When I was practicing some of the new KWC tricks today I had to break them down into smaller parts especially for the 10,11, and 12 tricks. I think it would be really cool if people made specific trick tutorials for KWC tricks especially the tricky ones like Rudy's lvl 10 I saw on @htimSxelA Instagram story he made an in depth tutorial on his level 8 (maybe 9 not so sure) that helped a lot. Just a thought though.
I actually think it's way cooler that you're breaking it down into smaller parts to learn the tricks. That's like the whole point of learning a new trick, and just learning anything new in general. Break it down bit by bit until you actually understand it. You don't start learning calculus in kindergarten; (at least not in America, I don't think), you learn addition and subtraction, and then multiplying and dividing, and so on until you reach a level where you can start doing calculus. Experiment with the trick and keep trying. If you notice that you're still not landing it, tweak your execution a little bit and see if that makes a difference. Try, modify, try again until you land it. Trial and error. While tutorials are certainly helpful, a lot of the tricks in the list can be figured out just by trying it on your own, but it will just take some effort. I will admit that there are some that are just effed though, like Li Ho's "around vertical turntable" trick. Turntables are just hard in general for me, I can barely do a regular dub consistently. Then again, I never practice them so that's most likely the reason why. I'll use Rudy's trick as an example because you mentioned it and I also think it's hard, so this is my way of explaining it to myself and anyone else that can benefit from this lol. The trick is airplane, 3 turn juggle, ghost penguin falling in. Well first of all, plane it. You're at tama grip with the spike in the hole at this point. Next, go for a triple j stick, but instead of catching it back in the hole, you toss the ball up as the ken is making the final rotation and catch the ken in Sara grip with the spike facing down (the ken just did 3 rotations). At this point, the ball is in the air and you got a Sara grip going on. From here, you toss the ken straight up so that the spike is still facing down in the air. While that ken is in the air, you then catch the ball that was still in the air but falling as you tossed the ken up. That was the juggle part of the trick. You catch the ball, twist your wrist into penguin grip, and then watch the spike fall into the hole. Sounds straightforward, but it's still really hard. The hole control when tossing up the ball as well as zeroing the ken straight up like Rudy does is hard. Plus adding a penguin catch in there is just effed. The slomo function that YouTube has is also really helpful. Add that on top of the slomo that's already on the video and you have a super slomo. One helpful tip I would say is writing things down. Trying to process everything in your head is super hard, at least for me cause I'm a visual kinda person. I'll fidget around with the kendama and mimic the trick while holding it so I can at least visualize how the tricks supposed to look. In the same way I wrote down rudys trick, try it with other tricks. Go super specific so there's no way you can misinterpret something. The important thing is to at least try rather than just waiting for someone else to tell you how to do it.