Flying Chute

The Flying Chute (フライングシュート) is an obstacle introduced with the course redesign after Nagano Makoto's kanzenseiha in SASUKE 17. The objective of the Flying Chute is to slide down a 6.3m slide, grab onto a rope placed a certain distance away from the slide, and use momentum to reach a net placed underneath the slide, if the competitor fails the obstacle another net located just above the water helps make the obstacle safer, as the velocity that they travel means that if the net were not there the competitor would be severely injured. This obstacle has proven to be one of the most dangerous and hardest obstacles in the Shin-SASUKE First Stage, and has eliminated competitors such as Nagano Makoto, Iketani Naoki, Nagasaki Takamasa, Nagasaki Shunsuke, Shiratori Bunpei (timed out), Urushihara Yuuji, and Yamamoto Shingo (twice). The obstacle has been changed multiple times in the four tournaments that it was in the First Stage, throwing off competitors each time.


Demonstration on the Flying Chute

SASUKE Competitions
Stage: First Stage
First: SASUKE 18
Last: SASUKE 21
Total: 4 competitions
First Attempt: SASUKE 18, Kobayashi Shinji
First Clear: SASUKE 18, Kobayashi Shinji


SASUKE 18 Version

The first version of this obstacle was rather basic. Competitors would slide down the chute, catch the rope underneath the arms, and reach for the net underneath the chute. This version required none of the timing, speed, or strategy required in future versions. Because of this, not many people failed here.


Flying Chute, SASUKE 18


SASUKE 19 Version

By far the hardest version of the Flying Chute. To make the obstacle harder for the competitors, the producers raised the rope and put it farther from the chute. In order to pass this obstacle, competitors needed great speed in order to gain enough momentum to reach the net and great timing. Jump too early and they would slide down the net and lose balance. Jump too late and competitors wouldn't be able to hold onto the rope and fall into the water (as Nagasaki Takamasa and Nagano Makoto did). On top of that, competitors also needed to only hold the rope with their bare hand, otherwise they would not be able to reach the net. Because of the great speed required to gain momentum, many competitors tried to reach the net on the first rebound, however, this proved fatal. This version of the obstacle was so hard, that only four people cleared successfully.


Koji Yamada attempting the redesigned Flying Chute at SASUKE 19


SASUKE Version 20/21

Because of SASUKE 19's extreme difficulty, the producers toned down the Flying Chute in order to make it a little easier for the competitors to pass. To do this, they moved the rope vertically down so it was same height as the SASUKE 18 version but also the same distance away from the net as the SASUKE 19 version. While more people did beat the obstacle, this version required more strategy than its predecessors. Competitors could go fast, try to endure the whiplash, and make it to the net on the first rebound, or competitors could go slow and try to land on the rope with enough force to get the necessary momentum to reach the net. This design also created several interesting and unique wipeouts, as some competitors flipped over the rope (as Haga Tomoya, and Iketani Naoki did). It has since been taken out of the First Stage and was replaced in SASUKE 22 with the Slider Jump.


Okuyama Yoshiyuki attempting the redesigned Flying Chute at SASUKE 20

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