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Wikipedia

Ryu (Street Fighter)

Ryu (Japanese: リュウ, Hepburn: Ryū) is a fictional character and the protagonist of Capcom's Street Fighter series.[5] Having premiered in the first Street Fighter in 1987, Ryu appears as the game's lead character alongside his best friend and friendly rival Ken Masters. Other games in the series show Ryu to be highly focused on his training, aiming to become the strongest he can. Unable to control his dark nature, Ryu developed two alter egos: Evil Ryu (殺意の波動に目覚めたリュウ, Satsui no Hadō ni Mezameta Ryū, lit. "Ryu with the surge of murderous intent awakened", abbreviated Satsui Ryu in Street Fighter Alpha 3), and Kage-naru mono (影ナル者, lit. Shadowed One) or simply Kage (, lit. Shadow).

Ryu
Street Fighter character
First gameStreet Fighter (1987)
Created byTakashi Nishiyama
Designed byManabu Takemura (Street Fighter)
Shoei Okano (Street Fighter II)[1]
Portrayed by
Voiced by
In-universe information
Fighting styleShotokan/Kyokushin-style Karate[3][4]
Origin
Nationality

He was created by Takashi Nishiyama. Nishiyama's inspiration was the martial artist Mas Oyama. For his second appearance, Ryu's design changed from that of a young fighter to a skilled Karate practitioner. However, because of issues in the making of Street Fighter II he possessed a major weakness within the cast. For the next titles, Ryu's fighting style was modified, so he had different skills with Evil Ryu and Kage possessing more diverse moves. Multiple actors have voiced him both in Japanese and in English.

One of the most iconic characters in the fighting game genre and video games as a whole, Ryu has been the protagonist of the Street Fighter series since the first game and has appeared as a playable character in several crossover games involving the franchise, including the Marvel vs. Capcom series, Project X Zone and the Super Smash Bros. series. He has also appeared in manga and anime adaptations, as well as the 1994 live-action film. Despite his popularity, his evil persona has been criticized for retaining most of his regular form's moves.

Creation and development edit

 
Mas Oyama inspired Ryu's character.

Takashi Nishiyama's inspiration for Ryu was Mas Oyama, who was depicted as the protagonist in the kung fu manga and anime series Karate Master by Ikki Kajiwara. Nishiyama grew up watching the animated series, which was influenced by Oyama's life. Nishiyama was impressed by Oyama's martial arts skill and philosophies, and this inspired him to create the first Street Fighter game. Nishiyama wanted the game to have a story similar to a film, anime, or novel.[6] Whereas Ryu was based on Oyama, his rival Sagat was also influenced by the protagonist's rivalry with a bald Muay Thai martial artist from the series.[7]

Ryu's name was based on Nishiyama's name because the on'yomi (Sino-Japanese pronunciation) of the character "Takashi" is "Ryū" (Mandarin: Lóng, 隆). In addition, Ryu's Hadouken (波動拳, hadōken) energy attack was based on the wave motion gun from the titular spacecraft in the sci-fi anime series Space Battleship Yamato, which Nishiyama watched during the seventies. His other two techniques from the first Street Fighter game, Shoryuken (昇龍拳, Shōryūken) and Tatsumaki Senpukyaku (竜巻旋風脚) were inspired by actual martial arts moves, which were exaggerated for the character.[8] Because Ryu was the only playable character in the original Street Fighter game, his designer Manabu Takemura wanted him to be easy for players to relate to.[9]

In an interview with Game On!, Capcom Research and Development head Noritaka Funamizu said that of the series' characters, Ryu was one of the most popular with American audiences, alongside Zangief and Guile.[10] Ryu's Shoryuken was noted to be highly difficult to execute, something which the team wanted to fix.[11] Although Ryu and Ken had the same moves, Yoshiki Okamoto said Ryu was the weaker of the two. This was because Capcom had wanted to add a weak point to their Shoryukens. They later decided not to do so, but a mistake resulted in Ryu become the weaker character.[12] Ryu and Ken were mainly handled by Shoei, who had clear memories of designing the Hadoken and Shoryuken. Shoei Okano recalled they were originally going to be Y.S.'s[clarification needed] characters in early stages of development. He noted, Ryu and Ken are the "so-called standard characters in the SFII world, and since they were coming from SFI, we could have the other characters be weirdos." As a result, the duo was redesigned to have a stoic feel.[13]

Director Hideaki Itsuno remembers he was not allowed to work on Ryu because of his inexperience in making games.[14] As a result, Itsuno worked on creating new characters for the series which could rival Ryu and Ken.[15] In order to update Ryu's image while staying true to his character, Capcom created his alternative alterego Evil Ryu. However, it was not until Street Fighter IV that the staff decided to give him a more unique design though the designer was worried if he exaggerated too much with his look. In retrospective, Capcom felt the Evil Ryu was a success among players.[16]

In the three Street Fighter III games, the designers described the older Ryu as a more hardcore fighter. Despite being Japanese, Capcom described him as an American martial artist which led to the creation of Makoto whose design was based on an Eastern point of view.[17]

 
Kyle Hebert has voiced Ryu in every English-speaking appearance since Street Fighter IV.

For Street Fighter IV, Kyle Hebert was cast as Ryu in preparation for the return of his "Evil Ryu" persona. The localization director Taliesin Jaffe told Hebert "you booked this because of Evil Ryu. It's not gonna be this year, it's not gonna be next year, but eventually when we get to it, we're gonna remember that this was part of the plan all along." In further elaborating on this idea, Jaffe said:

The whole idea of Ryu in the first place is that he's a Lancelot character, and I was prepared for the corruption of that character from the very beginning. We knew we were gonna go there, and actually part of the first audition for Ryu was, I had a couple lines I wanted them to read specifically in that darker vein.

The team wanted to avoid having Ryu sound like a traditional Japanese hero and generate a contrast between his and Ken's characters.[18] While Ryu has retained his original white gi outfit in most games, Capcom tried using an alternate high school uniform for Street Fighter V where he was presented as a rebel. The concept for Ryu was "leader"—leader of a student group or a bunch of delinquents. Super deformed versions of this image were used by the company as April Fool's jokes.[19] While originally conceived as a character for fighting game newcomers, Ryu has been balanced across the series with 3rd Strike focusing on his defense. This balancing affected the character negatively to the point multiple expert players said that in Street Fighter V he was unsuitable for competitive fights. In 2019, Capcom patched the character, which garnered a positive response from fans.[20] In previews of Street Fighter V Ryu was noted to have a more realistic look to the point of being compared to the Tekken characters. Capcom said this approach to Street Fighter V's artistic design, focused on two main points: making the art "easy to follow and understand" and creating a "personality with artistic accents".[21]

As downloadable content, Capcom created an alter ego of Ryu in Street Fighter V named Kage who represents the Satsui no Hado Ryu rejected. In early stages of development, Kage had a noticeably different design. His entire body showed no skin as it was covered in purple. Designing the character did not take too much time according to Takayuki Nakayama. His "design was nailed down pretty quick, so there aren't many prototype images that can be shown." He was loosely based on Ryu's dark persona from Street Fighter Alpha game's Evil Ryu.[22]

Design edit

Ryu wears a white gi, as a symbol of his Japanese heritage, with the Japanese symbols for the Fūrinkazan (風林火山 (Hepburn: "Wind, Forest, Fire, Mountain")) on his belt as well as a stylised version on his gloves.[23] While many Street Fighter characters have been redesigned, Ryu's design has stayed largely the same.[24]

In Street Fighter II, the character was included because of presence in the first game, symbolizing the concept of a Japanese martial artist. As the series progressed, his design was made more muscular to coincide with the concept, while his white gi, considered his most defining characteristic by the development team, let viewers know he was "a karate master at first sight".[25] For the Street Fighter Alpha games, Ryu was redesigned as a younger character. Artist Naoto "Bengus" Kuroshima noted that the expectations that come with drawing him or Chun-Li were greater compared to newcomers like Sakura Kasugano.[26] When picking the cast of Street Fighter V, producer Yoshinori Ono said he wanted Ryu and the cast to differ from their previous characters although Ryu retained his original look in contrast to Ken.[27] Ryu had multiple costumes in V including his Alpha, one with a notable sex appeal. .[28] In 2020, Ryu received a Kairi costume.[29] For the Championship Edition of the game, new moves were added to make Ryu a more defensive fighter.[30]

Spin-offs and other media edit

 
 
Byron Mann and Mike Moh have portrayed Ryu in the live-action film and the webseries, respectively.

Comic book writer Len Strazewski wanted to tell a more dramatic storyline for Ryu based in a comic book narrative. Like storylines involving chaos, Strazewski wrote a comic in which Ryu was the center of attention as he sought revenge. As a result, to find a motivation for Ryu's character, he planned to kill his best friend Ken Masters. However, since the comic book was cancelled after its third issue, this plot was never fully explored. Mangaka Masahiko Nakahira, the creator of Evil Ryu, wrote his own take on Ryu during his career, aiming for a more serious take on Ryu's personality in his works.[31]

Actor Byron Mann said in the making of the live-action Ryu he had no knowledge of Ryu's identity or what Street Fighter was originally about. Director Steven E. de Souza wanted Mann to play Ryu, but Capcom was not keen because they had their own actor, Kenya Sawada, who had played the character in various promotions in Japan. Sawada would play a more serious Ryu in contrast to Mann's portrayal. Nevertheless, DeSouza was able to use Mann in the film as Sawada's English was not good. Sawada played a character written for him: Captain Sawada.[32][33]

Ken Masters' actor, Damian Chapa, said the name is pronounced "Rye-you" as opposed to "Ree-you". Despite issues with this, DeSouza decided to use "Rye-you" believing it would be easier to pronounce for Western audiences,[32] although Jean-Claude Van Damme and Raul Julia both addressed him as "Ree-you" in the film.

