Get to Know About Tenkyu
Tenkyu builds a clear physics challenge from a simple idea. You guide a ball by tilting the stage, and every nudge changes speed and direction. Paths float above open gaps with bowls, ramps, and edges. These features push the ball off line. You feel weight build on descents and ease on climbs. A misread slope can send the ball over the side, but restarts come fast and keep the pace.
Early stages teach gentle tilts and wide lanes. Later layouts add narrow rails, sharp switchbacks, and steep drops. Some sections use curved bowls. They funnel the ball and require steady hands to reach the rim. Other parts pack short ridges. These ridges disrupt momentum and test control. The camera holds a clear angle, and the clean shapes make hazards easy to read.
Use light tilt on descents and bleed speed before a tight corner. Center the ball and hold a steady line through the bend. Avoid sudden swings. Pause on flat pads to stop drift, then set the next path. Scan the route, point the ball the right way, then commit. This approach turns tricky tracks into a steady rhythm.