
Three mini-game modes make up Specialized Training, all feeding Training Points into free rewards including the Vale "Gaara" skin
Each of Genjutsu, Ninjutsu and Taijutsu tests a different skill, ranging from visual puzzles through hand seal memory to raw reflexes
The best way to stack points before Path of the Ninja closes on April 29 is clearing all three categories on a regular basis

Seven crossover skins came back to the Land of Dawn through the MLBB x Naruto 2.0 collaboration, and most of the online conversation has revolved around draw mechanics and Premium Supply phases.
Path of the Ninja's Specialized Training track is where free-to-play progress really lives though, since clearing Genjutsu, Ninjutsu and Taijutsu challenges feeds Training Points into a reward path covering the Vale "Gaara" skin and the Valir "Ember Gaze" skin without needing the gacha system at all.
With Path of the Ninja running inside MLBB x Naruto 2.0 you've got from March 27 to April 29 to make use of it. The Specialized Training doesn't behave like the rest of the event since it's set up like a standalone mini-game collection rather than a match grind. Across Genjutsu, Ninjutsu and Taijutsu every completed challenge drops Training Points into the same shared progression track, so no time gets wasted choosing between modes. The full Naruto 2.0 event runs through to May 10, however the Path of the Ninja window shuts on April 29, putting the free skin grind on a tighter deadline than the event page suggests.
Genjutsu's basically a spot-the-difference mode. It's the most approachable between the three because time pressure stays steady and only the visual challenge steps up gradually.
You're hunting three differences in 20 seconds across Stages 1, 2 and 3. Once you reach Stages 4 through to 6 the count moves up to four and stages 7, 8, 9 and 10 ask for five differences inside the same 20-second clock. Since the timer doesn't shrink at any point, the bigger jump in difficulty comes from the differences themselves, getting smaller and hiding against backgrounds that get busier and messier as the stages climb.
Start with character outlines and weapon details, those are the elements Moonton tends to alter most aggressively in later stages. Faces, glowing effects and background edges round out the other common change points, so training your eye to scan in that order gives you a system instead of just panic-tapping around hoping something lights up.
Casuals and completionists part ways on Ninjutsu, and the difficulty curve is much steeper than it looks on esports news sites.
| Stage | Technique | Hand seals | Perfect time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Clone Jutsu | 3 | 11 sec |
| 2 | Lightning Style: Lightning Blade | 3 | 11 sec |
| 3 | Earth Style: Mud Wall | 4 | 18 sec |
| 4 | Summoning Jutsu | 5 | 12 sec |
| 5 | Water Style: Water Wall | 5 | 12 sec |
| 6 | Fire Style: Phoenix Flower Jutsu | 6 | 12 sec |
| 7 | Fire Ball Jutsu | 6 | 10 sec |
| 8 | Water Style: Shark Bomb | 7 | 10 sec |
| 9 | Fire Style: Majestic Demolisher Flame | 7 | 10 sec |
| 10 | Reaper Death Seal | 9 | 10 sec |
Nine hand seals with only ten seconds on the clock is what Stage 10 throws at you, and that's where most runs collapse. The best thing is memorizing the first three seals before you start the timer, so your brain only needs to process six new inputs in real time, then treat the rest of the sequence like tapping to a beat rather than reading and reacting to each individual seal separately.
Taijutsu drops the puzzles and the memorisation entirely and just tests your reflexes, so the strategy here is fundamentally different from the other two modes.
Substitution Logs add to your point total, Paper Bombs subtract from it. One bad tap on a bomb wipes three or four good collections in a single moment. The winning approach is controlled deliberate tapping rather than frantic screen mashing, and accuracy counts way more than raw speed here.
Out of the three modes Taijutsu finishes the quickest per session. We'd recommend running it first as a daily warm-up before tackling Genjutsu or Ninjutsu puzzles. It keeps your reflexes sharp and Training Points ticking up from the second the event tab opens.
April 29 is when the Path of the Ninja side gets pulled, and that's the only route to Vale "Gaara" and Valir "Ember Gaze" without dropping cash on the gacha. So bank the Specialized Training reps before then or both skins are gone.
You can also click the banners on this page if you’re looking for top sites to bet on MLBB.