Ryu's inclusion in Street Fighter EX was deemed natural by the studio, Arika, with producer Ichiro Mihara describing him as one of the three essential Street Fighter characters along with Chun-Li and Ken.[34][35] Ansah talked about Ryu and Ken's story in Street Fighter: Assassin's Fist and said "a good analogy with Ryu is that he's not actually ever competing with anyone else; he's competing with himself. Whereas Ken is driven fiercely by competition."[36]

For the game, Tekken X Street Fighter, producer Katsuhiro Harada commented that while Ryu might be able to perform his classic moves like the Hadouken reassuring his fans, most of his normal moves would be changed to play more like a Tekken character and fit the cast.[37]

Game designer Masahiro Sakurai said that for Super Smash Bros., Ryu was recreated to play his Street Fighter II persona while having new moves because the controller had more buttons. Nevertheless, he was given a technique from Street Fighter III and new techniques exclusive to Smash. The Shoryuken was implemented in the character but as his strongest technique.[38]

Appearances edit

In Street Fighter games edit

Ryu debuted in the first Street Fighter as the primary playable character, with his best friend, rival, and sparring partner Ken Masters serving as the second player's character. Both compete to test their strength against the tournament's champion, Sagat.[39] His next appearance was in 1991's Street Fighter II. Set several years after Ryu defeated Sagat in the first tournament, Ryu participates in a second tournament. In his ending in the game, Ryu wins the tournament but does not stay for the ceremony, already seeking his next challenge.[40] The Ultra Street Fighter II: The Final Challengers version of the game added Evil Ryu as a hidden character although the narrative does not explore this take on Ryu.[41]

Ryu's backstory, along with those of other Street Fighter characters, would be explored in the subsequent Street Fighter Alpha prequel series. The first game, Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams (1995), features Ryu confronting Sagat as his last opponent in a rematch following their first game.[42] Street Fighter Alpha 2 (1996) depicts Ryu on a quest to confront Akuma, his master's brother and enemy. After their match, Akuma reveals that Ryu possesses the "Evil Intent" (殺意の波動, Satsui no Hadō, lit. "Surge of Murderous Intent", sometimes translated as the "Dark Hadou") within him, the same power Akuma uses.[43]

In the Street Fighter Alpha series, there is an alternative selectable version of Ryu known as "Evil Ryu". Like Akuma, Ryu takes this form when succumbing to the evil intent and becomes more violent. It was not until the international versions of the game, Street Fighter Alpha 2, that Evil Ryu was introduced as a playable secret character.[44] The code to access him is by starting from Ryu on the character select screen, then moving left (Ken), right (back to Ryu), pressing Start for one second (which should seemingly do nothing), then moving it to the right (Adon), up (Akuma), then down and left back to Ryu, before pressing Start and a punch button at the same time. This will cause either a black-gi-and-gray-belt pallette, or dark red palette. Evil Ryu was originally introduced in a 1996 Street Fighter Zero manga series by Masahiko Nakahira and later adapted in the Street Fighter canon by Capcom. In Street Fighter Alpha 3 (1998), a man named M. Bison seeks Ryu to use him as his next host body. The two clash and Ryu emerges victorious, causing Bison to retreat.[45] If Evil Ryu is used, he clashes with Akuma to decide who is the strongest user of Dark Hadou.[46]

Ryu and Ken return in Street Fighter III (1997)[47][48] and its updates. While Ryu's motivation and rivalry with Ken would remain the same, he was also shown getting acquainted with several of the new characters featured in the game.[49][50] Ryu appears in Street Fighter IV, which takes place after Street Fighter II but before Street Fighter III. Still conflicted by the Dark Hadou, Ryu fights a criminal organization while meeting his old rivals.[51] A new appearance of Evil Ryu in a Street Fighter game was confirmed in Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition by a teaser trailer,[52] and he was later confirmed as a secret boss and playable character in leaked video footage.[53] Ryu later appears in Street Fighter V, set between IV and III, where he destroys Bison once and for all with help from Charlie Nash after purging himself of the Satsui no Hado within him using the Power of Nothingness (無の拳, Mu no Ken). However, the evil energy manifested as its own entity, taking the form of an Oni version of Evil Ryu, referring to itself as Kage. Kage attempts to overpower Ryu but fails to shake his convictions and fades from existence.[54] In Street Fighter 6, Ryu is available as a mentor to the Avatar, who he considers an unofficial student. While training the Avatar, he relays his past adventures and daily activities in Japan and how the people he's met and places he's been to have inspired him. Training with the Avatar not only allows him to learn how to use a smartphone, but he also achieves a satisfactory offensive technique he's been searching for years, and believes the next step is to pass what he's learned to the next generation.

Ryu has appeared in spin-offs related to the main Street Fighter series such as the Street Fighter EX series produced by Arika.[55] Byron Mann portrays the character in the separately produced arcade and console games based on the American film of the series, both titled Street Fighter: The Movie, where he wears Ryu's characteristic white karate gi and red headband.[56] The 1994 animated movie also inspired a movie where Ryu is featured.[57]

In other games edit

Ryu has also been featured in Capcom's inter-company crossovers such as the Marvel vs. Capcom series, the SNK vs. Capcom series, Namco × Capcom, Tatsunoko vs. Capcom: Ultimate All-Stars, Project X Zone and Project X Zone 2.[58][59][60][61][62] Some games in the SNK vs. Capcom series also include Evil Ryu as an unlockable character. Ryu is also an unlockable character in the new free fire update[63][64][65] In Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes, Ryu can change his moveset to the ones by Ken or Akuma while fighting.[66] He appears in Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo, a puzzle video game featuring super deformed characters, the sequel fighting game Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix,[67] and the mobile puzzle game Street Fighter: Puzzle Spirits.[68] Ryu is a playable fighter in the crossover fighting game Street Fighter X Tekken,[69] and is also seen in the Tekken X Street Fighter poster along with Jin Kazama.[70]

Onimusha: Dawn of Dreams features Ryu as an unlockable costume swap for the game's protagonist Soki.[71] Although his incarnation there is much slimmer, this change is merely cosmetic and does not affect gameplay. Ryu has a cameo in the shooting game Varth: Operation Thunderstorm. He was also to appear in the now-cancelled game Mega Man Universe.[72] A Ryu-inspired costume for players to use in Sony's LittleBigPlanet was released in 2008 as downloadable content for the title.[73] A special downloadable episode in Asura's Wrath allows players to fight both Ryu and Evil Ryu.[74] Ryu also appears as a playable character via downloadable content in the Nintendo crossover fighting games Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U along with a stage based on his arena from Street Fighter II known as Suzaku Castle.[75] Ryu returns in the sequel Super Smash Bros. Ultimate—this time available in the initial release—along with every other returning fighter in the series' history. He appears as a party member for a limited time event in the smartphone RPG, Granblue Fantasy, in a collaboration event titled "Ultra Granblue Fighter".[76] Ryu is also a guest character in Power Rangers: Legacy Wars, appearing both in his traditional form and in an original Power Rangers form called the "Ryu Ranger".[77] This same version of Ryu, now dubbed the "Crimson Hawk Ranger", appears as a playable character in Power Rangers: Battle for the Grid via downloadable content.[78]

A playable Ryu outfit has also been added to Fortnite.[79][80] A playable Ryu skin will also be added to Exoprimal.[81]

In other media edit

Live-action edit

Ryu is played by Byron Mann in the 1994 film version of Street Fighter, where he serves as a supporting protagonist, as Guile is the main character. In this depiction, Ryu is given the surname "Hoshi" and is presented as an American of Japanese ethnicity. While still a master of martial artists, he and Ken are a pair of traveling con artists who steal money from rich crime lords through schemes such as selling modified toy guns. He and Ken eventually work with Guile to infiltrate M. Bison's headquarters with a homing device to lure Guile and his forces there. In the film's climax, Ryu fights and defeats Vega in battle. Unlike the video games, Ryu does not fight Bison nor scar Sagat in the film, though Ryu does at one point attempt to fight Bison alongside Ken, Chun-Li, E. Honda and Balrog. Ryu ultimately plays a vital role in Bison's downfall by luring Guile to Bison's base with a tracking device. Although Guile gives them their freedom after Bison is defeated, they stay to help with the cleanup in Shadaloo, preferring to leave once this is finished.[82]

Despite not appearing at all in Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun Li, Ryu is mentioned at the end of the movie as a formidable Japanese fighter entering a tournament.[83]

Jon Foo played Ryu (given the surname "Takashi") in the fan film Street Fighter: Legacy.[84]

Ryu appears as a main lead alongside Ken in Street Fighter: Assassin's Fist portrayed by martial arts actor/stuntman Mike Moh. The film is set before the events of the games, and focuses on Ryu and Ken's training under Gouken, while flashbacks show Gouken's past with his brother Gouki/Akuma and their mentor, Goutetsu. Moh reprised his role as Ryu in the five-part mini series Street Fighter: Resurrection.[85]

Ryu appears in the 2018 film Ready Player One, based on the book of the same name by Ernest Cline.[86]

In the 2018 film Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween, Slappy the Dummy uses magic to bring actions figures of Ryu and Ken to life.[87]

Peter Jang portrays Ryu in the official crossover between the Power Rangers and Street Fighter titled Power Rangers: Legacy Wars—Street Fighter Showdown. In the short, Ryu morphs into the Ryu Ranger and Chun-Li teams with Tommy Oliver, Ninjor and Gia Moran to battle M. Bison and evil Power Rangers.[88]

Animation edit

In the 1994 film Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie, Ryu is the central character and focus of several other characters, namely Sagat, Guile and Bison. After Ryu defeats and scars Sagat in the film's opening, Bison commands a worldwide manhunt for him, determined to make him a brainwashed member of Shadaloo (here known as Shadowlaw). He cannot find Ryu because of his travelling the world and his ability to suppress his power, rendering Bison's monitor cyborgs unable to detect him. Throughout the film, Ryu comes into contact with several fighters, such as Fei-Long and E. Honda. Bison eventually captures and brainwashes Ken in Ryu's stead. This prompts Guile and Interpol to intercept Ryu before Bison can get to him, but Bison follows them and sets Ken on Ryu, who refuses to fight his controlled friend. Ken manages to break free of Bison's control and the pair ultimately work together to defeat Bison.[89] He was voiced by Kōjirō Shimizu in the Japanese version and Skip Stellrecht in the English dub.[90]

Ryu also appears in the American TV series and is once again replaced by Guile as the protagonist since it is a continuation of the 1994 live-action film. Near the end of the series, however, the story shifts focus to Ryu and Ken, making them more prominent as they face several enemies such as the Mad Gear gang. In both the film and the series, Ryu's name is incorrectly pronounced "Raiyu", though in the movie Guile and Bison are the only ones who pronounce his name correctly.

The premise of the 1995 Japanese TV series Street Fighter II V centers on a young Ryu and Ken, who travel the world with Chun-Li to improve their martial art skills by challenging other fighters. He was voiced by Kōji Tsujitani in the Japanese version and again by Skip Stellrecht in the English Animaze dub. In the ADV Films dub he was portrayed by Brett Weaver and later by Tommy Drake.[90]

The 1999 original video animation Street Fighter Alpha: The Animation centers on Ryu's inner conflict with the Dark Hadou, as seen in the Street Fighter Alpha manga and games. Original elements such as the appearance of Ryu's supposed younger brother, Shun, and their conflict with Professor Sadler and Rosanov were added. Like Bison, Professor Sadler seeks the world's greatest martial artists, to absorb their abilities into his own body, particularly Ryu's Dark Hadou. After Shun is abducted by Sadler's monitor cyborg, Rosanov, Ryu is implored by Rose to search for him. Ryu tracks down and confronts Akuma, demanding to know if Shun is his son, but Akuma, after attempting but failing to goad Ryu into giving in to the Dark Hadou, denies it. Enlisting the help of numerous fighters, Ryu tracks Sadler to his base, where he learns that Shun was working for Sadler and posed as his brother to lure him out. Enraged, Ryu gives into the Dark Hadou and obliterates Rosanov. At the same time he mortally wounds Shun, powering Sadler up enough for him to enter the battlefield personally. Worn out, Ryu is initially pummeled by Sadler, until a vision of Rose inspires him to use his normal power to fight. With help from his allies, he defeats Sadler for good. Shun dies in Ryu's arms, apologizing for his actions; Ryu forgives him.[91] The 2005 OVA Street Fighter Alpha: Generations features a similar storyline, but is unrelated to the previous Alpha anime.[92]

In 2008, Capcom released a new OVA where Crimson Viper is sent to capture Ryu on orders from Seth, who knows about Ryu's Satsui no Hado and wants it for himself. Ryu fights Seth and remains victorious.[93]

Ryu made cameo appearances in the 3D Disney computer-animated film Wreck-It Ralph, with Kyle Hebert reprising his role. He first appears in a sparring match with Ken and decides to go to Tapper for a drink after the fight.

