0roo0roo
No Lifer
- Sep 21, 2002
- 64,795
- 84
- 91
you judge as a chopsticks n00b.
try playing a fps with your hand positions switched. its almost impossibly fustrating for a beginner, never mind someone who normally easily plays fps. does that mean wasd+mouse is dumb? but that kind of uncoordinated pain is i guess what n00b chopstick users experience. if you don't have the positioning/leverage down you will have no real force or dexterity in usage. easiest way to tell if person is chopstick n00b is if they sorta have the sticks pressed together in their fist, the two sticks shouldn't be touching at all in the hand, they should be rather far apart. even some asians use it wrong. with correct hold you should be easily able to do things like pick up a drumstick or something flat on a plate. its so versatile that it makes a fork seem like a.....crude stick with prongs on the end
the ONLY thing forks are more efficient at are where you have to cut food first because the preparer didn't bother to do it for you, like a slab of steak.
http://www.wikihow.com/Eat-With-Chopsticks
try playing a fps with your hand positions switched. its almost impossibly fustrating for a beginner, never mind someone who normally easily plays fps. does that mean wasd+mouse is dumb? but that kind of uncoordinated pain is i guess what n00b chopstick users experience. if you don't have the positioning/leverage down you will have no real force or dexterity in usage. easiest way to tell if person is chopstick n00b is if they sorta have the sticks pressed together in their fist, the two sticks shouldn't be touching at all in the hand, they should be rather far apart. even some asians use it wrong. with correct hold you should be easily able to do things like pick up a drumstick or something flat on a plate. its so versatile that it makes a fork seem like a.....crude stick with prongs on the end
http://www.wikihow.com/Eat-With-Chopsticks
