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==SASUKE 8 Version==
 
==SASUKE 8 Version==
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[[File:Gyakuso Conveyor in 8..png|thumb|289x289px|The Gyakuso Conveyor as it appeared in SASUKE 8, turned off.]]
 
In [[SASUKE 8]], the whole course was showered with a typhoon that unleashed a heavy rain. This caused several obstacles to have trouble functioning. The Gyakusō Conveyor was among them.
 
In [[SASUKE 8]], the whole course was showered with a typhoon that unleashed a heavy rain. This caused several obstacles to have trouble functioning. The Gyakusō Conveyor was among them.
   

Revision as of 23:59, 5 January 2020

The Gyakusō Conveyor (逆走コンベア), called the Conveyer Belt in English broadcast, is a Second Stage obstacle from the first thirteen SASUKE tournaments. Variants of this obstacle were also used in several Kinniku Banzuke events.

It is exactly what its name implies: a conveyor belt with an overhang covering it. Competitors must crawl across the conveyor belt from one side to the other. The conveyor belt is 8m long and moves 20km/h in the opposite direction of the competitors.

Used exclusively as a time waster, it has only eliminated two competitors (Atarashii Ichirō in SASUKE 4 and Ueki Shigenori in SASUKE 13) and was replaced with the Metal Spin in SASUKE 14, which acquired a reputation as a feared obstacle.

It was eventually revived in SASUKE 32 from 12 years and 19 tournaments hiatus since SASUKE 13, as the seventh obstacle of the Second Stage, placed after the Backstream and before the Wall Lifting. The name in SASUKE 32 was changed to Reverse Conveyor (リバースコンベア).

A padding was added behind the conveyor belt when competitors fail at it due to fatigue, which became another way to fail this obstacle. The padding was replaced by water in SASUKE 35. On a side note, the layout was already in use since its first appearance in SASUKE 1.

However, the speed of the conveyor belt had been decelerated compared to previous tournaments, likely due to the risk of going onto an electric obstacle after being inundated with the water from the Backstream.

Similar to its appearance in the early tournaments, this obstacle appeared as a time waster in SASUKE 32, as all eight competitors who attempted this obstacle, could complete it.

Because of that, the speed of the conveyor belt was increased to its original speed in the next tournament. As the result, the obstacle was proven to be brutal, causing Hioki Masashi and Mori Wataru to time out there and causing trouble for other competitors (due to the wet hands and feet from taking on the Backstream).

This obstacle was proven to be brutal once again in SASUKE 34, as Darvish Kenji and Urushihara Yuuji timed out at this obstacle. On the other hand, Takahashi Kenji became the first competitor to fail the obstacle without timing out, in which he ran out of stamina and was dragged by the conveyor to the padding.

JG Reverse Conveyor

Jessie Graff attempted the Reverse Conveyor, SASUKE 34

There is also two sets of padding beside the belt possibly to prevent injury from being dragged by the belt. While it may be touched, it is not allowed for competitors to use for support (as Mori Wataru did in SASUKE 36, which resulted in his disqualification), meaning the competitor must stay on the belt while moving forward.

KUNOICHI Appearances

RC1

Reverse Conveyor, KUNOICHI 9

The Reverse Conveyor appeared as the fourth obstacle during the BLUE Stage (Second Stage) from KUNOICHI 9 to KUNOICHI 11, with the exception that the overhang was lower, forcing the competitors to lie down and crawl onto the conveyor.

In KUNOICHI 9, since the BLUE Stage had no time limit to complete the stage, the obstacle was fallible if the competitors were dragged to the padding below the conveyor belt. However, from KUNOICHI 10 onward, with the implementation of time limit to the stage, similar to its appearances in SASUKE, the obstacle was served as a time waster for the competitors.

SASUKE 8 Version

Gyakuso Conveyor in 8.

The Gyakuso Conveyor as it appeared in SASUKE 8, turned off.

In SASUKE 8, the whole course was showered with a typhoon that unleashed a heavy rain. This caused several obstacles to have trouble functioning. The Gyakusō Conveyor was among them.

To prevent the dangers of getting electrocuted, the belt was turned off, so it didn't move at all, however the rain that had fallen on the belt while it was not moving had left the belt slippery.

This caused some competitors to slip and struggle before finally making it to the Wall Lifting.

Competitors' Success Rate

  • All results based on the TBS broadcast and external information found

SASUKE

SASUKE Clears Attempts Percentage
1 8 8 100%
2 13 13 100%
3 8 8 100%
4 11 12 91.67%
5 1 1 100%
6 5 5 100%
7 5 5 100%
8 5 5 100%
9 6 6 100%
10 4 4 100%
11 9 9 100%
12 10 10 100%
13 8 9 88.89%
32 8 8 100%
33 5 7 71.43%
34 10 14 71.43%
35 6 6 100%
36 11 14 78.57%
Total 122 130 93.80%

KUNOICHI

KUNOICHI Clears Attempts Percentage
9 5 5 100%
10 4 5 80%
11 7 8 87.5%
Total 16 18 88.89%

Gallery