Ryu appears in a non-speaking cameo in the adult animated martial arts film Mortal Kombat Legends: Scorpion's Revenge.

Comics edit

Ryu also appears in many printed adaptations of the series. In the manga Street Fighter II by Masaomi Kanzaki, Ryu believes M. Bison murdered both Gouken and Ken and goes on a quest to avenge them.[94] The manga Street Fighter: Sakura Ganbaru! by Masahiko Nakahira has Ryu as a central character from the storyline where the title character, Sakura Kasugano, wishes to meet him.[95] Nakahira also wrote and illustrated "Street Fighter III: Ryu Final",[96] which chronicles Ryu's ongoing quest for enlightenment during the Street Fighter III storyline that culminates into a decisive battle against Akuma.

Udon Entertainment's comic book adaptation of the Street Fighter plot places Ryu in the center of the plot's events. Ryu grows up training in the art of Ansatsuken all the while fighting off the urge of the Satsui no Hadō. He trains to be a strong fighter without relying on the hatred and consumption it brings. After returning from the first Street Fighter tournament, Ryu discovers his master Gouken has been slain by his brother Akuma and sets out with Ken to avenge his death. Ryu's victory over Sagat in the first Street Fighter tournament attracts the attention of Bison as well as Chun-Li and Guile, who believe there is a criminal connection between the two at first. He also trains Sakura during the comic's second arc and later trains with other fighters (specifically Dhalsim and Gen) to give himself a better chance against Akuma. Ryu attends Bison's tournament and advances all the way to the final stage. However, before he is able to fight Bison, Akuma intervenes and soundly defeats Bison instead with ease. The plot then shifts to the battle between Akuma and Ryu as the concluding fight of the comic series. During the battle, Ryu is almost corrupted by the Satsui no Hadō to defeat Akuma at any cost but refuses the power, which allows Akuma the upper hand in battle. All seems lost, but at the very last moment, Gouken returns and he finishes the battle with Akuma. Ryu passes out before the fight can conclude and is rescued from the sinking island by Dhalsim. Following the battle, Ryu believes he no longer needs to rely on Satsui no Hadō if he wants victory.

In the follow-up series, Ryu takes on Sakura as his official pupil after she graduates. After he is kidnapped by Urien and the Society, Sakura blames herself and Akuma manipulates her into succumbing to the Satsui no Hadō in an attempt to save him. Once he is freed, Ryu absorbs the Dark Hado from Sakura and transforms into Evil Ryu, leading him to battle Akuma in his Oni form. Gill arrives and uses his powers to defeat them and revert them to their base forms. In the Street Fighter Unlimited series, Ryu struggles to maintain the Dark Hado in him. He discovers his master Gouken is alive, who teaches him the final techniques of Ansatsuken to control his inner demons. When Ryu tells Gouken he wants to find a way to use the Satsui no Hadō against Akuma without fully succumbing to it, Gouken tells him to go to Brazil and seek out Oro. Oro agrees to teach Ryu how to balance his light and dark ki to achieve total balance. During their training, Ryu is invited to participate in Gill's fighting tournament. Oro tells him that if he defeats Gill, he will find a way to defeat Akuma. At the tournament, Gill gets Ryu to succumb to the Satsui no Hadō and transform into Evil Ryu before capturing him to use him to power Seth's Blece device to take over the Earth. As his allies struggle to defeat Gill, Ryu achieves total balance between his two natures and becomes Shin Ryu, who proves powerful enough to defeat Gill. He then has his rematch with Akuma and finally claims a victory against him. After defeating Akuma, Ryu returns to Brazil to resume his training with Oro to master his new powers.[97]

Promotion and reception edit

Popularity edit

Ryu is consistently ranked as one of the most popular and memorable characters from the Street Fighter franchise and gaming overall among critics, taking the ninth place in a Capcom poll.[98] GameSpot featured him in their article "All Time Greatest Game Hero",[99] while CBR regarded him as a "video game icon" alongside Chun-Li thanks to their character development since their first appearances.[100] He ranked number seventy-one in UGO Networks's "Top 100 Heroes of All Time" article.[101] UGO also placed him at number two on their list of "Top 50 Street Fighter Characters" saying, "Whereas Ken is flashy, Ryu is contemplative, tortured and driven."[102] IGN ranked him first in their "Top 25 Street Fighter Characters" article saying, "Ryu is a testament to the virtue of simplicity in character design. White gi, dark gloves, red headband for a little touch of color, and that is it. It's rare, when you think about it, to see too many fancy pieces go into the making of an icon."[103] GameDaily listed him at number two in their "Top 20 Street Fighter Characters of All Time" article saying, "He always seeks a bigger challenge, and that determination makes him one of our favorites."[104] In a later character profile article on Ryu, they noted, "Ryu is a formidable fighter that gets the job done ... Bottom line, you can't go wrong with Street Fighter's most iconic character."[105] The same site ranked him sixth along with Ken in the Top 25 Capcom Characters of All Time with editor Robert Workman saying "It was just impossible to choose between one of these world warriors."[106] He has also been recognized as one of the best all-time gaming characters. He was voted one of the best fifty characters both in a Famitsu issue and in the Guinness World Records Gamer's Edition in 2011.[107][108] In the February 1992 issue of Gamest magazine in Japan, Ryu ranked third Best Character of 1991.[109] In the 30 January 1997 issue Ryu ranked number thirteen in the Top 50 Characters of 1996.[110] In a 2010 survey of 4,000 online matches for Super Street Fighter IV, Ryu was the most popular character, with 16.6% of the usage.[111] In 2011, Empire ranked him as the 27th greatest video game character, adding "he has remained the definitive beat-'em-up fighter and go-to-guy for the discerning player since the days of SF2."[112] Jeremy Parish of Polygon ranked 73 fighters from Super Smash Bros. Ultimate "from garbage to glorious", listing Ryu as 20th and stated that "Yes, he's the main guy from Street Fighter, but at this point something like 20 different Street Fighters fight in a variant of Ryu's shotokan karate style, and nearly all of them have more interesting moves and stories than Ryu."[113] Gavin Jasper of Den of Geek ranked Ryu as 39th of Super Smash Bros. Ultimate characters, criticizing the character's addition to the roster and stated that "he feels a bit too stiff in Smash. Capcom fit him nicely in a Marvel battlefield, but in Smash, but Nintendo doesn't quite accomplish the same."[114] Ian Walker of Kotaku described Ryu as a Kevin Bacon of video games.[115]

Critical response edit

GamesRadar writer Tyler Wilde published an article focusing on Ken's and Ryu's development across the franchise under the title "The evolution of Ken and Ryu".[116] The Guardian recommended Ryu and Ken for beginners in Street Fighter IV. Ryu was deemed better at fights from distances because of his projectiles moves.[117] In GameSpot's "Great Loves" article Ryu was described as "one of the most independent men in the world of video games" as he is interested only in training to become a stronger fighter in contrast to other Street Fighter characters who have romantic interests.[118] Henry Gilbert wrote in a 2009 GamesRadar article that Ryu was "the heart and soul of the Street Fighter series" and "probably the most well known fighting game character in the world".[119] GamesRadar called him "the epitome of fighting game characters" in 2012 because of his ongoing goal to challenge himself and seek stronger opponents.[120] Den of Geek argued the character is appealing because of his wish to engage strong enemies and his growth since the Alpha series, most notably in Masahiko Nakahira's manga centered on Ryu which shows the character's appeal.[121] HobbyConsolas also included Ryu on their "The 30 best heroes of the last 30 years."[122]

Evil Ryu was noted to be a trope of protagonist gaming characters who reveal an evil alter-ego.[123] UGO Networks editor Paul Furfari said it made the Street Fighter Alpha series more entertaining because of the potential of his moves.[124] The form shown in Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition was noted to share traits from both Ryu and Akuma.[125][126] GameSpot said that since he uses modified versions from known techniques, he was one of the least interesting additions to the game.[127] The stronger damage he can inflict has been commented on by Game Informer, which mentioned he was even stronger than Seth, the Street Fighter IV boss.[126][128] In a GamesRadar article by Michael Grimm, a fight between Evil Ryu and Devil Jin was described as one players wanted to see in Street Fighter X Tekken as the two are evil alter egos from two existing characters sharing similar designs and movesets with their original forms.[129] Kage was criticized for being a recycled character based on Evil Ryu because of their similar looks and moves.[54][130]

Ryu's characterization in the Street Fighter II animated feature was a subject of praise. Eurogamer enjoyed his multiple journeys across the film such as his meeting with E. Honda and the exploration of his backstory.[131] Kotaku liked his fight scenes because of how well they are choreographed, his presentation and his relationship with Ken.[132] THEM Anime Reviews shared similar comments about how Ryu's past with Ken is explored and how he fights against multiple enemies even if the plot is an excuse for the fights.[133] The young Ryu from the anime TV series Street Fighter II V was felt to be enjoyable because of the way he interacts with Sagat and how skilled the character becomes across the story despite his first beatdown by Guile.[134] Though disappointed by Chun-Li's take in this series, THEM Anime Reviews enjoyed the handling of the trio of Ryu, Ken and Chun-Li during the TV series believing they provide an interesting damsel-in-distress quest.[135] In another review, THEM Anime Reviews found that the trio had enough character development and stronger techniques while noting some issues within the plot.[136] Den of Geek noted one of best takes of Ryu's characterization was in the manga Final where he stands out thanks to the narrative.[137]

