>>2462330Not any of the Germanons, but I do have a decent amount of camo experience. Almost any camo is better than none, so I'm sure the rain camo helps, even if only by a tiny marginal improvement. Avoid tarps where the pattern repeats a lot, like most cheaper multicam tarps you can find. You want as little repetition as possoble, since the human eye is an uberautistic pattern-enthusiast. There are a lot of good resources for stealth and camouflage in army manuals floating around the internet. Grab one in your native language, preferably one that describes the environment in which you go /out/. Knowledge is much much much more important than having the ultimate camouflage (which is picrel, btw). I'd easily put my money on a skilled guy in solid natural colors versus a less experienced guy with full camo kit. For real effectiveness, you'd want full camouflage kit, painted skin, no fires, no noise, no lights, no reflective surfaces, slow movement, no smoke, etc. That is insufferably tedious, even if solo.
TL;DR: neon horrors<natural tones<camo, but all it does is buy you a bit of distance and time before being spotted. Only with a lot of skill and autistic camp discipline do you stand a chance of being legitimately near-invisible.
PS. NVGs change all of this, since material composition suddenly matters more than pattern. Thermals again change all of this, since ambient temperature and heat insulation suddenly plays a crucial role.