Gather water and wind chakras to create ice chakras. Send them anywhere within short-range and create ice, or, if a water source is within short-long range, then you can use it as a source of creation as well. It's one of the most versatile techniques ever. It has one specific usage, where you create a blizzard that can hinder ones senses. Other than that, you can use it to materialize ice/snow and use shape manipulation to create constructs of ice that are limited to your imagination. It can be sent out as projectiles, created from the ground, materialized from air. So yeah, its one of the most useful techniques for Ice, imo.(Kyousei Hyouton no Jutsu) Greater Ice Technique
Rank: A
Type: Offensive/Defensive
Range: Short-Long
Chakra Cost: 30
Damage: 60
Description: Similar to the original, weaker technique, the Greater Ice technique allows the user to, by making a simple hand seal (Ram) produce walls, pillars, etc of snow or ice. The ice constructs are rather simple in nature but resilient and strong, with the user being able to materialize them anywhere short range (though from that point they can grow up to long range) from him from the moisture in the air. He can, however, use any proportional water source within short-long range of him to produce said constructs. These can also be directed and propelled as projectiles towards targets. In both cases, the size and possible uses are limited only by the users will, chakra and skill. It also allows the user to cool down existing moisture in the high atmosphere to bring down a snow storm, similar to the original technique yet stronger and faster acting. This snow storm will not directly harm anyone but is useful to cover the field in snow rather quickly (2 turns) and to hinder visibility, sense of touch and hearing on anyone caught inside. The user is not immune to these effects though and must spend 15 chakra points per turn to sustain the blizzard, while becoming unable to mold other elements than Water, Wind or Ice.
Give me several creative usages, since there's a lot.
Perform it also, and tell me what you like and dont like about the technique.