BoxKunEdo runs as one continuous loop, not a list of separate techniques. Every exchange moves through four operating layers — Intercept, Defensive Coil, Angle Creation, and Continuation — and the last layer feeds straight back into the first. This page is the whole system on a single screen.
The Loop at a Glance
Read left to right. Each layer is the trigger for the next.
1
Intercept
Disrupt the attack before it develops.
→
2
Defensive Coil
Cover and load in the same motion.
→
3
Angle Creation
Step off-line into a dominant angle.
→
4
Continuation
Re-enter — never give the fight back.
↻ Continuation feeds back into Intercept — the loop never resets
1
Layer One
Intercept Layer
The fight is decided on entry. Rather than wait, block, and answer, you meet the attack at its origin — interrupting it before it gains shape or commitment.
Early timing over reaction
Meet the first beat of the combination
Take initiative instead of trading
2
Layer Two
Defensive Coil Layer
Defense is not a pause — it is the loading mechanism. The coil covers the head and centerline while storing rotational energy, so the same motion that protects you also powers the counter.
Cover and load in one action
Continuous off-hand responsibility
Defense becomes the trigger for offense
3
Layer Three
Angle Creation Layer
While striking and covering, footwork moves you off the opponent's line and onto theirs. You end the exchange in a position where you can act and they cannot — rotation replaces retreat.
Create angles during offense, not after
Leave the line you entered on
Positional dominance over volume
4
Layer Four
Continuation Layer
Nothing ends in a reset. Whether the action lands, misses, or fails, the system recycles motion straight back into interception — recovery becomes re-entry, and the pressure never stops.
Failure becomes motion, not a stop
Continuity replaces sequence
Never give the fight back
See the Map in Live Sparring
Every layer on this page is pressure-tested on the sparring breakdown page — including a 145.8 lb practitioner against a 207 lb experienced boxer.