Patada Alta De Buchikome Full

Most beginners kick at 60% speed to maintain balance. Buchikome Full demands you accept the risk of falling. If you land it, you win. If you miss, you spin. That is the gamble.

The user steps deep into the opponent's guard (the buchikome step) and launches a vertical rising kick. Unlike a standard roundhouse, this is a linear, piercing strike aimed at the chin or chest. Upon contact ("Full" connection), the impact usually triggers a "crumple" state or a knockback effect, sending the opponent reeling.

The Patada Alta de Buchikome Full is more than a kick; it is a philosophy. In a world of tentative jabs and point sparring, this technique represents the primal desire to end a conflict with one devastating blow. patada alta de buchikome full

To practice this kick is to accept failure as a stepping stone. You will fall. You will miss. You will pull a hamstring. But when you finally land a clean, full-power, smashing high kick, you will understand the beauty of Buchikome.

So, tie your belt tight, find a heavy bag, and shout it loud: ¡Patada Alta de Buchikome Full! Most beginners kick at 60% speed to maintain balance


Disclaimer: This technique requires high flexibility and proper warm-up. Always practice under supervision. Do not attempt Buchikome kicks in a street fight without training.

Note: This term blends Spanish (“patada alta” = high kick) with Japanese (“buchikome” = a hard, crashing entry/stomp, often from martial arts like Kyokushin Karate or certain kickboxing styles). “Full” likely implies a full-power, full-rotation, or full-commitment version. If you face someone known for this kick, defend wisely

This guide assumes you have basic kicking flexibility and balance.


If you face someone known for this kick, defend wisely.

Problem: You drop your guard on the kicking side to generate more swing. Fix: Buchikome is aggressive, but not stupid. Snap your same-side hand down as a counterweight, but keep the opposite hand glued to your jaw.

Start from a balanced fighting stance. Unlike a probing front kick or a fast roundhouse, the Buchikome requires a slightly wider base. You are trading speed for raw torque.