Does Naruto Rasenshuriken Appear In Official Naruto Video Games?

2025-08-23 16:31:10 64

3 Answers

Ulysses
Ulysses
2025-08-25 04:29:26
I get asked this a lot by friends who binge the series and then jump into games: yes, Rasenshuriken definitely appears in official Naruto video games. It’s most reliably found in the 'Ultimate Ninja Storm' series where it functions as an ultimate/awakened move with flashy cinematics and heavy damage, and it also crops up in a variety of mobile and spin-off titles as a special skill. That means if you want the exact anime feel — the wind-razor visuals, the big hit — go for one of the Storm entries or the newer mobile gacha games that keep adding move variants. If you dig through older non-'Shippuden' titles, though, don’t be surprised if it’s missing, since the technique didn’t exist yet when those games released.
Xavier
Xavier
2025-08-26 15:32:12
On a practical level, I can tell you Rasenshuriken is present across a bunch of official Naruto releases, but how it plays depends on the platform and the era of the game. In the modern console fighters — especially the 'Ultimate Ninja Storm' lineup — it's typically an ultimate jutsu or an awakened move with a long cinematic and high damage. I remember pulling it off in 'Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4' during a ranked session and the visual flair was basically the anime distilled into a button press. That series also bundles those moves in collections like 'Ultimate Ninja Storm Legacy', so it's easy to find.

If you're more into mobile or strategy formats, the technique shows up there too, often as a card, skill, or special unit ability in titles such as 'Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Blazing' and 'Naruto x Boruto: Ninja Voltage'. Those versions trade cinematic spectacle for stats and team synergies. One caveat: very old Naruto games that predate the Rasenshuriken's introduction in the manga/anime won't have it, so check release dates if you're digging through retro catalogs. Personally, when I want the full experience I pick a Storm game — feels closest to the show every time.
Tanya
Tanya
2025-08-27 16:24:04
I've always been the kind of nerd who squeals when a signature move from the show shows up in a game, and the Rasenshuriken definitely makes that list. In short: yes — Naruto's Rasenshuriken appears in many official Naruto video games. If you want the big cinematic version that throws particles everywhere, the 'Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm' series is where it shines. Games like 'Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 2', 'Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 3 Full Burst', 'Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm Revolution', and 'Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4' include it as a high-end ultimate or an Awakening-style move, often with the full anime cutscene treatment and hefty damage or special status effects.

Beyond the Storm trilogy, you'll find the Rasenshuriken in several spin-offs and mobile titles too. For example, 'Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Blazing' and 'Naruto x Boruto: Ninja Voltage' feature versions of it as a powerful skill card or special ability, while some handheld and portable entries (like PSP-era tie-ins) include it in boss fights or unlockable moves. Older pre-'Shippuden' games naturally don't have it because the technique didn't exist in the source material yet. If you're hunting for the most faithful, dramatic Rasenshuriken gameplay, aim for the Storm series or the mobile gacha games that keep adding new jutsu variants — that's where it looks and feels most like the anime.
View All Answers
Scan code to download App