Cultural impact edit

One of Ryu's quotes from Street Fighter II is, "You must defeat Sheng Long to stand a chance." The quote caused a confusion among players, who wondered whether there was actually a character named Sheng Long. Although the quote was actually a mistranslation, it was exploited as an April Fools' joke various times by gaming magazines.[138][139] Nevertheless, the character was referred to in the video games based on live-action films as Ryu's teacher. Moreover, the fans' request to include Sheng Long, led to Gouken's inclusion in Street Fighter IV.[140][141] Ryu's original designer, Takashi Nishiyama, revealed that Art of Fighting's Ryo Sakazaki was created as an homage to the original Ryu. After the release of the game some members of the original Street Fighter video game development team at Capcom moved to SNK.[142] This is further explored in the crossover games SNK developed with the Capcom franchises where Ryu often interacts with Ryo.[143] While in charge of developing the character Kyo Kusanagi, Yuichiro Hiraki was contemplating making Kyo completely different from Ryu. He believed Ryu was a popular character and that Kyo's characterization and design need to be in distinct contrast to be appealing to reach Ryu's level of popularity level. He explored this idea further when developing Street Fighter V years later.[144] Ryu also inspired the character of Akuma. The designers wanted Akuma to be based on his design rather than the other villain of Street Fighter II, M. Bison.[31]

In 1993, Hong Kong artist Situ Jianqian based characters in his comic Supergod Z: Cyber Weapon on Ryu, Ken, and Chun-li, though renamed them after receiving a warning from Capcom. While noting that Ryu was one of the most popular Japanese characters in gaming, Benjamin Wai-ming Ng from the University of Hong Kong said that in China, the cast was overshadowed by main characters from SNK's fighting series, The King of Fighters.[145] In 2019, a scientific work concluded that Ryu would have to move at almost 70 miles per hour (110 km/h) through the air to perform a Tatsumaki Senpukyaku.[146] Briana Lawrence of The Mary Sue said that she's leaning on Ryu's screencap on Street Fighter 6 trailer being more unintentional moment than Lady Dimitrescu.[147]

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Studio Bent Stuff (September 2000). All About Capcom Head-to-Head Fighting Game 1987–2000. A.A. Game History Series (Vol. 1) (in Japanese). Dempa Publications, Inc. ISBN 4-88554-676-1.
  • Monthly Arcadia Editorial Staff (October 2008). Street Fighter IV Master Guide 拳の書. エンターブレインムック Arcadia Extra Vol. 69 (in Japanese). Enterbrain. ISBN 978-4-7577-4513-1.

