Ok my question for today, when you're playing are you focusing more on the other players character or your own?
I find myself watching my own character more which I have a hunch is not what I am supposed to be doing, but figured I would ask anyway.
I can't help but comment on this, even if it is a bit late in the thread. Anyone that has done some reading on how the eye works, and most especially how reflexes are learned by the brain, cannot fail to be fascinated by the examples given by the experience of learning a fighting game.
Any time you are learning a new fighting game, or a new character in that game, you will tend to watch your own character more than the opponent's character. This is
VERY OK and part of the natural learning process, as you are more concerned with learning how to operate your character. You're throwing in some input on the controls, and then checking to see if that input has gotten the appropriate response from your character. Attempt to 'skip' this part of the hand-eye learning process, which has been painfully developed over the last couple of million years, at your own peril.
Once you've been fighting for a bit, of course, you start to 'set in' with a handful of moves that are working for you. The more comfortable you are with your character's move, the less need you feel to visually check (talking fractions of a second here) to see if that move has been performed correctly. Your neural pathways have been burned in, and you become more and more capable of devoting your visual attention away from watching your own character to watching your opponent's character. This transition is gradual, and in my opinion not something to be 'forced' or 'trained for', just something you may notice if you are paying real attention to your own perceptions of the game as your skills increase through time and practice.
Eventually, once you have mastered a character's moves, your own character will become effectively 'invisible' to you on the screen, and you will see ONLY your opponent. Your character no longer exists to you because in your brain's mind, you ARE your character. And that's when, in my opinion, you have graduated from training, and are truly entering the arena of The Fight. And what happens from there... well, it can't be described, because it's always different for every person, and always different for every Fight.
Good luck getting there, man. Win or lose, The Fight is always a cool rush, a Good Place to Be. There's Always Someone Better Than You. Your job is to seek them out and defeat them. Nuff sed.