Related Books

Twisted Games
Twisted Games
Prologue : •"Im sorry, put the gun down" I say afraid, looking pleadingly into his eyes. " This gun?" He asks. "What if I don't want to?" he continues to ask as he cocks the gun. At this point I can feel tears start to form in my eyes. "Ad-Adri....pl-ease st-st-stop" I shakingly beg him "Stop what baby?" "Tell me what I should stop" he asks feigning confusion as he begins to slide the gun along my cheek, dragging it slowly from my temple all the way down to my lips. I'm so scared by what he's doing that I just start sobbing unable to hold my tears back any longer "Shh-shh-shh don't cry" he mockingly coos into my ear his breath fanning my skin. "What will you do for me if I stop?" "Any-anything, just just st-stop,ok" I hurriedly reply "Anything! Lucky me" he exclaims "hmm, I've got to think about this one" "Hmm? Oh I've got it" he continues as I nervously swallow wondering what he will ask of me.• □ This book is set in two timelines, the present day and 3 years ago. □ meet: Adriano Valencia Accused of Arms dealing, Drug distribution, Murder and possible mafia ties. 3 years ago the girl he loved betrayed him and almost destroyed him but, now he's hunting for her. Meet: Klara Davis She was just an innocent highschool student until Adriano showed up and ruined her life. And now almost 3 years later the he's back and more dangerous than ever, but what he doesn't know is that Klara's changed to. By Kerry Kerry **WARNING: THIS BOOK IS FOR A MATURE AUDIENCE 18+ **contains explicit language, profanity, extreme violence and sexual situations as well as some dark romance themes that sensitive readers may find disturbing! Reader discretion is advised.
10
21 Chapters
Shifter games
Shifter games
We all hear about "the girl next door", or the girl tamed the bad boy. But, what happens when the bad boy meets his match? Bad girl by nature, independent by force. Sienna learns the hard way, to never trust anyone but yourself to look out for you. Possessive by nature, bad boy by reputation. Zander is renowned for his possessive attitude and dominant way of life. In a world without packs, A world rising from ruin, a moon goddess with a paw to grind and a bone to pick, and 2 hot headed polar opposites. Recipe for disaster. But throw in the fact the only way to bring packs back and have the chaos return to some sort of civility is that of the shifter games? Nothing could possibly go wrong, could it? Shifter games are not for the faint of heart, and definantly only for those who believe they can lead their kind to prosperity. But with leadership comes bumps in the road and alliances with those you never thought you would ever turn to. It also comes with great responsibility. Are they cut out for it? Do they have what it takes to make it out on top of one the most gruesome and ruthless tests the goddess herself has created, in order to test their kind to the best of their abilities to rightfully obtain leadership through sheer grit, cunning and strength? Join sienna and zander on their journey to find out. Let the shifter games begin!
Not enough ratings
3 Chapters
WOLF GAMES
WOLF GAMES
How I loved to piss her off! For some reason, it only aroused me even more, and, most importantly, her too. Parents always said that meeting your mate is a gift from heaven. Only no one warned that it could become a drug for me. And I certainly didn’t expect that the girl would perceive our connection in a completely different way, and if I strive to be closer, then she only tries to run away from me. Silly, you can't run away from the wolf, he will catch up sooner or later anyway... well, that's even more interesting. Hunting has always been one of my favorite pastimes.
Not enough ratings
19 Chapters
Dangerous Games
Dangerous Games
Andrea Laurence had it all, the glamour the perfect fiance, and her dream job that was until her fall from grace. Now she is untouchable no one in the corporate world will hire her. Those are the rules. Corbyn Emerson has never been one to follow the rules, especially when he plays the game. He needs Andrea to take down his enemy who just so happens to be Andrea's ex-fiance and doesn't expect to be so enthralled by her fiery no-nonsense personality. Soon he finds out that she knows how to play the game just as well as him, there is danger, blackmail lies galore, and maybe before they realise it a forbidden sort of love they both decided to ignore. As they play with each other's hearts, from unwilling co-conspirators to something more, are you willing to play the game?
Not enough ratings
36 Chapters
DANGEROUS GAMES
DANGEROUS GAMES
She couldn't love him. His heart didn't belong to her. It belonged to another woman; one that had loved him for years. And in her heart, the heart that he was slowly stealing with each sweet word and every act of kindness, she knew he loved that woman still. Maybe she would have hated him longer if he had been anything like his mother. The woman who forced her into this marriage by threatening her sister's future. But he wasn't. Samuel Madden was everything she dreamed of ending up with but settling for him might mean settling for half. Half of his heart, half of a family, half of a husband. He had everything planned. The ring, the house, the way he'd ask the woman he loved to marry him. But with one word from his mother, threatening to ruin her life, he found himself at the altar, saying void vows to a woman he met only a month ago. He was ready to settle and wait until he was free again, but Kali Hastings wasn't an easy woman to dislike. Sure, she had flaws, but they were nothing compared to her tender heart and perky personality. Now, he was falling for a woman who was daily conquering more and more of his heart. But at what cost? There was more connecting them than even she knew. A truth that had been buried in his family since he was born. Would she still want him when she found out the truth?
Not enough ratings
107 Chapters
Syndicate Games
Syndicate Games
When the bodies of his informats start turning up dead at every corner ; an assertive and confident journalist who is entangled with the mafia finds himself in a race against time - for his life.
Not enough ratings
5 Chapters

Related Questions

Which Naruto Episodes Feature Naruto Rasenshuriken In Battle?

