16-20 wins to get the black belt, 5-6 wins till u beat the sensei
For the white through orange, it takes 4 or 5 wins. For the green through black, it takes about ten wins. I have heard in the end when you earn your black belt, the total wins is 88. So
In order to beat the Sensei, you have to have the black belt. Second you go up to him and click the second button. Third you battle him. This step may take many tries. After you defeat him, he gives you the black belt mask. That's how you beat the Sensei
to get a belt in club penguin you have to have 13 battles.it doesnt matter if you win or lose as long as you just play 13 times.(the black belt may vary)
for the white belt u need 5
it depends on how good u r in cardjitsu
10-15 times i think
it depends on how many times you win ( you could be a black belt in 1-3 hours )
This really varies depending on what dojo you go to. Every dojo has it's own belt order, but many dojos follow this order: white yellow orange green blue purple red brown black
In many of the oldest traditions in the martial arts, a black belt was the result of years and years of training, such that the white belt eventually became black. In these traditions, it is improper to wash or launder the belt, as it served as a sign of respect to the art itself (or for other reasons). A "brown belt" was an experienced martial artist whose belt wasn't quite black.
The standard belt color system is white, yellow, green, brown, and black. In some Karate school and styles the color order is white, yellow, orange, green, blue, brown, black. Depending on the school, stripes, additional colors and combinations are also used. I have even seen a camouflage belt!
There isn't a brown belt. Or at least that's what I heard from my little brother who is a red belt and gets on club penguin often. He might be wrong though, but he said the brown belt would have been before the red belt.
At a dojo that i know of, they have this belt order: For kids: White White/yellow stripe White/orange stripe White/green stripe Then they stay there until 16 and then get a blue belt. If they have been there for a long time, they can skip to purple. For 12 to 17: White Yellow Orange Green Stay until they are 16, then: Blue Purple Brown Possibly black if they are good enough then black/red squares Then red For adults: White Blue Purple Brown Black Black/Red squares Red But you have to get four stripes on each belt to move to the next one. Hope I Helped!!
In my jujitsu (Goshin Jujitsu) we are graded every three months so bearing the belt system in mind: White, Yellow, Orange, Green, Blue, Brown 1st Stripe, Brown 2nd Stripe, Brown 3rd Stripe, Black, Black 1st Dan-10th Dan. I'd say about 18 months (1 year and 6 months).
Kickboxing has belt ranks that parallel the Judo system. It starts with white, then yellow..orange....green...blue....purple...red....brown...black. At black, you can then progress into varying degrees. Note - each school varies in the kyu rankings.
omg math! omg math! omg math! another person-three. if you pull out three socks, here are all the possible ratios. black, black, brown brown, brown, black black, black, black brown, brown, brown
Stripes are used by many schools as an indication of intermediate ranks between the solid belts. Some use s strip running the length of the belt to indicate a rank higher then the other color on the belt. Some use stripes around the ends to indicate the same thing. On a black belt the number of stripes indicate the Dan level of the individual.