Here at Muzikludo headquarters (by which I mean inside my brain), we value customizability more than anything else. The skin is aimed to make every player content with the skin with its pre-packaged options, but even if they are not, they will find the elements of this skin good for combining with other pro skins.Muzikludo has several customization options. The most conspicuous of all is hitcircle and hitcircleoverlay. In addition to the default hitcircle, which you can make opaque or transparent, you can use the "donut" hitcircle that shows hitcircles below from its window in the center, or you can use the ever-so-famous Kamui hitcircle.There are two options for the approach circle: broken and continuous. The broken approach circle will help some people recognize individual approach circles better in some designs. There are also three options for the reverse arrow: simple, emphasized, and semicircle (added in v1.4).There are three alternative styles for the numbers in hitcircles, aside from the default Tungsten: Tungsten Light, Calibre Light, or just replace them with dots. The follow point has four styles, including an option to disable it altogether.Muzikludo also has some spiffy custom hitsounds. In addition to the popularly used Kamui hitsounds, Muzikludo has a set of EDM style hitsounds and a set of chiptune hitsounds made on Famitracker. And don't worry,In Version 1.1, an alternate, more dot-shaped cursor was added to the skin. The slider ball was changed to fit the rest of the skin better, but the "record" slider ball is still available as an option.In Version 1.2, the Taiko mode was skinned. Two options for the circles are available: traditional circular ones, and novel rectangular ones. Each comes with a set of feedback icons, in the osu!Standard or Taiko no Tatsujin color scheme.In Version 1.4, the default hit circle was remade from scratch.In Version 1.5, the cursors were remade as more languages were added.