Yasuo dashes through a target, dealing magic damage. Each use of this Ability grants 25% bonus damage to the next use for 5 seconds, stacking up to 50%. This Ability has a 10/9/8/7/6 second per-target Cooldown.
How do you use Yasuo’s ULT?
Any time the enemies are in the air (whether by your Q tornado or by someone else’s ability, like Braum’s ult for example), press R on them and Yasuo will jump to them and keep them in the air and perform his ultimate.
What happens when you use sweeping blade on Yasuo?
If Yasuo uses Sweeping Blade multiple times in succession, the ability deals extra damage up to a cap. Yasuo cannot use Sweeping Blade on an enemy that’s already been marked. (Active) Yasuo teleports to a nearby Airborne enemy champion, briefly suspending them and all surrounding Airborne enemies mid-air as he damages them.
Where does Yasuo get most of his damage from?
The bulk of Yasuo’s damage comes from his Q ability, Steel Tempest. It’s cooldown scales with his attack speed, down to a minimum of 1.33 seconds. But it’s also key to his CC and long-range AoE damage. Steel Tempest rotates through a 3-move combo. The first two casts cause him to strike forward in a line, just dealing damage.
Is it fun to play Yasuo as a champion?
Of course, playing Yasuo is extremely fun, because you can use his skills in a lot of ways, both defensively and offensively. But let’s talk about the actual champion for a second. Yasuo is a fighter, with heavy assassin tendencies. His skillset might seem quite easy to pull off at the start but in fact, it’s not as easy as it seems.
How to tell when Yasuo is going to leap to you?
If you can safely move away from that line of potential leap-targets for Yasuo, you’ll be much safer. If not, Yasuo will easily leapfrog his way to you off of those minions. You can tell which minions or champions Yasuo can leap to by watching for a large circular indicator.