modern side, but itβs just facts. If you had other boxers from the old era, such as Ali, Robinson, Greb, Sanchez, Pep. I would of mostly picked them, depending on who they were against.
@jethopping025@stinglik3_a_b33@Sourceofboxing Whether you believe bud would defeat Greb in the ring or not is irrelevant, as you never know. What we do have is stats, resume and accomplishments. And Greb is leagues above Bud in these.
The one-and-only Harry Greb strikes a fighting pose in 1925.
Arguably the greatest middleweight of all time, "The Pittsburgh Windmill" holds wins over opponents such as Tommy Gibbons, Jeff Smith, Mickey Walker, Tommy Loughran, Mike Gibbons, Tiger Flowers, and Gene Tunney.
The legendary Harry Greb, perhaps the greatest middleweight boxer of all-time, poses for the camera in 1925.
While no film has survived of Greb in action, his incredible record and the testimony of those who witnessed his ring exploits make abundantly clear that "The Pittsburgh Windmill" belongs in any discussion of the greatest fighters of all-time, pound-for-pound. World heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey called Greb "the fastest fighter [he] ever saw."
No less an authority than the renowned "Boston Bonecrusher," the great Sam Langford, echoed Dempsey's assessment, declaring that "The fastest fighter I ever saw in my life was that white boy from Pittsburgh, Harry Greb. And they called him windmill for a reason, because the faster he went, the more he punched. And from all over!"