Most Triple-Nunchaku Techniques Performed in a Continuous Martial Arts Routine
- Atlas World Records

- Dec 28, 2025
- 3 min read
Updated: Jan 25
KIEV, 21 October 2025 (Atlas) — There are moments when human movement transcends mere sport and transforms into something akin to ritual. It’s not about celebration or entertainment; it’s a quiet confrontation between discipline and chaos. On October 21, 2025, in Kiev, Alexey Chugaev stepped into such a moment.
Before him lay silence, space, and three lengths of wood bound by chain. The triple nunchaku is not an instrument that forgives hesitation. It multiplies error and punishes distraction. Controlling one is difficult; commanding three simultaneously is like navigating a narrow corridor where failure lurks at every turn.
For seventy-two seconds, Chugaev did not pause. He did not reset. He did not bargain with fatigue. Instead, he moved forward, technique following technique, each one dissolving into the next. Forty-three distinct triple-nunchaku techniques emerged in succession—not as isolated tricks, but as a single continuous organism of motion. Kicks appeared without announcement. Acrobatic transitions unfolded as inevitabilities, not mere flourishes. The weapons never left his control.
Then came a different test. A static target stood at a height that does not concern itself with ambition: 192 centimeters. Chugaev did not leap. He did not cheat gravity. One foot remained rooted to the ground, bearing the full weight of consequence, while the other rose and struck the target cleanly. No theatrics. No excess.
This record is not about speed alone, nor height, nor quantity. It is about continuity—the refusal to fracture effort into manageable pieces. It is about maintaining clarity when the body urges collapse. In this sense, the achievement belongs less to spectacle than to endurance of will.
Atlas World Records has certified this performance as the Most Triple-Nunchaku Techniques Performed in a Continuous Martial Arts Routine, recognizing not just what was done, but how it was sustained. In a world enamored with interruption and noise, this record stands as something quieter and more unsettling: proof that mastery is not loud and that control, once earned, speaks for itself.
There is no applause in the archive. Only the record remains.
TRANSPARENT ADJUDICATOR STATEMENT
Record Title: Most Triple-Nunchaku Techniques Performed in a Continuous Martial Arts Routine, Including the Highest Verified Non-Jumping Side Kick
Record Holder: Alexey Chugaev
Atlas Record ID: 20425021
Location: Kiev [Ukraine]
Date of Achievement: 21 October 2025
SUMMARY OF CLAIM
The claimant asserted that he completed a single continuous martial arts performance featuring triple nunchaku, executing a high volume of distinct techniques while maintaining uninterrupted control. The claimant further asserted that, during the same authenticated session, he executed the highest non-jumping side kick to a static target measured at 192 centimeters.
EVIDENCE SUBMITTED
Continuous, unedited video documentation of the full performance session
Visual verification of a 72-second uninterrupted routine
Clear visibility of 43 distinct triple-nunchaku techniques
Visual confirmation of integrated kicking techniques and acrobatic transitions
Static target measurement establishing a verified height of 192 cm
Clear demonstration that the supporting foot remained grounded during the kick
All materials were submitted digitally to Atlas World Records and processed through AtlasEngine™.
VERIFICATION METHODOLOGY (AVP-72 PROTOCOL)
Atlas adjudicators reviewed the submitted evidence for continuity, clarity, and methodological compliance. Technique count, timing, and control were independently verified. Kick height was evaluated using visible measurement reference and confirmed point of contact. Comparative archive research found no existing record combining these elements within a single continuous performance.
ADJUDICATION FINDINGS
Based on the submitted evidence, verification methodology, and comparative archive research, Atlas World Records finds that the claim satisfies all criteria for certification. The record is determined to be unique, verifiable, and unclaimed at the time of adjudication.
CONCLUSION
Atlas World Records determines that the claim meets all criteria for certification and is unique, verifiable, and unclaimed at the time of adjudication.
This record is hereby certified under Atlas World Records ID 20425021, in accordance with Atlas Verification Protocol AVP-72.