External links edit

street, fighter, japanese, リュウ, hepburn, ryū, fictional, character, protagonist, capcom, street, fighter, series, having, premiered, first, street, fighter, 1987, appears, game, lead, character, alongside, best, friend, friendly, rival, masters, other, games, . Ryu Japanese リュウ Hepburn Ryu is a fictional character and the protagonist of Capcom s Street Fighter series 5 Having premiered in the first Street Fighter in 1987 Ryu appears as the game s lead character alongside his best friend and friendly rival Ken Masters Other games in the series show Ryu to be highly focused on his training aiming to become the strongest he can Unable to control his dark nature Ryu developed two alter egos Evil Ryu 殺意の波動に目覚めたリュウ Satsui no Hadō ni Mezameta Ryu lit Ryu with the surge of murderous intent awakened abbreviated Satsui Ryu in Street Fighter Alpha 3 and Kage naru mono 影ナル者 lit Shadowed One or simply Kage 影 lit Shadow RyuStreet Fighter characterRyu in Namco X CapcomFirst gameStreet Fighter 1987 Created byTakashi NishiyamaDesigned byManabu Takemura Street Fighter Shoei Okano Street Fighter II 1 Portrayed byByron Mann Street Fighter film games Jon Foo short film Mike Moh Assassin s Fist Peter Jang Power Rangers Legacy Wars Street Fighter Showdown Voiced byJapanese Katashi Ishizuka SFA SFA2 XvSF MSHvSF SFEX series MvC2 Toshiyuki Morikawa SFA3 MvC CvS series MSHVSF Capcom Fighting Evolution N C Hiroki Takahashi 2008 present Wataru Takagi SFIII New Generation and SFIII Second Impact Tōru Ōkawa SFIII Third Strike Sōichirō Hoshi Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo Pocket Fighter Kōji Tsujitani SFII V Kojiro Shimizu SFII animated film Kane Kosugi SFA The Animation Yasuyuki Kase SFA Generations Bin Shimada SFII drama CD Masashi Ebara first film Japanese dub Shin ichiro Miki Real Battle on Film Taketora Wreck It Ralph English Skip Stellrecht SFII anime SFII V Animaze SFA The Animation Brett Weaver SFII V ADV 1 Tommy Drake SFII V ADV 2 Tong Lung TV series Richard Cansino SFA Generations Kyle Hebert 2009 present Vincent Tong Puzzle Fighter 2 In universe informationFighting styleShotokan Kyokushin style Karate 3 4 OriginJapanNationalityJapaneseHe was created by Takashi Nishiyama Nishiyama s inspiration was the martial artist Mas Oyama For his second appearance Ryu s design changed from that of a young fighter to a skilled Karate practitioner However because of issues in the making of Street Fighter II he possessed a major weakness within the cast For the next titles Ryu s fighting style was modified so he had different skills with Evil Ryu and Kage possessing more diverse moves Multiple actors have voiced him both in Japanese and in English One of the most iconic characters in the fighting game genre and video games as a whole Ryu has been the protagonist of the Street Fighter series since the first game and has appeared as a playable character in several crossover games involving the franchise including the Marvel vs Capcom series Project X Zone and the Super Smash Bros series He has also appeared in manga and anime adaptations as well as the 1994 live action film Despite his popularity his evil persona has been criticized for retaining most of his regular form s moves Contents 1 Creation and development 1 1 Design 1 2 Spin offs and other media 2 Appearances 2 1 In Street Fighter games 2 2 In other games 2 3 In other media 2 3 1 Live action 2 3 2 Animation 2 3 3 Comics 3 Promotion and reception 3 1 Popularity 3 2 Critical response 3 3 Cultural impact 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksCreation and development edit nbsp Mas Oyama inspired Ryu s character Takashi Nishiyama s inspiration for Ryu was Mas Oyama who was depicted as the protagonist in the kung fu manga and anime series Karate Master by Ikki Kajiwara Nishiyama grew up watching the animated series which was influenced by Oyama s life Nishiyama was impressed by Oyama s martial arts skill and philosophies and this inspired him to create the first Street Fighter game Nishiyama wanted the game to have a story similar to a film anime or novel 6 Whereas Ryu was based on Oyama his rival Sagat was also influenced by the protagonist s rivalry with a bald Muay Thai martial artist from the series 7 Ryu s name was based on Nishiyama s name because the on yomi Sino Japanese pronunciation of the character Takashi is Ryu Mandarin Long 隆 In addition Ryu s Hadouken 波動拳 hadōken energy attack was based on the wave motion gun from the titular spacecraft in the sci fi anime series Space Battleship Yamato which Nishiyama watched during the seventies His other two techniques from the first Street Fighter game Shoryuken 昇龍拳 Shōryuken and Tatsumaki Senpukyaku 竜巻旋風脚 were inspired by actual martial arts moves which were exaggerated for the character 8 Because Ryu was the only playable character in the original Street Fighter game his designer Manabu Takemura wanted him to be easy for players to relate to 9 In an interview with Game On Capcom Research and Development head Noritaka Funamizu said that of the series characters Ryu was one of the most popular with American audiences alongside Zangief and Guile 10 Ryu s Shoryuken was noted to be highly difficult to execute something which the team wanted to fix 11 Although Ryu and Ken had the same moves Yoshiki Okamoto said Ryu was the weaker of the two This was because Capcom had wanted to add a weak point to their Shoryukens They later decided not to do so but a mistake resulted in Ryu become the weaker character 12 Ryu and Ken were mainly handled by Shoei who had clear memories of designing the Hadoken and Shoryuken Shoei Okano recalled they were originally going to be Y S s clarification needed characters in early stages of development He noted Ryu and Ken are the so called standard characters in the SFII world and since they were coming from SFI we could have the other characters be weirdos As a result the duo was redesigned to have a stoic feel 13 Director Hideaki Itsuno remembers he was not allowed to work on Ryu because of his inexperience in making games 14 As a result Itsuno worked on creating new characters for the series which could rival Ryu and Ken 15 In order to update Ryu s image while staying true to his character Capcom created his alternative alterego Evil Ryu However it was not until Street Fighter IV that the staff decided to give him a more unique design though the designer was worried if he exaggerated too much with his look In retrospective Capcom felt the Evil Ryu was a success among players 16 In the three Street Fighter III games the designers described the older Ryu as a more hardcore fighter Despite being Japanese Capcom described him as an American martial artist which led to the creation of Makoto whose design was based on an Eastern point of view 17 nbsp Kyle Hebert has voiced Ryu in every English speaking appearance since Street Fighter IV For Street Fighter IV Kyle Hebert was cast as Ryu in preparation for the return of his Evil Ryu persona The localization director Taliesin Jaffe told Hebert you booked this because of Evil Ryu It s not gonna be this year it s not gonna be next year but eventually when we get to it we re gonna remember that this was part of the plan all along In further elaborating on this idea Jaffe said The whole idea of Ryu in the first place is that he s a Lancelot character and I was prepared for the corruption of that character from the very beginning We knew we were gonna go there and actually part of the first audition for Ryu was I had a couple lines I wanted them to read specifically in that darker vein The team wanted to avoid having Ryu sound like a traditional Japanese hero and generate a contrast between his and Ken s characters 18 While Ryu has retained his original white gi outfit in most games Capcom tried using an alternate high school uniform for Street Fighter V where he was presented as a rebel The concept for Ryu was leader leader of a student group or a bunch of delinquents Super deformed versions of this image were used by the company as April Fool s jokes 19 While originally conceived as a character for fighting game newcomers Ryu has been balanced across the series with 3rd Strike focusing on his defense This balancing affected the character negatively to the point multiple expert players said that in Street Fighter V he was unsuitable for competitive fights In 2019 Capcom patched the character which garnered a positive response from fans 20 In previews of Street Fighter V Ryu was noted to have a more realistic look to the point of being compared to the Tekken characters Capcom said this approach to Street Fighter V s artistic design focused on two main points making the art easy to follow and understand and creating a personality with artistic accents 21 As downloadable content Capcom created an alter ego of Ryu in Street Fighter V named Kage who represents the Satsui no Hado Ryu rejected In early stages of development Kage had a noticeably different design His entire body showed no skin as it was covered in purple Designing the character did not take too much time according to Takayuki Nakayama His design was nailed down pretty quick so there aren t many prototype images that can be shown He was loosely based on Ryu s dark persona from Street Fighter Alpha game s Evil Ryu 22 Design edit Ryu wears a white gi as a symbol of his Japanese heritage with the Japanese symbols for the Furinkazan 風林火山 Hepburn Wind Forest Fire Mountain on his belt as well as a stylised version on his gloves 23 While many Street Fighter characters have been redesigned Ryu s design has stayed largely the same 24 In Street Fighter II the character was included because of presence in the first game symbolizing the concept of a Japanese martial artist As the series progressed his design was made more muscular to coincide with the concept while his white gi considered his most defining characteristic by the development team let viewers know he was a karate master at first sight 25 For the Street Fighter Alpha games Ryu was redesigned as a younger character Artist Naoto Bengus Kuroshima noted that the expectations that come with drawing him or Chun Li were greater compared to newcomers like Sakura Kasugano 26 When picking the cast of Street Fighter V producer Yoshinori Ono said he wanted Ryu and the cast to differ from their previous characters although Ryu retained his original look in contrast to Ken 27 Ryu had multiple costumes in V including his Alpha one with a notable sex appeal 28 In 2020 Ryu received a Kairi costume 29 For the Championship Edition of the game new moves were added to make Ryu a more defensive fighter 30 Spin offs and other media edit nbsp nbsp Byron Mann and Mike Moh have portrayed Ryu in the live action film and the webseries respectively Comic book writer Len Strazewski wanted to tell a more dramatic storyline for Ryu based in a comic book narrative Like storylines involving chaos Strazewski wrote a comic in which Ryu was the center of attention as he sought revenge As a result to find a motivation for Ryu s character he planned to kill his best friend Ken Masters However since the comic book was cancelled after its third issue this plot was never fully explored Mangaka Masahiko Nakahira the creator of Evil Ryu wrote his own take on Ryu during his career aiming for a more serious take on Ryu s personality in his works 31 Actor Byron Mann said in the making of the live action Ryu he had no knowledge of Ryu s identity or what Street Fighter was originally about Director Steven E de Souza wanted Mann to play Ryu but Capcom was not keen because they had their own actor Kenya Sawada who had played the character in various promotions in Japan Sawada would play a more serious Ryu in contrast to Mann s portrayal Nevertheless DeSouza was able to use Mann in the film as Sawada s English was not good Sawada played a character written for him Captain Sawada 32 33 Ken Masters actor Damian Chapa said the name is pronounced Rye you as opposed to Ree you Despite issues with this DeSouza decided to use Rye you believing it would be easier to pronounce for Western audiences 32 although Jean Claude Van Damme and Raul Julia both addressed him as Ree you in the film Ryu s inclusion in Street Fighter EX was deemed natural by the studio Arika with producer Ichiro Mihara describing him as one of the three essential Street Fighter characters along with Chun Li and Ken 34 35 Ansah talked about Ryu and Ken s story in Street Fighter Assassin s Fist and said a good analogy with Ryu is that he s not actually ever competing with anyone else he s competing with himself Whereas Ken is driven fiercely by competition 36 For the game Tekken X Street Fighter producer Katsuhiro Harada commented that while Ryu might be able to perform his classic moves like the Hadouken reassuring his fans most of his normal moves would be changed to play more like a Tekken character and fit the cast 37 Game designer Masahiro Sakurai said that for Super Smash Bros Ryu was recreated to play his Street Fighter II persona while having new moves because the controller had more buttons Nevertheless he was given a technique from Street Fighter III and new techniques exclusive to Smash The Shoryuken was implemented in the character but as his strongest technique 38 Appearances editIn Street Fighter games edit Ryu debuted in the first Street Fighter as the primary playable character with his best friend rival and sparring partner Ken Masters serving as the second player s character Both compete to test their strength against the tournament s champion Sagat 39 His next appearance was in 1991 s Street Fighter II Set several years after Ryu defeated Sagat in the first tournament Ryu participates in a second tournament In his ending in the game Ryu wins the tournament but does not stay for the ceremony already seeking his next challenge 40 The Ultra Street Fighter II The Final Challengers version of the game added Evil Ryu as a hidden character although the narrative does not explore this take on Ryu 41 Ryu s backstory along with those of other Street Fighter characters would be explored in