The T-6 landing technique is rather level on the mains first. This is to help keep the vertical stab & rudder in the air stream long enough so you can maintain directional control until enough deceleration occurs to make the transition to settle the tail & plant the tailwheel (with full back pressure) then gently apply even brake pressure. Once you're just above normal taxi speed, you can use the tailwheel steering & very light differential braking. Following that procedure will keep you from suffering ground looping and runway excursions, One word of caution: DO NOT unlock the tailwheel (with full forward stick) unless taxiing very slowly for facilitating pivot turns. You generally have more than enough ground turning authority by stepping on the rudder pedals and very slight differential braking.
The end results will be different with each user depending on the hardware they use but with a bit of fine tuning and practice, it's actually quite easy.