Chunithm Top | Rinnet
Yes, but with difficulty. The primary barrier is cabinet latency. Japanese arcades (where Rinnet plays) maintain their CHUNITHM cabs with microsecond precision. Many international cabs suffer from screen lag or sticky buttons.
The Solution:
Most players tap bottom notes with fingers and slide with palms. This causes a micro-delay. Rinnet uses a technique where the pad of the middle finger taps the button while the side of the index finger simultaneously engages the slide sensor. This reduces the timing gap between "Tap" and "Slide" to zero, which is critical for charts like Grievous Lady or World Vanquisher.
| Category | Rating (out of 5) | |----------------|------------------| | Visual | ⭐⭐⭐⭐½ | | Skill Usefulness| ⭐⭐⭐½ | | Rarity/Coolness | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | | Overall Fun | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
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You cannot luck into a top score. You must build muscle memory that rejects imperfection. Here is a weekly drill inspired by Rinnet’s known practice habits.
Day 1-2: Slow Mirroring Take a Level 14 chart (e.g., Aleph-0). Play it at 75% speed using the "Practice" mode (if available in your arcade version or via simulators like Seaurchin). Do not proceed until you hit 4 consecutive bars of Justice Criticals.
Day 3-4: The Thumb Lock Play a fast tap-heavy song (like end time) using ONLY your thumbs. This forces forearm strength. Then swap to ONLY your index/middle fingers. This balance is key for Rinnet’s hybrid style. rinnet chunithm top
Day 5: Blind Rehearsal Watch a replay of Rinnet playing the song without sound. Air tap on your desk. This trains visual pattern recognition separated from auditory crutches.
Day 6: The Live Run Go to the arcade. Play your target song three times only. Overtraining causes fatigue and sloppy inputs.
Day 7: Rest & Leaderboard Review Study where you lost points. Did you get a "Great" on a trill? Did your AIR wave register early?
How does one physically input commands to rival Rinnet? Based on video analysis of top replays (available via CHUNITHM LUMINOUS’s replay function), here are three specific techniques required to reach the top. Yes, but with difficulty
In the world of competitive rhythm gaming, few phrases carry as much quiet prestige as “Rinnet Chunithm Top.” To the uninitiated, it may look like random syllables or a username. But within the Chunithm community — particularly among players who follow high-level score-chasing and tournament play — it represents a specific benchmark of skill, dedication, and legacy.
If you spend any amount of time in the global CHUNITHM community, you will inevitably hear one name whispered with a mixture of awe and disbelief: Rinnet.
In a game known for its laser sliders, frantic air actions, and breakneck speed, Rinnet isn't just playing the game—they are redefining its limits. Today, we’re taking a deep dive into the phenomenon of Rinnet, the undisputed "Top" player of the CHUNITHM world.