the subsequent Street Fighter Alpha prequel series The first game Street Fighter Alpha Warriors Dreams 1995 features Ryu confronting Sagat as his last opponent in a rematch following their first game 42 Street Fighter Alpha 2 1996 depicts Ryu on a quest to confront Akuma his master s brother and enemy After their match Akuma reveals that Ryu possesses the Evil Intent 殺意の波動 Satsui no Hadō lit Surge of Murderous Intent sometimes translated as the Dark Hadou within him the same power Akuma uses 43 In the Street Fighter Alpha series there is an alternative selectable version of Ryu known as Evil Ryu Like Akuma Ryu takes this form when succumbing to the evil intent and becomes more violent It was not until the international versions of the game Street Fighter Alpha 2 that Evil Ryu was introduced as a playable secret character 44 The code to access him is by starting from Ryu on the character select screen then moving left Ken right back to Ryu pressing Start for one second which should seemingly do nothing then moving it to the right Adon up Akuma then down and left back to Ryu before pressing Start and a punch button at the same time This will cause either a black gi and gray belt pallette or dark red palette Evil Ryu was originally introduced in a 1996 Street Fighter Zero manga series by Masahiko Nakahira and later adapted in the Street Fighter canon by Capcom In Street Fighter Alpha 3 1998 a man named M Bison seeks Ryu to use him as his next host body The two clash and Ryu emerges victorious causing Bison to retreat 45 If Evil Ryu is used he clashes with Akuma to decide who is the strongest user of Dark Hadou 46 Ryu and Ken return in Street Fighter III 1997 47 48 and its updates While Ryu s motivation and rivalry with Ken would remain the same he was also shown getting acquainted with several of the new characters featured in the game 49 50 Ryu appears in Street Fighter IV which takes place after Street Fighter II but before Street Fighter III Still conflicted by the Dark Hadou Ryu fights a criminal organization while meeting his old rivals 51 A new appearance of Evil Ryu in a Street Fighter game was confirmed in Super Street Fighter IV Arcade Edition by a teaser trailer 52 and he was later confirmed as a secret boss and playable character in leaked video footage 53 Ryu later appears in Street Fighter V set between IV and III where he destroys Bison once and for all with help from Charlie Nash after purging himself of the Satsui no Hado within him using the Power of Nothingness 無の拳 Mu no Ken However the evil energy manifested as its own entity taking the form of an Oni version of Evil Ryu referring to itself as Kage Kage attempts to overpower Ryu but fails to shake his convictions and fades from existence 54 In Street Fighter 6 Ryu is available as a mentor to the Avatar who he considers an unofficial student While training the Avatar he relays his past adventures and daily activities in Japan and how the people he s met and places he s been to have inspired him Training with the Avatar not only allows him to learn how to use a smartphone but he also achieves a satisfactory offensive technique he s been searching for years and believes the next step is to pass what he s learned to the next generation Ryu has appeared in spin offs related to the main Street Fighter series such as the Street Fighter EX series produced by Arika 55 Byron Mann portrays the character in the separately produced arcade and console games based on the American film of the series both titled Street Fighter The Movie where he wears Ryu s characteristic white karate gi and red headband 56 The 1994 animated movie also inspired a movie where Ryu is featured 57 In other games edit Ryu has also been featured in Capcom s inter company crossovers such as the Marvel vs Capcom series the SNK vs Capcom series Namco Capcom Tatsunoko vs Capcom Ultimate All Stars Project X Zone and Project X Zone 2 58 59 60 61 62 Some games in the SNK vs Capcom series also include Evil Ryu as an unlockable character Ryu is also an unlockable character in the new free fire update 63 64 65 In Marvel vs Capcom Clash of Super Heroes Ryu can change his moveset to the ones by Ken or Akuma while fighting 66 He appears in Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo a puzzle video game featuring super deformed characters the sequel fighting game Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix 67 and the mobile puzzle game Street Fighter Puzzle Spirits 68 Ryu is a playable fighter in the crossover fighting game Street Fighter X Tekken 69 and is also seen in the Tekken X Street Fighter poster along with Jin Kazama 70 Onimusha Dawn of Dreams features Ryu as an unlockable costume swap for the game s protagonist Soki 71 Although his incarnation there is much slimmer this change is merely cosmetic and does not affect gameplay Ryu has a cameo in the shooting game Varth Operation Thunderstorm He was also to appear in the now cancelled game Mega Man Universe 72 A Ryu inspired costume for players to use in Sony s LittleBigPlanet was released in 2008 as downloadable content for the title 73 A special downloadable episode in Asura s Wrath allows players to fight both Ryu and Evil Ryu 74 Ryu also appears as a playable character via downloadable content in the Nintendo crossover fighting games Super Smash Bros for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U along with a stage based on his arena from Street Fighter II known as Suzaku Castle 75 Ryu returns in the sequel Super Smash Bros Ultimate this time available in the initial release along with every other returning fighter in the series history He appears as a party member for a limited time event in the smartphone RPG Granblue Fantasy in a collaboration event titled Ultra Granblue Fighter 76 Ryu is also a guest character in Power Rangers Legacy Wars appearing both in his traditional form and in an original Power Rangers form called the Ryu Ranger 77 This same version of Ryu now dubbed the Crimson Hawk Ranger appears as a playable character in Power Rangers Battle for the Grid via downloadable content 78 A playable Ryu outfit has also been added to Fortnite 79 80 A playable Ryu skin will also be added to Exoprimal 81 In other media edit Live action edit Ryu is played by Byron Mann in the 1994 film version of Street Fighter where he serves as a supporting protagonist as Guile is the main character In this depiction Ryu is given the surname Hoshi and is presented as an American of Japanese ethnicity While still a master of martial artists he and Ken are a pair of traveling con artists who steal money from rich crime lords through schemes such as selling modified toy guns He and Ken eventually work with Guile to infiltrate M Bison s headquarters with a homing device to lure Guile and his forces there In the film s climax Ryu fights and defeats Vega in battle Unlike the video games Ryu does not fight Bison nor scar Sagat in the film though Ryu does at one point attempt to fight Bison alongside Ken Chun Li E Honda and Balrog Ryu ultimately plays a vital role in Bison s downfall by luring Guile to Bison s base with a tracking device Although Guile gives them their freedom after Bison is defeated they stay to help with the cleanup in Shadaloo preferring to leave once this is finished 82 Despite not appearing at all in Street Fighter The Legend of Chun Li Ryu is mentioned at the end of the movie as a formidable Japanese fighter entering a tournament 83 Jon Foo played Ryu given the surname Takashi in the fan film Street Fighter Legacy 84 Ryu appears as a main lead alongside Ken in Street Fighter Assassin s Fist portrayed by martial arts actor stuntman Mike Moh The film is set before the events of the games and focuses on Ryu and Ken s training under Gouken while flashbacks show Gouken s past with his brother Gouki Akuma and their mentor Goutetsu Moh reprised his role as Ryu in the five part mini series Street Fighter Resurrection 85 Ryu appears in the 2018 film Ready Player One based on the book of the same name by Ernest Cline 86 In the 2018 film Goosebumps 2 Haunted Halloween Slappy the Dummy uses magic to bring actions figures of Ryu and Ken to life 87 Peter Jang portrays Ryu in the official crossover between the Power Rangers and Street Fighter titled Power Rangers Legacy Wars Street Fighter Showdown In the short Ryu morphs into the Ryu Ranger and Chun Li teams with Tommy Oliver Ninjor and Gia Moran to battle M Bison and evil Power Rangers 88 Animation edit In the 1994 film Street Fighter II The Animated Movie Ryu is the central character and focus of several other characters namely Sagat Guile and Bison After Ryu defeats and scars Sagat in the film s opening Bison commands a worldwide manhunt for him determined to make him a brainwashed member of Shadaloo here known as Shadowlaw He cannot find Ryu because of his travelling the world and his ability to suppress his power rendering Bison s monitor cyborgs unable to detect him Throughout the film Ryu comes into contact with several fighters such as Fei Long and E Honda Bison eventually captures and brainwashes Ken in Ryu s stead This prompts Guile and Interpol to intercept Ryu before Bison can get to him but Bison follows them and sets Ken on Ryu who refuses to fight his controlled friend Ken manages to break free of Bison s control and the pair ultimately work together to defeat Bison 89 He was voiced by Kōjirō Shimizu in the Japanese version and Skip Stellrecht in the English dub 90 Ryu also appears in the American TV series and is once again replaced by Guile as the protagonist since it is a continuation of the 1994 live action film Near the end of the series however the story shifts focus to Ryu and Ken making them more prominent as they face several enemies such as the Mad Gear gang In both the film and the series Ryu s name is incorrectly pronounced Raiyu though in the movie Guile and Bison are the only ones who pronounce his name correctly The premise of the 1995 Japanese TV series Street Fighter II V centers on a young Ryu and Ken who travel the world with Chun Li to improve their martial art skills by challenging other fighters He was voiced by Kōji Tsujitani in the Japanese version and again by Skip Stellrecht in the English Animaze dub In the ADV Films dub he was portrayed by Brett Weaver and later by Tommy Drake 90 The 1999 original video animation Street Fighter Alpha The Animation centers on Ryu s inner conflict with the Dark Hadou as seen in the Street Fighter Alpha manga and games Original elements such as the appearance of Ryu s supposed younger brother Shun and their conflict with Professor Sadler and Rosanov were added Like Bison Professor Sadler seeks the world s greatest martial artists to absorb their abilities into his own body particularly Ryu s Dark Hadou After Shun is abducted by Sadler s monitor cyborg Rosanov Ryu is implored by Rose to search for him Ryu tracks down and confronts Akuma demanding to know if Shun is his son but Akuma after attempting but failing to goad Ryu into giving in to the Dark Hadou denies it Enlisting the help of numerous fighters Ryu tracks Sadler to his base where he learns that Shun was working for Sadler and posed as his brother to lure him out Enraged Ryu gives into the Dark Hadou and obliterates Rosanov At the same time he mortally wounds Shun powering Sadler up enough for him to enter the battlefield personally Worn out Ryu is initially pummeled by Sadler until a vision of Rose inspires him to use his normal power to fight With help from his allies he defeats Sadler for good Shun dies in Ryu s arms apologizing for his actions Ryu forgives him 91 The 2005 OVA Street Fighter Alpha Generations features a similar storyline but is unrelated to the previous Alpha anime 92 In 2008 Capcom released a new OVA where Crimson Viper is sent to capture Ryu on orders from Seth who knows about Ryu s Satsui no Hado and wants it for himself Ryu fights Seth and remains victorious 93 Ryu made cameo appearances in the 3D Disney computer animated film Wreck It Ralph with Kyle Hebert reprising his role He first appears in a sparring match with Ken and decides to go to Tapper for a drink after the fight Ryu appears in a non speaking cameo in the adult animated martial arts film Mortal Kombat Legends Scorpion s Revenge Comics edit Ryu also appears in many printed adaptations of the series In the manga Street Fighter II by Masaomi Kanzaki Ryu believes M Bison murdered both Gouken and Ken and goes on a quest to avenge them 94 The manga Street Fighter Sakura Ganbaru by Masahiko Nakahira has Ryu as a central character from the storyline where the title character Sakura Kasugano wishes to meet him 95 Nakahira also wrote and illustrated Street Fighter III Ryu Final 96 which chronicles Ryu s ongoing quest for enlightenment during the Street Fighter III storyline that culminates into a decisive battle against Akuma Udon Entertainment s comic book adaptation of the Street Fighter plot places Ryu in the center of the plot s events Ryu grows up training in the art of Ansatsuken all the while fighting off the urge of the Satsui no Hadō He trains to be a strong fighter without relying on the hatred and consumption it brings After returning from the first Street Fighter tournament Ryu discovers his master Gouken has been slain by his brother Akuma and sets out with Ken to avenge his death Ryu s victory over Sagat in the first Street Fighter tournament attracts the attention of Bison as well as Chun Li and Guile who believe there is a criminal connection between the two at first He also trains Sakura during the comic s second arc and later trains with other fighters specifically Dhalsim and Gen to give himself a better chance against Akuma Ryu attends Bison s tournament and advances all the way to the final stage However before he is able to fight Bison Akuma intervenes and soundly defeats Bison instead with ease The plot then shifts to the battle between Akuma and Ryu as the concluding fight of the comic series During the battle Ryu is almost corrupted by the Satsui no Hadō to defeat Akuma at any cost but refuses the power which allows Akuma the upper