Slosher

The Slosher is a main weapon in Splatoon and Splatoon 2.

The Slosher is a bucket of ink that can be swung to splatter turf and enemies in a straight line. The trajectory of the ink can be adjusted to strike enemies behind walls or on above high surfaces. It's strong enough to splat opponents in only two shots.

The Slosher deals constant damage no matter how far away the ink travels, as opposed to rollers and shooters dealing less damage as ink travel farther due to fall-off damage. However, there is still fall-off damage when targeting opponents below the player, dealing less than maximum damage.

Splatoon
The Slosher was made available with the update on 2015-08-06 at July 27, 2024. It comes in a set with the Burst Bomb and Inkstrike. The Slosher deals constant 70 damage no matter how far away the ink travels, or what part the opponent is hit by.

Demonstration
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGDEz7IfcK8

Splatoon 2
In Splatoon 2, the Slosher returns with a new design that is primarily orange instead of pink. It is described as having redesigned handle and suspension. It comes in a set with Suction Bomb and Tenta Missiles. As of 4.0.0, the weapon no longer does a consistent 70 damage, but will deal a max of 50 damage if they're hit from above by the trail of ink between the primary glob and the player.

Demonstration
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xO1s6HC_1E

Trivia

 * In Splatoon,
 * The Slosher was first discovered in the June 24th datamine.
 * This weapon was later shown in a Japanese trailer detailing future Splatoon updates.
 * The Slosher alongside the Heavy Splatling would be the first entirely new weapon classes to added into the Splatoon franchise. Making their debut on 2015-08-06 at July 27, 2024, with the release of 2.0.0.
 * In Splatoon 2,
 * The weapon was first revealed to be returning in a tweet from the official Splatoon Twitter account on the 24th January 2017.
 * This weapon is used in the following Octo Expansion stages:
 * Pop Rock Station

Etymology
Slosher is derived from the verb to slosh.

バケットスロッシャー baketto surosshā is derived from Bucket and the verb to slosh.