One/three advantages:
Most likely at a time when my opponent is following me. While he is doing that, I cast the genjutsu. It would make it seem more "realistic". It would seem as he is following me for a long time.
How you would counter it:
I think running for hours without stopping will of course give it away that it's a genjutsu. I would simply inflict small damage on myself to cast me free of the genjutsu.
How you perform it (with as much detail as you can):
I start molding my chakra throughout my body. I focus on my opponent. Then I wait to find the perfect time when he is mid/close range and at the mean time running to cast the genjutsu. I release my chakra and transfer it into his brain, successfully making him think he is running into a straight line, while he is actually running in circles.
- 1. It exhausts your opponent without them realizing.
- 2. It is effective against moving targets.
- 1. It's useless if the opponent is not moving, since it'd give it away.
- 2. No physical damage or infliction of pain is caused, only exhaustion.
Most likely at a time when my opponent is following me. While he is doing that, I cast the genjutsu. It would make it seem more "realistic". It would seem as he is following me for a long time.
How you would counter it:
I think running for hours without stopping will of course give it away that it's a genjutsu. I would simply inflict small damage on myself to cast me free of the genjutsu.
How you perform it (with as much detail as you can):
I start molding my chakra throughout my body. I focus on my opponent. Then I wait to find the perfect time when he is mid/close range and at the mean time running to cast the genjutsu. I release my chakra and transfer it into his brain, successfully making him think he is running into a straight line, while he is actually running in circles.