Board Thread:Boruto Discussions/@comment-31377229-20180125162054/@comment-6769189-20180202022601

We were talking about A and now you flip the script and talk about B? Ok. Sasuke was planning on cutting through Be's swords with chidori blade, Suigetsu even says that it is supposed to be unblockable. That didnt work out because B channeled the lightning.

Page 15-16: whether he had it active is debatable because we dont have a close up shot of him at all and Sharingan users on multiple occasions have activated it in the middle or inbetween attacks from enemies. If it wasnt, then Sasuke is boss for managing defense as long as he did. If it was (which is most likely because in that panel there werent any activation sfx that accompany transformations), Sasuke got hit by B after all his spinning attacks because B overwhelmed him with the sheer number of sword strikes regardless of how well the Sharingan can predict movement, Sasuke will not be able to counter multiple attacks from multiple angles.

Page 17: we can verify his Sharingan is active and it shows how well they predict movement because he managed to to protect himself from 3 swords at once from an otherwise fatal blow even though he was knocked off balance and had to defend/dodge 3 seperate strikes at once.

As for page 21: SHARINGAN USERS CAN HAVE REACTION TIME ISSUES THIS WAS COVERED WAY BACK IN SASUKE VS LEE! But you are just going to ignore how he specifically mentions that he can follow B even with his chakra cloak active 2 chapters later, unless you are saying that B is slower with his version 1 cloak active.

Anytime in the series the Sharingan wasnt able to predict movement it is specifically mentioned(Itach vs Kakashi. Sasuke vs 1 Tail Version 1 Naruto) and in niether case did Sasuke mention that he couldnt follow B or A's movements.

You keep claiming your speculation is fact when you have 0 confirmation from the manga and characters offer explanations and Kishimoto draws diagrams that do not match your interpretation; such as a Sharingan users body not being able to keep up with what they see.