hand in battle All seems lost but at the very last moment Gouken returns and he finishes the battle with Akuma Ryu passes out before the fight can conclude and is rescued from the sinking island by Dhalsim Following the battle Ryu believes he no longer needs to rely on Satsui no Hadō if he wants victory In the follow up series Ryu takes on Sakura as his official pupil after she graduates After he is kidnapped by Urien and the Society Sakura blames herself and Akuma manipulates her into succumbing to the Satsui no Hadō in an attempt to save him Once he is freed Ryu absorbs the Dark Hado from Sakura and transforms into Evil Ryu leading him to battle Akuma in his Oni form Gill arrives and uses his powers to defeat them and revert them to their base forms In the Street Fighter Unlimited series Ryu struggles to maintain the Dark Hado in him He discovers his master Gouken is alive who teaches him the final techniques of Ansatsuken to control his inner demons When Ryu tells Gouken he wants to find a way to use the Satsui no Hadō against Akuma without fully succumbing to it Gouken tells him to go to Brazil and seek out Oro Oro agrees to teach Ryu how to balance his light and dark ki to achieve total balance During their training Ryu is invited to participate in Gill s fighting tournament Oro tells him that if he defeats Gill he will find a way to defeat Akuma At the tournament Gill gets Ryu to succumb to the Satsui no Hadō and transform into Evil Ryu before capturing him to use him to power Seth s Blece device to take over the Earth As his allies struggle to defeat Gill Ryu achieves total balance between his two natures and becomes Shin Ryu who proves powerful enough to defeat Gill He then has his rematch with Akuma and finally claims a victory against him After defeating Akuma Ryu returns to Brazil to resume his training with Oro to master his new powers 97 Promotion and reception editPopularity edit Ryu is consistently ranked as one of the most popular and memorable characters from the Street Fighter franchise and gaming overall among critics taking the ninth place in a Capcom poll 98 GameSpot featured him in their article All Time Greatest Game Hero 99 while CBR regarded him as a video game icon alongside Chun Li thanks to their character development since their first appearances 100 He ranked number seventy one in UGO Networks s Top 100 Heroes of All Time article 101 UGO also placed him at number two on their list of Top 50 Street Fighter Characters saying Whereas Ken is flashy Ryu is contemplative tortured and driven 102 IGN ranked him first in their Top 25 Street Fighter Characters article saying Ryu is a testament to the virtue of simplicity in character design White gi dark gloves red headband for a little touch of color and that is it It s rare when you think about it to see too many fancy pieces go into the making of an icon 103 GameDaily listed him at number two in their Top 20 Street Fighter Characters of All Time article saying He always seeks a bigger challenge and that determination makes him one of our favorites 104 In a later character profile article on Ryu they noted Ryu is a formidable fighter that gets the job done Bottom line you can t go wrong with Street Fighter s most iconic character 105 The same site ranked him sixth along with Ken in the Top 25 Capcom Characters of All Time with editor Robert Workman saying It was just impossible to choose between one of these world warriors 106 He has also been recognized as one of the best all time gaming characters He was voted one of the best fifty characters both in a Famitsu issue and in the Guinness World Records Gamer s Edition in 2011 107 108 In the February 1992 issue of Gamest magazine in Japan Ryu ranked third Best Character of 1991 109 In the 30 January 1997 issue Ryu ranked number thirteen in the Top 50 Characters of 1996 110 In a 2010 survey of 4 000 online matches for Super Street Fighter IV Ryu was the most popular character with 16 6 of the usage 111 In 2011 Empire ranked him as the 27th greatest video game character adding he has remained the definitive beat em up fighter and go to guy for the discerning player since the days of SF2 112 Jeremy Parish of Polygon ranked 73 fighters from Super Smash Bros Ultimate from garbage to glorious listing Ryu as 20th and stated that Yes he s the main guy from Street Fighter but at this point something like 20 different Street Fighters fight in a variant of Ryu s shotokan karate style and nearly all of them have more interesting moves and stories than Ryu 113 Gavin Jasper of Den of Geek ranked Ryu as 39th of Super Smash Bros Ultimate characters criticizing the character s addition to the roster and stated that he feels a bit too stiff in Smash Capcom fit him nicely in a Marvel battlefield but in Smash but Nintendo doesn t quite accomplish the same 114 Ian Walker of Kotaku described Ryu as a Kevin Bacon of video games 115 Critical response edit GamesRadar writer Tyler Wilde published an article focusing on Ken s and Ryu s development across the franchise under the title The evolution of Ken and Ryu 116 The Guardian recommended Ryu and Ken for beginners in Street Fighter IV Ryu was deemed better at fights from distances because of his projectiles moves 117 In GameSpot s Great Loves article Ryu was described as one of the most independent men in the world of video games as he is interested only in training to become a stronger fighter in contrast to other Street Fighter characters who have romantic interests 118 Henry Gilbert wrote in a 2009 GamesRadar article that Ryu was the heart and soul of the Street Fighter series and probably the most well known fighting game character in the world 119 GamesRadar called him the epitome of fighting game characters in 2012 because of his ongoing goal to challenge himself and seek stronger opponents 120 Den of Geek argued the character is appealing because of his wish to engage strong enemies and his growth since the Alpha series most notably in Masahiko Nakahira s manga centered on Ryu which shows the character s appeal 121 HobbyConsolas also included Ryu on their The 30 best heroes of the last 30 years 122 Evil Ryu was noted to be a trope of protagonist gaming characters who reveal an evil alter ego 123 UGO Networks editor Paul Furfari said it made the Street Fighter Alpha series more entertaining because of the potential of his moves 124 The form shown in Super Street Fighter IV Arcade Edition was noted to share traits from both Ryu and Akuma 125 126 GameSpot said that since he uses modified versions from known techniques he was one of the least interesting additions to the game 127 The stronger damage he can inflict has been commented on by Game Informer which mentioned he was even stronger than Seth the Street Fighter IV boss 126 128 In a GamesRadar article by Michael Grimm a fight between Evil Ryu and Devil Jin was described as one players wanted to see in Street Fighter X Tekken as the two are evil alter egos from two existing characters sharing similar designs and movesets with their original forms 129 Kage was criticized for being a recycled character based on Evil Ryu because of their similar looks and moves 54 130 Ryu s characterization in the Street Fighter II animated feature was a subject of praise Eurogamer enjoyed his multiple journeys across the film such as his meeting with E Honda and the exploration of his backstory 131 Kotaku liked his fight scenes because of how well they are choreographed his presentation and his relationship with Ken 132 THEM Anime Reviews shared similar comments about how Ryu s past with Ken is explored and how he fights against multiple enemies even if the plot is an excuse for the fights 133 The young Ryu from the anime TV series Street Fighter II V was felt to be enjoyable because of the way he interacts with Sagat and how skilled the character becomes across the story despite his first beatdown by Guile 134 Though disappointed by Chun Li s take in this series THEM Anime Reviews enjoyed the handling of the trio of Ryu Ken and Chun Li during the TV series believing they provide an interesting damsel in distress quest 135 In another review THEM Anime Reviews found that the trio had enough character development and stronger techniques while noting some issues within the plot 136 Den of Geek noted one of best takes of Ryu s characterization was in the manga Final where he stands out thanks to the narrative 137 Cultural impact edit One of Ryu s quotes from Street Fighter II is You must defeat Sheng Long to stand a chance The quote caused a confusion among players who wondered whether there was actually a character named Sheng Long Although the quote was actually a mistranslation it was exploited as an April Fools joke various times by gaming magazines 138 139 Nevertheless the character was referred to in the video games based on live action films as Ryu s teacher Moreover the fans request to include Sheng Long led to Gouken s inclusion in Street Fighter IV 140 141 Ryu s original designer Takashi Nishiyama revealed that Art of Fighting s Ryo Sakazaki was created as an homage to the original Ryu After the release of the game some members of the original Street Fighter video game development team at Capcom moved to SNK 142 This is further explored in the crossover games SNK developed with the Capcom franchises where Ryu often interacts with Ryo 143 While in charge of developing the character Kyo Kusanagi Yuichiro Hiraki was contemplating making Kyo completely different from Ryu He believed Ryu was a popular character and that Kyo s characterization and design need to be in distinct contrast to be appealing to reach Ryu s level of popularity level He explored this idea further when developing Street Fighter V years later 144 Ryu also inspired the character of Akuma The designers wanted Akuma to be based on his design rather than the other villain of Street Fighter II M Bison 31 In 1993 Hong Kong artist Situ Jianqian based characters in his comic Supergod Z Cyber Weapon on Ryu Ken and Chun li though renamed them after receiving a warning from Capcom While noting that Ryu was one of the most popular Japanese characters in gaming Benjamin Wai ming Ng from the University of Hong Kong said that in China the cast was overshadowed by main characters from SNK s fighting series The King of Fighters 145 In 2019 a scientific work concluded that Ryu would have to move at almost 70 miles per hour 110 km h through the air to perform a Tatsumaki Senpukyaku 146 Briana Lawrence of The Mary Sue said that she s leaning on Ryu s screencap on Street Fighter 6 trailer being more unintentional moment than Lady Dimitrescu 147 References edit Street Fighter II Developer s Interview Guests Activity Reports Vincent Tong VincentTong007 3 October 2017 I voiced Ryu amp Ken for CAPCOM s Puzzle Fighter So pumped that s it s out Download it now capcom voice voiceover yvr Tweet Retrieved 25 August 2018 via Twitter Street Fighter III 2nd Impact wayback in Japanese Archived from the original on 5 December 1998 空手をベースにした独自の格闘技を使う Uses unique martial arts based on karate Studio Bent Stuff All About Capcom Head to HeadMarvel vs Capcom 3 Taekwondo Shotokan Judo Fighting Games p 345 Street Fighter IV Return of the World Warriors Game Informer 178 February 2008 90 ストリートファイター アートワークス 極 Street Fighter Artworks Extreme in Japanese Udon 2012 p 434 ISBN 978 4 86233 381 0 西山 1対1での戦いを 実在の格闘技に置き換えてもエンターテインメント性に欠 けると思うんですよ より映画的な アニメ的な 小説的な物語性が必要だし それ にはハプニング的に勃発する闘いが不可欠だった だから ストリートファイター I という名前にしたんです ゲームで表現できることって限られているけれど どこかド キドキするような物語性を感じ取れるようにしたかったんです Nishiyama I think that even if one on one fights were replaced with actual martial arts it would lack entertainment A more cinematic anime like novel like narrative was necessary and a battle that broke out in a happening way was indispensable for that That s why I named it Street Fighter I The things that can be expressed in a game are limited but I wanted to make it so that you could feel a story that would make your heart skip a beat Mas fuerte que un toro Mas Oyama el hombre que inspiro a Ryu de Street Fighter CodigoEspagueti 30 August 2017 Retrieved 2 December 2019 The Man Who Created Street Fighter 1UP com Archived from the original on 22 January 2012 Retrieved 15 December 2011 Manabu Takemura Interview sfrpg com br Archived from the original on 2 February 2010 Retrieved 29 January 2010 Staff 1996 A Fighter Speaks Game On Horibuchi Seiji 1 1 6 Making the Game Polygon Retrieved 1 December 2019 Software Glitches Polygon Retrieved 1 December 2019 Software Glitches Capcom Retrieved 1 December 2019 Street Fighter lore SF5 edition MMCafe Retrieved 2 December 2019 The devil within Hideaki Itsuno on 25 years at Capcom Eurogamer 3 March 2019 Retrieved 2 December 2019 Undisputed Street Fighter A 30th Anniversary Retrospective Dynamite Entertainment 2017 p 130 ISBN 978 1 5241 0466 5 blackoak Street Fighter lore SF5 edition Shmuplations Retrieved 2 December 2019 Interview Voice Actor and ADR Director Taliesin Jaffe the Sequel Otaku USA October 2015 Retrieved 6 November 2015 Interview Voice Actor and ADR Director Taliesin Jaffe the Sequel Capcom Retrieved 1 December 2019 Street Fighter V Ryu vuelve a ser bueno in Spanish Esports 11 June 2019 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Capcom designed a realistic Street Fighter V Ryu and it looked amazing Sports Yahoo 3 March 2017 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Early Development Ideas Kage Capcom Retrieved 1 December 2019 Oliveira Don 13 July 2012 PS3 version of Street Fighter 25th Anniversary Collector s Set includes a lot of exclusive content PSU Retrieved 4 September 2021 Stone Sam August 2019 Street Fighter What Made Ryu and Chun Li Video Game Icons Comic Book Review Retrieved 4 September 2021 Ryu Next Generation Magazine October 1998 Hendershot Steve 2017 Undisputed Street Fighter Dynamite p 41 Los secretos de Street Fighter V con Yoshinori Ono IGN 3 February 2016 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Costumes Capcom Retrieved 2 December 2019 StreetFighter 14 September 2020 You must strive to exceed Tweet via Twitter Yoshi OnoChin 