Disaster Tides is the newest Special Grade cursed technique added in Update 1, and after spending time using it in real fights, it feels like a technique that is clearly designed to grow into something much bigger in the future rather than being a finished monster right now.
Jujutsu Zero Disaster Tides Cursed Technique Guide
At the moment, it represents a smaller, early-stage version of Dagon. The devs have already confirmed that it will evolve later, so what you are using right now is basically the foundation of what will eventually become a full ocean-type domain monster.
Disaster Tides
Disaster Tides is built around crowd control, area damage, and positioning rather than raw single-target nukes. It shines the most when enemies are grouped together, which makes it feel incredible in raids, NPC farming, and multi-mob quests.
If you enjoy pulling multiple enemies into one spot and watching them melt together, this technique was made for you.
How Disaster Tides Feels In Combat
This is not one of those cursed techniques that deletes bosses in two buttons. It plays slower, more methodical, and rewards players who control space instead of rushing in.
You constantly want to pull enemies into your range, keep them grouped, and then rotate your skills to keep them trapped inside your damage zones. Once you learn that rhythm, the damage stacks up surprisingly fast.
F Skill – Auto Tracking Crowd Control
The F move is the hidden MVP of this technique.
It automatically tracks and locks onto the nearest NPC. This means if four NPCs are standing close together, this move can chain through them in a way that feels extremely smooth. However, if they are spread out, you will only tag one or two and lose a lot of value.
Because of that, your best habit is to always gather enemies first, then fire this move when they are tightly grouped.
C Skill – Slow But Heavy Finisher
The C move feels like it should have been the “wow” button, but instead it is more of a reliable finisher.
The damage itself is solid, but the cooldown is noticeably long. What saves it is how consistent it is. You use it to clean up waves, finish elite mobs, or deal chunk damage after your other skills have already softened targets.
It does not look flashy yet, but it hits harder than it feels.
Strengths of Disaster Tides
It dominates multi-mob farming.
It feels very safe to use because you are not forced into risky melee range.
It scales well in long fights where you can keep enemies grouped and controlled.
It is clearly designed to evolve into something much stronger later.
Weaknesses You Should Know
It does not feel like a true Special Grade nuke yet.
Single-target burst is weaker than many existing techniques.
You need positioning and grouping to get full value.
Cooldown management matters more than with faster CTs.
Right now, Disaster Tides feels like a future investment more than an instant PvP king. If your goal is boss farming, raids, and multi-mob quests, it already performs well and feels smooth to play.
If you are hunting for pure PvP burst power, you may feel underwhelmed until its domain and evolutions are added.
However, once its domain expansion and future upgrades arrive, this technique has the potential to jump straight into top-tier territory. Owning it early could put you ahead of the curve.
Disaster Tides is not loud, flashy, or overpowered yet. But it feels like a sleeping giant. If you enjoy control-based gameplay and want to secure a technique that is almost guaranteed to get stronger with future updates, this one is absolutely worth keeping an eye on.