Board Thread:Theories and Speculation/@comment-25122992-20170307224943/@comment-734582-20170308104352

AsianReaper wrote: I think FTG's main drawback is its difficulty. Tobirama and Minato were masters so we got see people who could use it like nothing. But the Hokage Guard people could only manage it in conjuction with each other. If you think about it, FTG has a MAJOR drawback: it would be extremely hard for the user to keep track of the various seals, locations, orientations and of the enemy's location and orientation.

Basically, using FTG it's super easy to get caught out of place if you don't have a perfect awareness of everything going on around you. You can easily teleport straight into a trap, or lose track of an enemy and teleport with your back towards them. You need to be a master sensor with excellent spatial awareness to use the technique in a useful way. AsianReaper wrote: Shadow Clone for me. The biggest drawback is probably chakra cost. It's not a forbidden technique because of the difficulty, but because it splits your chakra. And if you aren't perfectly aware of how much you have, you can easily run out.

Ravenlot 27 wrote: Recently, I recalled Kabuto words when he called his Edo Tensei a strongest technique in existence. Of course, we wasn't completely true, but because of it, I've got an idea to discuss what kind of technique can be called the "strongest" overall, and what defines this "strength" of it. I think Edo Tensei IS the closest thing to a perfect technique. undying, regenerating zombies with infinite chakra. It costs neither much chakra to perform nor maintain, you can easily control all your enemies. The only downside to the technique is that the user becomes cocky and starts using it wrong.

IE dont summon someone (much) stronger than you. Don't bind them loosely. don't summon someone who also knows the seals. If you abide by these three rules, it's a completely perfect technique.