Nessie Headscissor Ko Work [LATEST ✔]
Most depictions show Nessie with a long, muscular serpentine neck (approx. 30–40 feet). In human headscissors, the lever is the femur. For Nessie, the “legs” are ambiguous. If we interpret “Nessie” as a plesiosaur, she has four flippers. In a headscissor, flippers are useless—they lack the adductor muscles for a squeeze.
Unlike a human, Nessie can’t use thighs. Instead, she uses her (or the base of her neck) to create a vice. In most artistic depictions of the move, Nessie coils her neck into a loop around the opponent's head, then cinches it tight by swimming in a circle. The "headscissor" is thus a cervical constriction similar to a python, but targeted at the jaw and temples. nessie headscissor ko work
The visual is worth money. Merchandise (“I Got Nessie’d”) sells out. Most depictions show Nessie with a long, muscular









