Considering that both were designed with the same historical period and location in mind, that's not surprising. But the hood? And parkour? That can't also be a coincidence, can it?
This scenario is very different from what I understood from your OP. I'm pretty sure that in the majority of the world, this would be legal. It's what we call justifiable homicide.
If you were able to do 3 reps on one session and unable to do even a single rep with the same weight the next session, that's a sure sign of under-recovery. You need that deload.
I rarely downvote, yet I keep seeing posts and comments marked as downvoted by my account. Seems it's just very easy to fatfinger it and not notice.
If parts of it become residential like OP suggested, then it'll be accessible by foot.
I had walkthroughs, but you had to buy gaming magazines to get them.
The way people act is the interface with which you interact with them. It makes little difference if what lurks behind is an intelligent person or a child if they both behave the same.
There's no harm in experimenting with your stance. Different people will have different optimal stance widths. The best way to figure out what's good for you is to try it. You would have to decrease the weight and work your way back up, so it can double as a deload.
Yes i tried switching up sets x reps, i failed immediately on 6x2
How did you do on the 5x3 set before that? i.e. how many reps did you complete on each set? 6x2 should be easier in my experience. How long are you resting between sets? What about the 10x1 sets?
I follow a GZCL style program as well, and one thing I like to do is to only progress in weight when I can do at least 2 extra reps on the AMRAP set. For example, on the 5x3 sets, if I do 3/3/3/3/5, then I up the weight, but if I get 3/3/3/3/4, then I consider that a failure and I'll try the same weight again next session. It's one way to reduce the fatigue from each workout. That could be worth trying.
I took a screenshot at the bottom of one of your reps. Parallel means the hip crease going below the top of your knee. I've circled both here. It doesn't look parallel to me, but maybe that's just the camera angle.
Not ideal, but it's not bad either. You're making progress.
How does failure look like for you? Do you fail in the sense that you drop the bar on the safeties, or do you complete part of the set and rack when you think you can't do another?
How is your progress on T2 squats? If that's still going up, I wouldn't be too worried about T1 stalling.
I just checked, and the program also prescribes switching up the set/rep scheme when you fail. Have you done that?
You didn't say anything about your sleep and diet, but I want to reiterate that they're both very important. They have a huge effect on your recovery, and how well you recover is one of the main factors in determining how much stronger you get. Make sure you get enough quality sleep. Make sure you're getting enough protein. But of course, not all is lost if you can't improve here. It just means you'll have to live with slower gains at the gym. Slower progression, and more frequent deloads.
So if I understand correctly, between the first day you started the program until now, you've only gone up 10lbs on your squat?
I'll check the video again later, but I'm pretty sure you didn't reach parallel.
Someone still had to make the decision to put all of these elements together in one characters.