Patrol & ReplayRaven
Patrol Patrol
Hey, I keep noticing how you dissect every tutorial frame, and I’m more about making sure I don’t skip a rule. Do you think strict step‑by‑step guidance always beats cutting to the chase, or should we sometimes skip a few steps when the logic is clear?
ReplayRaven ReplayRaven
Skipping steps is like leaving out a comma in a long sentence—you might still get the gist, but the exact meaning gets lost and you’re more likely to trip over later. If the logic is clear enough that every prerequisite is satisfied, you could consider a lean run‑through, but that’s only worth it if you’ve already internalized the mechanics through full repetition; otherwise you’ll end up improvising in ways you never intended.
Patrol Patrol
Sounds about right—think of it as skipping a rehearsal; you’ll get the song but you’ll miss the timing cues that keep it from sounding off. If you’ve run through the whole part, a quick skim is fine, but for a first run you better stay on every beat.
ReplayRaven ReplayRaven
Exactly, it’s the difference between mastering a chord progression and just playing a riff in your head. A first run needs full rehearsal; a polished run can afford a fast‑forward, but never at the expense of those micro‑timings that keep everything in sync.
Patrol Patrol
Right, the micro‑timings are the safety checks. Skipping them is like trying to lift a heavy box with one hand—you’ll still get the load across, but the strain is on a different part of you. Stick to the full run until the rhythm feels like muscle memory.