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No one is able to do this 1 hour and no one in this forum is able to do that at this speed !
Multiball is important. But not for the reasons you might think. It is for muscle memory and for the fact that you are actually doing things at a faster pace than would happen in a game. The downside of multiball is that, since it is a drill where there is a pattern, you know where the next ball is going, so your reactions are based on a format. That never happens in a real game. The ball can go anywhere.
No matter what you do, every point starts with the serve, so you are either serving or receiving the serve. And if you watch enough game play, most points are over after the 3rd ball. So serve and receive drills are very important. Once you have the basic strokes and your footwork is starting to be adequate (everyone needs to work on footwork and make their footwork better, it is very important), if you spend 60-75% of your practice time on serve and attack drills your level will improve, your footwork will improve, all the skills you need for table tennis will improve. You need to do all the other drills too: practicing all the strokes, practicing footwork drills with multiball, there are many of them that are worth practicing, this one in the video and falkenberg are probably the most important for someone who has basic footwork skills. The reason the one in the video is so valuable is you develop the ability to field everything with the forehand and to move deep to the backhand quickly with the forehand.
But multiball drills are simply for developing muscle memory and because they make you go faster than you would need in a game situation. Shadow strokes and shadow footwork drills are valuable too for the same reason. The the reason not to overemphasize these kinds of drills is that they are patterns and you know where the next ball is going, so the anticipation is very different than if you needed to watch your opponent's racket and contact and react to where they hit the ball. These kinds of drills also do not teach you how to think, problem solve and play intelligently. There are players who do all these drills really well and have great strokes but do not work on serve and receive skills (game skills) and then they play some guy who looks like he sucks, cannot do those drills, does not have good strokes or good footwork, and they get killed because he serves and attacks really well. I have seen 2000 level players (USATT rating), very good players, loose to little old men who could not move and looked like they had terrible strokes, but man they were good at serving and putting the ball away on you. On the pro level you can look at He Zhi Wen. As far as footwork is concerned, at 50 (or how ever old he is now) that guy is sort of like a statue, stuck in one place, at least in comparison to most of the pros, but he is nothing short of amazing.
Multiball is very important to improve your skills and footwork , it's essential to train better, but to do this you need a coach.