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Full Version: [PBA] Info regarding the Phenomenon called "Draciel Syndrome"
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Greetings, Bladers.
This is a Public Bleyblading Announcement.
The topic of today being the Phenomenon now called "Draciel Syndrome."
The Phenomenon existed before it was called such,
but the current term was coined by WBO User "LeonidasKerbeus",
out of the beyblades the phenomenon was exhibited in the most, The Draciel Series.
the "Draciel Syndrome" is characterized by a few standout details:
1: The bey in question has many outwards points,
2: Those same points are situated to where they don't have much support,
3: The bey is often green. Not sure why man green beys are the victim of "Draciel Syndrome."
The main issues that "Draciel Syndrome" exhibits:
1: Lack of good recoil management
2: Large gaps between contact areas
3: Structural issues

The way the phenomenon seems to work is:
When the "DS" bey gets hit, the opposing bey will often get caught within the large gaps and small fins. This will cause the DS bey to experience massive recoil, often resulting in the DS bey getting flung out of the stadium or worse, getting damaged or even broken from the sheer trauma of the blow.
This phenomenon is the reason why many Bakuten Shoot Beyblade Attack Rings are susceptible to breakage, exception being Uriel 03 and its special snowflake gold plastic that just loses its will to live and snaps.

How can you prevent Draciel Syndrome?

An easy way to prevent Draciel Syndrome is to either utilize parts that massively reduce recoil,
or consider using a part that does not fall susceptible to the "Draciel Syndrome".

Now, "Draciel Syndrome" is still being tested and documented on why it causes great internal tension on the internal supports,
so there isn't much info on particular parts yet.
But with enough time, the Phenomenon may be finally answered.

This has been a PBA. Thank you for reading.
-Beypartment of Defense

ok i know its kind of cringy but i spent time typing this all out so at least give it the time of day
i just wrote out some info on something i call "Draciel Syndrome" so that people can figure out what im referring to, as i reference it A LOT.
Thanks for posting this unfortunately my 3d print beyblade maiden suffered from this and broke. Now I am more aware of this.
I don’t really like the word syndrome for this.
(Oct. 23, 2020  10:37 PM)6Jupiter5 Wrote: [ -> ]I don’t really like the word syndrome for this.

It sounds weird
Agree, and this how with the Draciel Series?
(Oct. 25, 2020  9:55 PM)fireblaze1 Wrote: [ -> ]Agree, and this how with the Draciel Series?

Draciel fits all of the requirements above.
The reason you never see anyone use draciels AR in plastic gen combo's is because it has so much lack of recoil reduction it just cant stay in the stadium.
Its commonly seen in the draciel beys.
just bc you said bleybladeing im gonna cancel you
I thought this was the Achilles syndrome but ok, i mean, achilles has green recolors, and draciel did come first
Bring green isn't really a requirement for this. MFB's Leone/Counter had the same sort of thing, Divine was basically that but with even more sides, Poison was a horrible offender (I mean really, a 15 sided wheel? Talk about too many contacts!). Even Rock had it to some degree, but could be controlled well enough for Attack to be a mid-ground benchmark and semi-viable. MFB wheels are just significantly harder to break, and the same applies to Burst as well where the rotating nature of their layers reduces this recoil significantly.

Plastic gen beys breaking because of it makes sense though. You get a lot of really aggressive points and make them smack things, and usually there's not going to be enough to stop them from snapping from a good hit. Think of it like holding a stick out and having something smack it hard enough, it's gonna go flying out of your hand. Truth is they were still new to this at the time and didn't quite yet know how to structure things for durability, so they wound up with some really fragile overly aggressive designs.