

- #I am a super sneaky ninja how to#
- #I am a super sneaky ninja full#
- #I am a super sneaky ninja code#
She says an SP - a Japanese VIP bodyguard. When her Ninja-ness is brought up, she specifically denies it.
#I am a super sneaky ninja code#

As a giant stinger missile that heavily disrupts her speed and is too enormous to be hidden, she can't engage in covert fighting at all with it. Her status as an example of this trope is accentuated when her bankai is revealed. Unsurprising, Aizen isn't bothered by her attack and it fails. She then proceeds to engage in one of the flashiest speed-clone attacks we've ever seen her produce. Lampshaded by Aizen who calls her mad for confronting him face-to-face instead of adhering to her training and striking covertly. However, she likes to have her abilities acknowledged and this leads her to take on face-to-face confrontations even when she should strike from the shadows.


Heroic (and technicolor) ninja are smart enough to avert this, while villainous ones are still needed to entertain the viewers.
#I am a super sneaky ninja full#
Not only is this not honorable, it's not as exciting as a full fledged fight. Assassins traditionally killed people through underhanded methods - stabbing In the Back, poisoning, etc. There's also this funny paradox: ninja are assassins. The real reason is the works need to make sure the audience sees the ninja.
#I am a super sneaky ninja how to#
While suffering from the law of Conservation of Ninjutsu, Ninja mooks not only forget how to fight properly and how to take advantage of their superior numbers, they also forget what a ninja truly is.īack at the dojo, didn't their sensei explain that the whole point is to be stealthy, secretive, even invisible? Why do they suddenly feel the need to appear in broad daylight, dressed in stereotyped kabuki-theater stagehand costumes, yell " Kiai!" as loudly as possible, and perform gymnastics and twirl their weapons like they're putting on a show? Even worse, they feel the need to do these things from a distance of about fifty meters, even when they know the enemy have guns ( though this isn't always a problem). The result of Mook Chivalry when applied to Ninja.
