When searching for or creating ULT player videos, the community has strict pet peeves.
1. The "Lag Switch" Look If the video stutters during a clinch attempt or a knockout punch, it is useless. Viewers will leave immediately. Always ensure a stable internet connection before recording.
2. Exploit Spamming An ULT player wins through skill, not glitches. Videos featuring "Statue Punching" (a known EA bug) or repeated, unblockable spinning backfists are not considered ultimate; they are considered toxic. The community will downvote these into oblivion. ult player videos
3. Lack of Context A video showing a Flash Knockout (FK) is cool, but an ULT video shows the setup for that FK. If you don't show the jab-body kick-low kick sequence that conditioned the opponent to drop their hands, you haven't made an ULT video.
Watching video passively is a waste of time. You need a system. Next time you queue up an ULT player video, follow the "Pause, Predict, Playback" method. When searching for or creating ULT player videos,
Step 1: Pause the video right as the offense sets the disc in a vertical stack.
Step 2: Predict the next move before it happens. Step 2: Predict the next move before it happens
Step 3: Loop the Playback.
Don't just sit on your couch. Turn your viewing session into a training session.
An ULT player video is almost always recorded in the highest difficulty settings or ranked tiers. In the context of EA Sports UFC 5, this means Division 20 gameplay. These videos feature players who have mastered:
You cannot film a screen with a phone. Use built-in console recording (PS5 Share or Xbox Game Bar) or a capture card (Elgato).