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==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==
In the original ''[[Street Fighter (video game)|Street Fighter]]'', and in the first iteration of ''[[Street Fighter II]]'', Ken was identical to [[Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]], in terms of game play, with only one attack (a throw) appearing to be aesthetically different. In later ''[[Street Fighter II]]'' editions, Ken's character was modified to be a variant of Ryu, using modified versions of Ryu's special attacks, though his animations and other attacks were still very similar to Ryu's, as Ken's sprite is always a [[head swap]] of Ryu. In the original version of this game, the only way to effectively have two characters with similar abilities fight each other was to have one player play as Ryu and the other play as Ken.
In the original ''[[Street Fighter (video game)|Street Fighter]]'', and in the first iteration of ''[[Street Fighter II]]'', Ken was identical to [[Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]], in terms of game play, with only one attack (an arse tickler) appearing to be aesthetically different. In later ''[[Street Fighter II]]'' editions, Ken's character was modified to be a variant of Ryu, using modified versions of Ryu's special attacks, though his animations and other attacks were still very similar to Ryu's, as Ken's sprite is always a [[head swap]] of Ryu. In the original version of this game, the only way to effectively have two characters with similar abilities fight each other was to have one player play as Ryu and the other play as Ken.


With the advent of "mirror matches" (same character vs.) in ''Street Fighter II': Champion Edition'', the designers began to vary the playing styles of Ryu and Ken a bit. Ryu was given a stronger, faster ''[[Hadouken]]'' and a one-hit knockdown ''[[Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku]]'', while Ken was given a wider arcing ''[[Shoryuken]]'' and a multi-hit ''Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku'' (In the "[[Marvel vs Capcom]]" series, the ''Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku'' went on an angle, making it effective against airborne opponents). In ''[[Super Street Fighter II]]'', Ken began deviating from Ryu further being given a multi-hit flaming ''Shoryuken''. In the next ''SFII'' installment, ''Super Street Fighter II Turbo'', Ken was given the [[special attack|super combo]] ''Shouryuu Reppa'' (which was simply Ken's Jab and Strong ''Dragon Punches'' chained together) and a number of different command kicks, plus a new jumping Forward and a Knee Bash hold. These command kicks would be incorporated as the standard move list in the ''[[Street Fighter Alpha]]'' series, but remain commands in all others.
With the advent of "mirror matches" (same character vs.) in ''Street Fighter II': Champion Edition'', the designers began to vary the playing styles of Ryu and Ken a bit. Ryu was given a stronger, faster ''[[Hadouken]]'' and a one-hit knockdown ''[[Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku]]'', while Ken was given a wider arcing ''[[Shoryuken]]'' and a multi-hit ''Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku'' (In the "[[Marvel vs Capcom]]" series, the ''Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku'' went on an angle, making it effective against airborne opponents). In ''[[Super Street Fighter II]]'', Ken began deviating from Ryu further being given a multi-hit flaming ''Shoryuken''. In the next ''SFII'' installment, ''Super Street Fighter II Turbo'', Ken was given the [[special attack|super combo]] ''Shouryuu Reppa'' (which was simply Ken's Jab and Strong ''Dragon Punches'' chained together) and a number of different command kicks, plus a new jumping Forward and a Knee Bash hold. These command kicks would be incorporated as the standard move list in the ''[[Street Fighter Alpha]]'' series, but remain commands in all others.

Revision as of 00:51, 27 June 2008

Ken
Street Fighter series character
File:Ken-SF4.png
Ken as he appears in Street Fighter IV.
First gameStreet Fighter

Ken Masters (ケン・マスターズ, Ken Masutāzu) is a video game character created by Capcom. He is one of the main characters from the Street Fighter series of fighting games alongside Ryu, having made an appearances in all major incarnations of the series.

Video game appearances

Street Fighter series

Ken made his first appearance in the original Street Fighter released in 1987. The character's name was originally spelled in Japanese as (Ken), which is the kanji character for fist, although Capcom dropped this in subsequent games, spelling his name in katakana instead (ケン). Ken is described as a former sparring partner, rival and best friend of the main character, Ryu, who trained under the same master (a character whose identity would later be fleshed out as Gouken). Within the actual game, Ken is for all intents and purpose a clone of Ryu controlled by the second player during competitive matches, with the only distinguishing aspects being that Ken wears a red karate gi, has blond hair and fights barefoot (in the original game, Ryu wears red slippers). The single-player tournament can only be played with Ken after the second player defeats the first player in a two-player match.