2 Answers2025-08-23 01:36:39
I still get a little giddy talking about the Rasenshuriken — it's one of those moments in 'Naruto Shippuden' that felt like Naruto really stepped into his own. For me the most important on-screen appearances are clustered around his wind training and the subsequent Akatsuki showdown, and then later during the Fourth Great Ninja War where he levels up the move into massive, crazy variants. If you want the beats rather than every minute of filler, here's how I break it down. The birth of the technique happens during the Wind Release training arc and shows up in the episodes around the late 70s to mid-80s of 'Naruto Shippuden' (these are the episodes where he masters wind nature and experiments with the Rasengan). The first time he actually throws a Rasenshuriken in a real fight is in the Kakuzu battle sequence (the Akatsuki fight that follows soon after the training). That clash is the one where the technique’s power — and its cost to Naruto’s arm due to cellular-level damage — becomes painfully obvious. Those are the iconic, must-watch moments if you want the classic “first in battle” usage. Fast-forward to the Fourth Great Ninja War arc: Naruto uses Rasenshuriken variants repeatedly. You’ll see him evolve it into larger forms (giant Rasenshuriken, multiple spinning rifts, even fused types with Kurama’s chakra in some scenes). Key battles include his fights against Obito and Madara during the war, and the climactic sequences much later against other big threats where he combines Sage or Kurama modes with the technique to create much larger-scale attacks. Keep in mind episode numbering can shift slightly between releases and recaps/fillers sometimes pad scenes, but if you watch the wind-training → Kakuzu fight → war arc sequence you’ll catch every major Rasenshuriken in action. I usually rewatch those arcs when I’m in the mood for flashy chakra tech — they still give me chills.

When Did Naruto Rasenshuriken First Appear In The Manga?

2 Answers2025-08-23 03:46:36
I still get a little buzz thinking about the moment Naruto dropped the Rasenshuriken into the story — it hits like a mic-drop. In the manga, the technique surfaces during Part II of 'Naruto' when Naruto finally masters Wind nature and combines it with his Rasengan. The first time we see him actually create and throw the full Rasenshuriken is in the battle against Kakuzu during the Hidan and Kakuzu arc; that’s when the move is revealed as a proper high-level technique rather than just a training exercise. The context matters: he learned the wind-infused Rasengan through intense training and experimentation, then pushed it into this explosive shuriken-shaped form when the stakes were sky-high. Reading that chapter felt like watching a character hit a new power ceiling. Kishimoto uses the sequence to show both Naruto’s growth and the cost of such a technique — it’s brutally effective but also has a personal toll (it’s lethal on contact in its original form). After that debut, the Rasenshuriken becomes a recurring signature, spawning later variations and tactical uses during the Fourth Great Ninja War and beyond. I still think back to sitting on a couch with a paperback of 'Naruto' and being like, "Yep, this kid just leveled up." Whether you’re into the choreography of the panels or the emotional payoff of hard-won power, that first Rasenshuriken scene is one of those classic shonen moments that sticks with you.

How Did Wind Naruto Learn Rasenshuriken In Canon?

4 Answers2025-08-25 14:14:08
My jaw dropped the first time I pieced this together while rewatching 'Naruto Shippuden'—Naruto didn’t get Rasenshuriken handed to him, he invented it through brutal, stubborn practice. He already had the Rasengan from Jiraiya, and what he needed next was to combine that inner spiraling chakra with a nature transformation. Naruto discovered he had a Wind affinity and, using shadow clones, experimented with infusing wind chakra into the Rasengan until it formed a blade-like, cutting effect. He taught himself the shape and the feel through repetition: countless clones, tweaking the chakra flow, and shaping the spinning mass into that shuriken-like form. The technique’s signature is that microscopic, cellular-level damage from the wind blades—something only realized after he used it seriously. Later he refined it into throwables and giant variants by adding more chakra and learning to avoid injuring his own arm. In short: Rasenshuriken is a mix of Naruto’s Rasengan base, his own wind nature discovery, and a huge amount of trial-and-error, with encouragement and prior lessons (like Rasengan from Jiraiya and general training from others) nudging him along.

What Chakra Nature Does Naruto Rasenshuriken Incorporate?