20 November 2019 We announced V Skill II RYU and KEN Tweet via Twitter a b Undisputed Street Fighter A 30th Anniversary Retrospective Dynamite Entertainment 2017 ISBN 978 1 5241 0466 5 a b Exclusive Interview Byron Mann Street Fighters Ryu Bristol Bad Film Club 17 March 2015 Retrieved 2 December 2019 Could Street Fighter VI Bring Back the Franchise s Most Obscure Character CBR 10 August 2021 Retrieved 26 June 2023 Ninterrogation Let s Talk About EX Baby Nintendo Magazine System 51 Arika CVG Interview CVG UK Freeplay 8 Gillen McAllister 20 August 2013 Street Fighter Assassin s Fist Interview Gamereactor eu Gamereactor UK Retrieved 10 November 2013 What Ryu Will Be Like in Tekken X Street Fighter Siliconera August 2011 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Super Smash Bros for Nintendo 3DS Wii U New Content Approaching 6 14 15 Nintendo Retrieved 1 December 2019 All About Capcom Fighting Games 1987 2000 Dempa Shimbunsha 2000 p 345 ISBN 978 4 88554 676 1 Capcom 1991 Street Fighter II Arcade Capcom Level area Ryu ending Ultra Street Fighter 2 Announced for Switch Has New Characters and Mode GameSpot Retrieved 1 December 2019 Capcom 27 June 1995 Street Fighter Alpha Warriors Dreams Arcade Capcom Level area Ryu ending Capcom 6 March 1996 Street Fighter Alpha 2 Arcade Capcom Level area Ryu ending Street Fighter Alpha 2 Hints amp Cheats GameSpot Retrieved 2 March 2009 Capcom 29 June 1997 Street Fighter Alpha 3 Arcade Capcom Level area Ryu ending Capcom 29 June 1997 Street Fighter Alpha 3 Arcade Capcom Level area Evil Ryu ending Official Street Fighter 2 2nd Impact Ryu character biography in Japanese Family A generation of fighters who have friends all over the world but still wander in search of true strength His best friend Ken is no longer his friend after he has a child Personality He has a strong sense of righteousness and justice Therefore in the world of fighting where even training can hurt opponents he is cautious and thoughtful in his actions and speech Fighting style He uses his own fighting style based on karate In contrast to Ken who prefers flashy moves his solid and lean technique construction appears subdued but when the moment is opportune he shows a radiant intensity His flashes of skill often mesmerise even his opponents Official Street Fighter 3 3rd Strike Ryu character biography in Japanese Ryu has fought through tens of thousands of battles and exchanged countless fists The path to becoming a true fighter is still vague and unformed But he is not lost As long as he continues on his path believing in the certainty of meeting new strongmen who will lead him to greater heights Capcom 4 March 1997 Street Fighter III 2nd Impact Arcade Capcom Level area Hugo ending Capcom 12 May 1999 Street Fighter III 3rd Strike Arcade Capcom Level area Oro ending Capcom 18 July 2008 Street Fighter IV PlayStation 3 Capcom Level area Ryu ending Evil Ryu amp Oni Akuma in SSF4 Arcade Edition new trailer 2 December 2010 Exclusive Oni Akuma and Evil Ryu Media Move Sets amp Impressions a b Street Fighter 5 s new DLC character Kage is basically Evil Ryu with a twist Eurogamer 17 December 2018 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Akira 30 November 1996 Street Fighter EX Arcade Capcom Capcom 10 August 1995 Street Fighter The Movie PlayStation Capcom Street Fighter Animated Electronic Gaming Monthly No 73 Sendai Publishing August 1995 p 90 Namco Capcom in Japanese Namco Capcom official website Archived from the original on 26 February 2009 Retrieved 2 March 2009 Tatsunoko vs Capcom in Japanese Tatsunoko vs Capcom official website Archived from the original on 28 February 2009 Retrieved 2 March 2009 Project X Zone TGS 2012 preview Why we need this crazy crossover9 GamesRadar 21 September 2012 Retrieved 2 December 2019 Ken Ryu Phoenix Wright Axel Stone y otros se unen a Project X Zone 2 GamesRadar 19 May 2015 Retrieved 2 December 2019 Ryu Tatsunoko vs Capcom Moves Combos Strategy Guide Eventhubs Retrieved 2 December 2019 Capcom VS SNK official website Capcom Archived from the original on 8 August 2008 Retrieved 2 March 2009 Project X Zone Review GameSpot Archived from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 8 September 2017 Project X Zone 2 Review Party On Reiji Party On Xiaomu Shack News 19 February 2016 Archived from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 8 September 2017 Marvel vs Capcom Hints amp Cheats GameSpot Retrieved 2 March 2009 Capcom 30 November 1996 Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo PlayStation Capcom Capcom Announces New Street Fighter Mobile Title with Puzzle Element MMOsite 12 October 2014 Archived from the original on 15 October 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 Molina Bretta 22 July 2011 Four more fighters revealed for Street Fighter X Tekken USA Today Retrieved 7 September 2011 Tekken X Street Fighter Is Well into Development Says Harada Siliconera 12 July 2015 Archived from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 8 September 2017 Onimusha Dawn of Dreams Hints amp Cheats GameSpot Retrieved 2 March 2009 Announcing Mega Man Universe for Xbox Live and PlayStation Network Acevedo Jay 12 December 2008 Weekly Playstation Store Update December 12 Game Focus Retrieved on 18 December 2008 Daniel Krupa 28 March 2012 Asura s Wrath DLC Details IGN Ziff Davis Archived from the original on 15 October 2013 Retrieved 11 August 2019 Ryu and Roy for Smash Bros Wii U 3DS Leaked IGN j2 Global 13 June 2015 Retrieved 13 June 2015 GRANBLUE FANTASY Cygames Bullard Benjamin 12 October 2018 Street Fighter s Ryu becomes a Power Ranger in mashup short Power Rangers Legacy War Syfy Archived from the original on 24 October 2019 Retrieved 13 October 2018 Street Fighter Crossover Coming to Power Rangers Battle for the Grid IGN 13 April 2021 Wood Austin 20 February 2020 Fortnite gets Street Fighter s Ryu and Chun Li GamesRadar Retrieved 20 February 2020 Knoop Joseph 20 February 2020 Fortnite is getting Street Fighter skins in latest crossover PC Gamer Retrieved 20 February 2020 Barker Sammy 8 June 2023 Ryu Guile Get Exoprimal Makeovers for Street Fighter 6 s First Capcom Collaboration DLC Push Square Archived from the original on 9 June 2023 Retrieved 10 June 2023 Street Fighter Collector s Edition back case Steven E de Souza Universal Studios 1998 1994 0783227094 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Street Fighter The Legend of Chun Li back case Steven E de Souza Legend Films a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Fahey Mike 3 May 2010 This Could Be The Best Street Fighter Film Ever Created Kotaku Retrieved 8 July 2021 RYU ANNOUNCED Hussain Tamoor 10 December 2017 New Ready Player One Trailer Features Overwatch And Street Fighter Cameos GameSpot Retrieved 10 December 2017 Cotter Padraig 15 September 2018 Goosebumps 2 Haunted Halloween s Easter Egg Guide Screen Rant Retrieved 10 December 2020 Power Rangers Legacy Wars Street Fighter Showdown Short Film Power Rangers Official YouTube 18 October 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2021 Street Fighter II The Animated Movie back case Steven E de Souza Animaze 1995 1994 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link a b Ryu Voice Behind the Voice Actors Retrieved 1 December 2019 Street Fighter Alpha The Animation back case Manga Entertainment 2001 2000 Street Fighter Alpha Generations back case Group TAC 2005 2005 Street Fighter IV The Ties that Bind back case Capcom 2008 2008 0783227094 Kanzaki Masaomi 1993 Street Fighter II Tokuma Shoten ISBN 4 19 793050 X Nakahira Masahiko 1997 Street Fighter Sakura Ganbaru Vol 2 Tokuma Shoten ISBN 4 88199 366 6 Nakahira Masahiko 2007 Street Fighter III Ryu Final Vol 1 Udon ISBN 978 1 897376 55 3 Street Fighter Unlimited Character popularity poll Capcom Retrieved 1 December 2019 All Time Greatest Game Hero The Standings GameSpot Archived from the original on 6 October 2009 Retrieved 15 September 2009 Street Fighter What Made Ryu and Chun Li Video Game Icons CBR August 2019 Retrieved 2 December 2019 Top 100 Heroes of All Time Archived 3 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine UGO com Retrieved on 13 December 2008 Furfari Paul 25 August 2010 Top 50 Street Fighter Characters UGO com Archived from the original on 28 August 2010 Retrieved 29 September 2011 IGN s Top 5 Street Fighter Characters Ryu s entry at number one Top 20 Street Fighter Characters of All Time GameDaily Archived from the original on 5 December 2008 Retrieved 13 November 2008 Street Fighter IV Character Profile Ryu GameDaily Archived from the original on 30 April 2009 Retrieved 22 December 2008 Workman Robert 26 September 2008 Top 25 Capcom Characters of All Time GameDaily Archived from the original on 3 October 2008 Retrieved 23 October 2009 Top 50 video game characters of all time announced in Guinness World Records 2011 Gamer s Edition Gamasutra 16 February 2011 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 9 July 2011 Glifford Kevin 10 February 2010 Snake Beats Mario Is Coolest Video Game Character Ever 1UP com Archived from the original on 7 June 2016 Retrieved 10 March 2010 第5回ゲーメスト大賞 GAMEST in Japanese 68 4 Archived from the original on 8 July 2008 Ishii Zenji December 1996 第10回ゲーメスト大賞 Gamest Magazine 188 46 Retrieved 28 December 2008 Super Street Fighter 4 character usage numbers from over 4 000 matches 26 September 2010 Dyer James McComb David Plumb Alastair Scarborough David 26 May 2010 The 50 Greatest Video Game Characters 27 Ryu Empire Retrieved 2 August 2013 Parish Jeremy 3 December 2018 We rank the Smash Bros and friends Polygon Retrieved 5 November 2020 Super Smash Bros Characters Ranked 7 March 2019 Street Fighter s Ryu is the Kevin Bacon of Video Games 22 June 2021 Wilde Tyler 18 March 2008 Street Fighter Week The evolution of Ken and Ryu GamesRadar Retrieved 6 September 2011 Stuart Keith 20 February 2009 A beginner s guide to Street Fighter IV The Guardian Retrieved 5 September 2011 Great Loves GameSpot Retrieved 29 January 2010 Gilbert Henry 5 May 2009 The 56 characters of Marvel vs Capcom 2 GamesRadar Retrieved 30 March 2010 The Top 7 Best fighting game characters GamesRadar 10 September 2012 Retrieved 3 October 2017 Street Fighter Ranking All the Characters Den of Geek Archived from the original on 19 September 2016 Retrieved 28 September 2017 Los 30 mejores heroes de los ultimos 30 anos March 2021 Barrat Charlie Characters we wish we knew LESS about GamesRadar Retrieved 23 August 2011 Furfari Paul 25 August 2010 Top 50 Street Fighter Characters UGO com Archived from the original on 15 June 2011 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Edwards Matt 6 August 2011 Super Street Fighter IV Arcade Edition Review Eurogamer Retrieved 15 August 2011 a b Grimm Michael 6 August 2011 Super Street Fighter IV Arcade Edition GamesRadar Retrieved 15 August 2011 Ramsay Randolph 1 July 2011 Super Street Fighter IV Arcade Edition Review GameSpot Archived from the original on 5 August 2011 Retrieved 15 August 2011 Ryckert Dan 6 August 2011 Super Street Fighter IV Arcade Edition Game Informer Retrieved 6 June 2011 Grimm Michael 3 August 2010 12 matchups we want to see in Street Fighter X Tekken GamesRadar Retrieved 20 August 2011 Evil Ryu Kage Hits Street Fighter V Arcade Edition Monday Variety 17 December 2018 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Street Fighter 2 The Movie review Eurogamer 3 August 2010 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Nearly 20 Years After its Release Street Fighter II The Animated Movie is Still the Best Fighting Game Movie I Have Ever Seen Kotaku 3 August 2010 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Street Fighter 2 The Animated Movie The Anime Review Retrieved 1 December 2019 By the Snake these fighters are extraordinary DVDVerdict Retrieved 1 December 2019 Street Fighter II V THEM Anime Reviews Retrieved 1 December 2019 Street Fighter II V THEM Anime Reviews Retrieved 1 December 2019 Street Fighter The Epic History of Ryu Den of Geek 15 March 2016 Retrieved 2 December 2019 Pigna Chris 1 April 2008 April Fools Day Round Up news from 1UP com 1UP com Archived from the original on 6 March 2009 Retrieved 1 June 2008 昨日は4 1 プロジェクトマネージャー 塩沢夏希 in Japanese Capcom Archived from the original on 5 April 2008 Retrieved 2 April 2008 Play Staff November 2008 Interview with Yoshinori Ono Play Fusion Publishing Incredible Technologies 1 June 1995 Street Fighter The Movie Capcom Level area Ryu ending The lessons he has learned from the teachings of Master Sheng Long help greatly in bringing dignity and prosperity to the war ravaged land The Man Who Created Street Fighter 1UP com Archived from the original on 14 April 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2016 SNK vs Capcom SVC Chaos Extreme Encounter 206頁 バトル開始メッセージ集 in Japanese SNK 2003 ISBN 4 7577 1618 4 主人公 in Japanese Capcom Archived from the original on 29 September 2016 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Wai ming Ng Benjamin Street Fighter and The King of Fighters in Hong Kong A Study of Cultural Consumption and Localization of Japanese Games in an Asian Context Chinese University of Hong Kong Retrieved 1 December 2019 Tatsumaki Senpukyaku Written by Osarenkhoe Uwuigbe in the Journal of Interdisciplinary Science Topics Vol 4 2015 After Our Thirst for Lady Dimitrescu Capcom Gives Us an Outline of Ryu s Shoryuken 22 February 2022 Bibliography editStudio Bent Stuff September 2000 All About Capcom Head to Head Fighting Game 1987 2000 A A Game History Series Vol 1 in Japanese Dempa Publications Inc ISBN 4 88554 676 1 Monthly Arcadia Editorial Staff October 2008 Street Fighter IV Master Guide 拳の書 エンターブレインムック Arcadia Extra Vol 69 in Japanese Enterbrain ISBN 978 4 7577 4513 1 External links edit nbsp Quotations related to Ryu Street Fighter at Wikiquote Ryu Hoshi at the Internet Movie Database Portals nbsp Video games nbsp Japan nbsp 1980s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ryu Street Fighter amp oldid 1184489888 In Street Fighter games, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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