Thanks for the great video. It's nice to see a lot of the different places one can play.
Your main idea about "what they're doing doing different" is the intensive (multiball) training? Anything else?
How do the feel the language barrier impacts the experience? In terms of, for example, getting more detailed advice from coaches - this a language thing, or more a 'system' thing?
One great thing about China is because the skill ceiling is so high there are players you can meet in the park who are very talented but don't take themselves too seriously. That gives the sport's atmosphere a different feeling.
There are lots of takeaways about how they structure their training, what they focus on. For example a lot of training sessions in the province teams they will literally focus on three drill centric system:
1. Forehand Footwork i.e 2-2 or three point forehand
2. Full table random
3. Serve and attack
Those are literally their main generic training blocks to improve the key areas they see as being most important. Of course they also mix in other drills when they want to focus on other areas, but that's the blueprint.
I think you can learn a lot seeing their approaches to matches and how they win points, how they adapt. Even simple things like what sequences they focus on in some of their multiball drills and other table drills.