2 Answers2025-08-23 06:30:06
Back when I was doodling ninjutsu diagrams in the margins of my schoolbooks, the Rasenshuriken always felt like the perfect example of how a small tweak changes everything. In 'Naruto', the original Rasengan is a pure shape-and-rotation technique — Minato created it by manipulating chakra rotation and form, not by adding an elemental nature. Naruto’s twist was to take that spinning chakra ball and infuse it with Wind Release (Fūton) nature, turning a blunt-force sphere into a spinning, serrated storm. So the Rasenshuriken is fundamentally a Wind Release technique: the wind chakra slices at a microscopic level, producing the characteristic cellular-level damage the series shows. That cutting property is what differentiates Naruto’s variant from the plain Rasengan. What makes it more interesting are the layers Naruto adds later. When he learns to use natural energy in Sage Mode, he creates the 'Sage Art: Rasenshuriken' — same wind basis but now boosted by senjutsu, which increases size, range, and destructive potential. And when he channels Kurama’s chakra or Six Paths power, you’re not changing the basic elemental nature so much as amplifying its output and adding different chakra qualities (more chakra, better control, sometimes different visual effects). Technically you can say it’s Wind Release at heart, but practically it becomes a hybrid: Wind nature plus whatever extra chakra (natural energy, tailed-beast chakra, or Six Paths chakra) Naruto layers on. I still get goosebumps watching the first time he throws a full-blown Rasenshuriken — it’s one of those scenes where the fight choreography and the explanation of chakra theory meet in a satisfying way. If you want to nitpick the mechanics, there’s a debate among fans about whether the Rasenshuriken’s damage is purely wind-cutting or also a form of targeted chakra disruption, but both theories point back to Wind Release being the core nature. If you haven’t rewatched it in a while, flip back to the 'Shippuden' arc where he debuts it—seeing the transition from training with clones to the field execution really sells why Wind Release was the perfect upgrade.

How Did Naruto Rasenshuriken Adapt In Boruto'S Timeline?

3 Answers2025-08-23 10:17:14
When I look at how the Rasenshuriken evolved into the 'Boruto' era, I see more of a journey from brute-force innovation to a legacy technique that gets adapted, refined, and sometimes avoided for tactical reasons. Back in the 'Naruto' days it was essentially Naruto’s radical solution: combine wind nature with the Rasengan and make something devastatingly precise, but the original form literally shredded the user’s cells at point blank. Naruto's workaround—building it with shadow clones and throwing it instead of making contact—was a smart in-universe engineering fix that showed how chakra control and teamwork solved a fundamental problem. By the time we’re in the 'Boruto' timeline, that original self-damaging version is mostly historic. Naruto matured, gained access to far larger power sources (and partners) and rarely needs to risk himself with the old approach. What actually changed in practical terms is twofold: the technique scaled up with higher-tier chakra (so you see more area-effect, bijuu-level versions rather than the microscopic cellular damage trick), and it became a teaching touchstone. Younger shinobi pick up rasengan-based variants rather than the exact Rasenshuriken — think of Boruto’s sneaky Vanishing Rasengan lineage rather than a literal copy of the Rasenshuriken. Also, the world around the jutsu changed. Scientific tools, modern training methods, and the presence of things like Karma and synthetic augmentations mean that instead of a single signature move, the Rasenshuriken’s DNA lives on across new techniques. It’s less often used by Naruto himself because he’s the Hokage and because it isn’t the most practical option in every fight, but its principles—wind-nature refinement, rotational destructive force, and clone-assisted delivery—are everywhere. As a long-time fan, I love that it didn’t just disappear; it got woven into the next generation’s toolkit.

How Does Naruto Rasenshuriken Compare To Sasuke'S Techniques?

3 Answers2025-08-23 07:40:22
I still get chills thinking about the moment the Rasenshuriken first shows up — it feels like pure instinct meeting engineering. To me, the Rasenshuriken is Naruto's commitment to brute-force ingenuity: it’s wind-nature chakra layered into a Rasengan and then shaped into a spinning, serrated storm that attacks at a microscopic, cellular level. Mechanically that means insane destructive power on impact and the ability to shred tissue and chakra networks rather than just making a hole. Early on it cost Naruto a lot to use it in close combat because the fallout would injure his own arm, but later he learns to throw it and combine it with Sage/Six Paths enhancements so the recoil and self-harm become non-issues. The Rasenshuriken is surgical violence — short range but brutally effective, and visually it’s one of those moves that reads as both beautiful and terrifying in 'Naruto' fight choreography. Sasuke’s toolkit feels like the opposite philosophy: precision, variety, and vision-based trump cards. He has lightning-based techniques like Chidori and the world-killing Kirin for raw range and speed, ocular ninjutsu like Amaterasu and his Rinnegan abilities for targeted annihilation or space-time tricks, and Susano’o as both an armored fortress and a weapon platform. Where Naruto’s Rasenshuriken punishes flesh and chakra directly, Sasuke’s stuff is more about tactical flexibility — long-range ganks, area denial with black flames, and movement control via teleportation. In practice, that means Naruto can wipe out a single target or break through defenses with raw, cellular-level force, while Sasuke can neutralize multiple threats, manipulate the battlefield, or deny escape routes. If I had to summarize casually: Rasenshuriken = close-to-midrange, obscene destructive specialization; Sasuke’s techniques = multi-role, ocularly empowered toolkit. In a straight-up clash it depends on conditions — distance, Susano’o availability, and who can land the first decisive strike. Watching how they complement each other in team-ups is one of my favorite parts of the series, because it shows two philosophies of power working in concert rather than one simply outclassing the other.

