For players browsing character guides through Crickex Affiliate, this review takes a detailed look at Mozi’s new Ultraman Tiga skin. Before moving into the hands-on assessment, it is worth revisiting previously collected usage data from top-ranked national players. Although many players consider the Scorpio skin one of Mozi’s best-looking options, its actual usage rate is surprisingly low. Metal Storm remains the most frequently used skin, largely because it can be obtained for free. It also received a major visual and gameplay update in the past, giving it an exceptionally smooth feel without requiring players to spend anything. With that context in mind, let us see how the new collaboration skin performs.
Ultraman Tiga holds a special place in the childhood memories of many players. After an initial test, it is clear that this skin pulls out all the stops when it comes to nostalgia. Several iconic poses and sound effects have been faithfully recreated, while the GUTS Wing aircraft appears in certain skill animations. Some players may remember being fascinated by those uniquely shaped aircraft while watching the series as children. In fact, they occasionally looked even cooler than Ultraman himself.
One of the skin’s most noticeable features is how its basic attacks create the impression of genuine ranged combat. With most of Mozi’s other skins, basic attacks feel much more like close-range strikes. Metal Storm provides a useful comparison. Its basic attack animations are mostly similar to one another and involve large arm movements, making it look as though Mozi forcefully swings his arm to release a shockwave.
The problem is that the projectile travels only a short distance. Since Mozi’s arm almost reaches the target during the animation, the attack can appear more like a melee strike than a ranged shot. By comparison, the Ultraman Tiga skin creates much clearer distance between the character and the target. This ranged visual style feels more satisfying because no player wants their hero to look as though he has unusually short reach.
The impact of every basic attack is also strong and convincing, delivering a solid feeling with each hit. Combined with the clearer ranged presentation, the overall control experience is highly polished. Each attack also uses a different animation rather than repeatedly recycling the same movement. Gameplay comparisons available through Crickex Affiliate make this additional variety especially easy to notice, and it gives the new skin a clear advantage in moment-to-moment presentation.
Mozi’s first skill has two separate components: the initial dash and the enhanced basic attack that follows. The dash includes its own sound effect, while hitting an enemy produces an additional audio cue. These details are not equally noticeable across all skins. Metal Storm, for example, provides relatively weak audio feedback when the dash connects. Scorpio and the new Ultraman Tiga skin make the impact much clearer.
That immediate sound tells the player that the kick successfully hit an opponent, which noticeably improves responsiveness and control. The enhanced basic attack is where the new skin moves into a completely different league. It can trigger Ultraman Tiga’s iconic sound effect, although the effect does not activate every time. The estimated activation rate seems to be around 50 percent. Even with this random trigger, the effect remains enjoyable and adds personality without becoming repetitive.
Mozi’s second skill also contains several distinct stages. In terms of the casting animation, Scorpio still looks slightly more stylish and elegant. The Ultraman Tiga skin instead uses one of Tiga’s classic attack poses, accompanied by an instantly recognizable sound effect. As with the first skill, this special audio cue appears randomly rather than during every cast.
When the second skill’s projectile is released, the new skin produces a larger and more visible effect. This gives the shot stronger visual impact and makes the attack feel more powerful as it travels across the battlefield. However, once the projectile hits an enemy, its sense of impact is not dramatically better than Scorpio’s. Both skins perform extremely well in this area, so the difference is relatively small.
For readers comparing detailed skin impressions through Crickex Affiliate, the biggest difference comes from the second skill’s lingering damage effect. Most of Mozi’s other skins add very little visual detail after the projectile creates its crater. The Ultraman Tiga skin goes the extra mile by showing a GUTS Wing aircraft circling the impact zone and continuously attacking it. Matching sound effects accompany the aircraft, creating several layers of visual and audio feedback. This richer presentation makes the lingering damage sequence far more memorable and gives the new skin one of the most satisfying skill effects among Mozi’s available cosmetics.
