Talk:Oily Water Technique

Deletion unnecessary
Deva says it could just be a variation of the Hydration Technique. Isn't a jutsu a the Big Ball Rasengan a variation as well? And Deva only wants to delete because he did not create the page himself. --OmegaRasengan (talk) 18:52, September 21, 2011 (UTC)
 * I wasn't the user who originally added the deletion tag. I don't care who creates a page, I just think creating a new unnamed jutsu page is necessary as the oil can simply be mentioned of the hydrification technique page.

I have to say I highly doubt that Deva wants to delete this article simply because he didn't create it himself, but either way, I still support the page's deletion. The information here can just as easily be represented on the Hydrification Technique page, especially as it hasn't been stated previously how the water involved in the technique acts, for all we know this might be the normal quality displayed by all of the users and not just the Second Mizukage. Blackstar1 (talk) 19:10, September 21, 2011 (UTC)
 * I agree with deletion for all we know, the water produced by the Hydriation tech is oily.Umishiru (talk) 19:29, September 21, 2011 (UTC)


 * Hydration Technique turns someone into a liquid form... liquid meaning in most cases water. Gaara said it's more "oil than liquid" and a suna shinobi said "the oily liquid". So far we know, the hydration technique allows to turn to liquid (as saw by Suigetsu and Mangetsu) so clearly this is a different case just for the fact that this ain't water. Althought people might said this is a variation of this Hydration Technique, i think this was a similar case with the "Dust Style: Detachement of a Primitive World" and "Dust Style: Dust Cone Technique". We can say this technique is different or it's the same, but until further explanations from Kishimoto comes, then this article shoould stay as it has differences with the hydration technique. --Kiba91 (talk) 20:27, September 21, 2011 (UTC)

I'm the one who added the deletion tag. There was no need for a page over something that almost certainly an existing technique. It is still water, albeit an oily one. Unless we are later told that this is a different technique altogether, the page is quite unneeded. Skitts (talk) 21:55, September 21, 2011 (UTC)