Tenta Missiles

The Tenta Missiles are a special weapon in Splatoon 2 and Splatoon 3. They lock onto targets and launch guided missiles that strike from the sky.

Appearance
When activated, the Tenta Missiles' user brandishes two large missile launchers. The launchers are mainly yellow, and each consists of one main part on top that harbors four missile compartments and a smaller part on the bottom that only has one compartment. Each missile compartment changes color to match the user's ink. The Tenta Missiles themselves each look like water bottles filled with the user's team's ink. Activating the Tenta Missiles also displays a large circular reticle appears that shows the radius to acquire targets. Some horizontal lines in the user's ink color move up and down along the side of the screen, giving the whole display a more technological feel. When an opposing player is not locked onto or targeted, they appear as two pairs of lines, similar to a shooter's reticle that shows shot deviation. Hovering over a target causes an octagonal icon with an X to appear over them and plays a beep sound effect, which is higher-pitched the further away the target is (and the icon persists when the missiles are fired on them). An opposing player targeted by Tenta Missiles will see a ring around them in the Tenta Missile user's ink color with some small bottle icons. The number of bottle icons depends on how many missiles the opposing player is targeted with. The icon that appears to warn opposing players of incoming Tenta Missiles is a simple black circle with a ring of the Tenta Missile user's ink color around it.

Splatoon 2
When activated, the player can lock on to up to five opponents using a large reticle and fire a set of homing missiles at them.

Tenta Missiles can also locate and briefly track opponents; while aiming and firing, a crosshair will stay on all locked-on targets on the user's screen and will follow each target until all the missiles have reached their destination.

After the special is activated and fired, markers appear to all players that show where the missiles land. If missiles are targeting a player, the player will see a ring with four, five, or ten arrows around their character showing how many missiles are still left. The number of missiles fired at each opponent differs based on how many have been targeted. If one player is targeted, they will receive ten missiles. If more than one player is locked on to, they will receive four missiles each.

Special Power Up
Wearing Special Power Up with Tenta Missiles increases the targeting radius and the painting radius of missiles.

Quotes
"If you press, this will fire missiles at all enemies that you tag with your cursor. The more enemies you tag, the more effective it is."

- Sub & Special Guide

"Press to launch missiles at all enemies inside the selected area. Extremely effective at taking down multiple enemies at once."

- Splatoon 2 Sub & Special Guide🇪🇺


 * Notes

Demonstration
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODNZm6PkZ4I

Splatoon 3
The Tenta Missiles make a return in. They were officially confirmed by the Splatoon 3 Direct on 2022-08-10. Starting from Chill Season 2022, the special gauge slowly depletes after the missiles are fired, and only when the gauge is empty again, can they be charged up again.

Special Power Up
Wearing Special Power Up with Tenta Missiles increases the targeting radius and the painting radius of missiles.

Badges
Wining a certain number of battles with the Tenta Missiles will reward the player with special badges that they can use on their Splashtag.

Strategy
For competitive tips about the Tenta Missiles

Trivia

 * The Tenta Missile launcher appears to be a pair of modified soda crates, as hinted by the logo which looks like the Coca-Cola brand logo and can be found on vending machines around Inkopolis Square. This is further hinted at by the fact that the projectiles that the Tenta Missiles shoot look like soda bottles of some sort.
 * The missile launchers also resemble the M202 FLASH rocket launcher.
 * In Salmon Run, the Flyfish appear to use their own version of the Tenta Missiles.
 * Based on word from Nintendo representatives during preview events for Splatoon 2, early versions of the Tenta Missiles may have fired a fixed ten missiles as opposed to the current version which varies depending on the number of opponents targeted.
 * As of version, the Tenta Missiles fire ten missiles when used on one or two targets.
 * The weapons with the smallest special gauges for Tenta Missiles are the Neo Sploosh-o-matic, H-3 Nozzlenose and Octobrush Nouveau at 170p each. The weapon with the largest special gauge for Tenta Missiles is the Mini Splatling at 210p.
 * In Splatoon 2, there are no brellas with the Tenta Missiles as their special, nor is it paired with Splat Bombs, Ink Mines, Splash Walls, Sprinklers, Fizzy Bombs or Torpedoes as their sub weapon.
 * This has changed in Splatoon 3, as Tenta Missiles are present as a special weapon in both the Flingza Roller and the Goo Tuber, which have Ink Mines and Torpedo as their sub weapon respectively.
 * According to one of the dialogues of Sturgeon Shipyard, shooting off Tenta Missiles just at the end of a match is called a "dismissive diss missile". In the Japanese dialogue it has been given the name "Embrace Me ☆ Twinkle Star" while in German it is called a "swarm alarm".
 * In Recon mode, apart from Rainmaker, Tenta Missiles cannot be launched due to not having targets to lock on to.
 * Prior to being confirmed in the Splatoon 3 Direct, the Tenta Missile's projectiles were first seen in one of the images from the announcement of Splatoon 3 as well as the Nintendo Switch OLED trailer. In the former, the E-liter 4K Scope can be seen around where the projectiles were fired. The Release Date Revealed trailer also shows that the icon for Special Power Up still depicts Tenta Missiles.