Tri-Slosher

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

It is a slosher-type weapon that is separated into three sections and is similar in appearance as a Japanese brush washer bucket. As its appearance implies, it can throw in three different directions. It covers a straight line forward and two splotches to the side. The range is short compared to other sloshers.

The weapon consumes 6% of the ink tank capacity with each slosh, allowing players to slosh sixteen times before needing to refill. Each slosh does enough damage to splat opponents in two hits.

Splatoon
The Tri-Slosher was released on 2015-09-26 at July 27, 2024. It comes with Disruptors and the Bubbler.

Quotes

 * Notes

Demonstration
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9K33FIgVc14

Splatoon 2
The Tri-Slosher returns in Splatoon 2, looking identical to how it did in the first game. It comes with Burst Bombs and Ink Armor.

Use

 * The Tri-Slosher has the fastest sloshing time of any slosher and has enough damage to splat opponents in 2 hits
 * It does well when it goes on the offense. Its high damage and fast fire rate is great against other weopons
 * Ink Armor helps with support on the team and could help in a battle against others
 * Burst Bombs helps to deal damage to get to a close 1 hit splat on an Opponent.
 * ,, can help reduce the chance of running out of ink during a confrontation.
 * Its Three way shot is useful for getting opponents who are on the side of the weapon.

Countermeasures

 * The Tri-Slosher uses up a lot of ink when firing so there is more of a chance to run out of ink in a confrontation.
 * The Recommended Abilities can help reduce the chance of running out of ink in a confrontion
 * The Tri-Slosher also has less range than other sloshers
 * This can get the user splatted when up against long range weapons like the Splattershot Pro and Heavy Splatling

Demonstration
https://youtu.be/-pIRsSm1mlo

Trivia

 * This weapon is used on the following Octo Expansion levels:
 * Breakdance Station

Etymology
Tri-Slosher is derived from the verb 'to slosh' and 'tri', a shortening meaning 'three'.

ヒッセン Hissen means 'Brush Washer'. 筆洗 Hissen are segmented buckets that are used for cleaning paintbrushes.