Why Did Naruto Rasenshuriken Cause Internal Damage To Users?

2 Answers2025-08-23 04:01:49
Watching the mechanics of chakra get pushed to their limits in 'Naruto' has always fascinated me, and the 'Rasenshuriken' is one of those techniques that feels equal parts brilliant and brutal. At a technical level, the reason it causes internal damage is because Naruto fused wind nature into a version of the 'Rasengan' and scaled it down to microscopic, high-velocity cutting edges. Those wind-infused chakra blades don't just slice flesh like a kunai; they attack on a cellular level — shredding cell membranes, nerve endings, and the chakra network itself. When Naruto originally formed it in his hand and pressed it into an opponent, those microscopic shockwaves and cutting currents radiated back into his own arm through the chakra flow and tissue connection, causing severe internal trauma. I always picture it like a spinning ball of tiny razors drilling into tissue from the inside out, not just surface damage. What I love about this is how the series turned a scientific-feeling detail into a plot and character beat. Naruto's physiology and chakra system couldn't fully contain the Rasenshuriken when it was generated in contact range; the technique literally disrupted his chakral pathways and cellular integrity. The practical consequences were clear: he couldn't use it close-range without harming himself. That limitation led to creative growth — Naruto learned to throw the Rasenshuriken and to have a clone throw it, so the destructive core wouldn't transfer back to his own body. Later power-ups like Kurama's chakra cloak, Sage Mode, and Six Paths energy further changed the equation: with larger, more robust chakra reserves and different chakra qualities, Naruto could generate and project the technique without the same self-inflicted damage. It's a neat piece of internal logic — a technique powerful enough to hurt others had to be adapted, or the user dies trying to rely on raw force. On a fan level, that sequence taught me something about tactical thinking in fights. Seeing Naruto get burned by his own innovation made the world feel real: even a brilliant new move can have trade-offs. I remember watching it with friends and us arguing whether he should've used clones sooner or trained a subtle chakra barrier — little tactical debates that made re-watching those arcs fun. The Rasenshuriken's danger gives weight to Naruto's evolution: it's not only about getting stronger but also about learning how to use power without self-destruction, which is something I find oddly relatable when I'm tinkering with anything risky in real life.

How Is Naruto Rasenshuriken Animated Across The Anime Seasons?

3 Answers2025-08-23 06:38:45
Man, the way the Rasenshuriken evolves on-screen is one of the coolest long-term animation stories in 'Naruto' lore. When it first shows up in 'Naruto Shippuden' it’s treated almost like a practical, physical thing: you get tight, hand-drawn key frames where Naruto forms the sphere and you can actually count the whorls of chakra. Those early sequences lean on sharp linework and quick, almost staccato camera cuts to sell the speed and danger of the technique. I used to pause and frame-by-frame the spiral blades because the animators put so much detail into the shape and rotation — that tiny, jagged edge effect that hints at how lethal it is at cellular level. As the series goes on, Studio Pierrot layers more digital effects on top of that foundation. Later 'Shippuden' fights add motion blur, glow, and particle debris so the Rasenshuriken reads as bigger and more destructive on-screen. The color palette also shifts between episodes: sometimes it’s icy blue with white sparks, other times it’s a harsher teal with purple undertones depending on the mood and lighting. In movies and big climactic episodes they’ll slow down the moment the Rasenshuriken is thrown, add heavy compositing and lens flares, and give the camera a dramatic arc — those are the shots that feel cinematic, where you literally hear the artist’s choices. By the time you reach 'Boruto: Naruto Next Generations' and modern movie re-releases, the technique sometimes gets a CGI boost or hybrid 2D/3D treatment. That makes the blades seem to slice through space — which is visually impressive, though a part of me still loves the grainy hand-drawn twirl from earlier seasons. Watching them side-by-side is like seeing the same song remixed: familiar melody, different instruments, and both versions have their own charm for different reasons.
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status