Asian mist can come in almost any color, but the most common one used is green. Red ("burning mist") is said to burn more, and was used by Yoshihiro Tajiri to defeat Rey Mysterio for the WWE Cruiserweight Championship, while black ("poison mist") blinds. Tajiri used this particular mist on Nidia, starting a storyline in which she was "blinded" (in kayfabe) for several weeks.
Other colors used. Read update Out of all the possible illegal wrestling moves in history, the poison mist (or Dokuguri, as Japanese wrestlers call it) is still one of the least painful looking ones, but they get the job done. There are all kinds of mist colors: black, blue, green, red, yellow, and even purple.
Every mist has a unique ability. The most common one. Asian mist can come in almost any color, but the most common one used is green.
Red ("burning mist") is said to burn more, and was used by Tajiri to defeat Rey Mysterio for the Cruiserweight Championship, while black ("poison mist") blinds. On last week's edition of WWE's flagship program, Monday Night RAW, Shinsuke Nakamura blindsided Cody Rhodes and caught him with a vile concoction: the red mist. In Japanese, it's called dokugiri (which means "poison fog"), but to many it's simply referred to as the Asian mist.
And much like Superman's kryptonite, the color of the mist actually means different "strains" of potency. Like and subscribe and comment below and share my videos Edwardreed@EdwardReedMajorway. I came across this on wiki.
Green Mist - The most common mist, which obscures the opponent's vision. Red Mist. Long after Khan left WWF, Tajiri showed up in WWE and kept up the mist spraying tradition.
Black mist was used by the Superstar and Nidia ended up going "blind" after a shot. Various colors were used during this time and I found on a Wiki fandom site a breakdown of the implications of each color. Making its debut in the early '80s, the "Dokugiri", "poison fog" or "poison mist," has lasted the test of time and become a staple in heelish wrestling tactics.
Coming in many colours, "The Mist" has different properties. It can distract, burn, or in some cases even blind an opponent, and makes a great alternative to salt or the always risky (in danger, or just sheer botch. "Asian mist" (so called because it has largely been the province of wrestlers of East Asian heritage) has been spewed from the mouths of mystical antagonists for more than 35 years, and in a wide spectrum of shades and shocking colors.
Besides temporarily impairing a victim's vision, it has been storied as a paralytic agent in kayfabe lore, imbued with properties that.