Ken and Ryu, along with former final boss Sagat, would be the only characters from the original Street Fighter to return in the game's true sequel, Street Fighter II, first released in 1991. In Street Fighter II, Ken is invited to participate in the World Warrior tournament by Ryu, with Ken having already moved away from Japan to live in America. In Ken's ending, he ends up marrying his girlfriend Eliza. Street Fighter II was a breakaway hit for Capcom, leading to the production of revised editions of the same game which included Champion Edition and Hyper Fighting in 1992, Super Street Fighter II in 1993 and Super Turbo in 1994, which all follow the same plot. Numerous spinoff products were made as well during the game's popularity: when Capcom licensed Hasbro to produced a line of action figures, Capcom were forced to give Ken the surname "Masters" to distinguish the character from Mattel's Ken Carson character from the Barbie toyline. The full name Ken Masters would be used in the animated Street Fighter II movie and in the Street Fighter II V series before being canonized in the games.

An all-new Street Fighter game would not be released until 1995, Street Fighter Alpha was released. Plotwise, the game is a prequel to the Street Fighter II games which fleshed out the established Street Fighter II characters, as well as reintroduced characters from the original Street Fighter and the beat-em-up Final Fight. Alpha features a younger Ken, who is searching for Ryu, having recently won the first "World Warrior" tournament in the events of the original Street Fighter. In Ken's ending in the original Street Fighter Alpha, he defeats Ryu and heads back to America, where he meets his future girlfriend and wife Eliza. Street Fighter Alpha would be followed by its own line of sequels: Street Fighter Alpha 2, which follows the same plot as in the original Alpha (with a revised ending for Ken); and Street Fighter Alpha 3, which takes place after the events in the first two games. In Alpha 3, Ken is featured in the numerous characters' storylines within the game.

Street Fighter III (released in 1997), features an older Ken, who is now married to Eliza and has a son with her named Mel. He also takes a young student named Sean under his wing. Street Fighter III was followed by 2nd Impact released during the same year and 3rd Strike in 1999.

Ken, along with Ryu, are seen sparring with each other in the trailer to the upcoming Street Fighter IV, although both characters' roles in the game are unknown at this point.[1] Ken was confirmed as a playable character for Street Fighter IV on December 6, 2007.[2] The story of IV will be set between Street Fighter II and III.

Other games

In 1990, Capcom produced an action game for the Nintendo Entertainment System titled Street Fighter 2010: The Final Fight . The Japanese version of the game starred an original character named Kevin Striker, a cyborg policeman who fought against alien creatures in the future. When Capcom released 2010 in North America, the main character's identity was changed from Kevin to Ken, with the game's story rewritten to imply that he was the same Ken from the original Street Fighter. Other than that, the game has little or no plot ties to the original Street Fighter and the game itself is not recognized as part of the canonical Street Fighter series.

Outside the mainstream Street Fighter games, Ken appears in 3D form in the Street Fighter EX games, in his Alpha incarnation in X-Men vs. Street Fighter, Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter and Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes and in a new form based on his Street Fighter II incarnation in Capcom vs. SNK and Capcom vs. SNK 2. He also appears in the arcade game Street Fighter: The Movie produced by Incredible Technologies, which Capcom later adapted for the home console market, and in SNK vs. Capcom: SVC Chaos by SNK Playmore, where he has an alter-ego named Violent Ken.

Appearance

Ken is most easily recognized by his sparring gloves (yellow in the Alpha Series, red or brown elsewhere) and bright red karate gi with the sleeves ripped off, similar to Ryu's (Capcom has said that a red gi was chosen to stand out and to reflect his more flashy style of fighting). Unlike Ryu however, Ken's gi shows less wear and tear. While official Street Fighter II artwork shows the arms of Ryu's gi are ripped off, Ken's seem to have been cut off clean. His hair is blonde (some sources indicate that his hair may in fact be dyed; evidenced that some of his sprites have black eyebrows) and has long eyebrows. He wears a black belt at his waist and fights barefoot. In the Street Fighter Alpha series, he had longer hair that he had tied back with a red ribbon into a ponytail. The official explanation for the loss of the ribbon is that he gave it to Ryu to wear during the events of Street Fighter Alpha 2 (as stated in Ken's own ending); Ryu was distracted during his fight with Ken because he had just fought Akuma, and ended up losing. Ken gave Ryu the headband to remind him of their fight. In 1993's Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie however, where the character was shown for the first time with a ponytail in flashbacks, he gave Ryu the red ribbon as a bandage when Ryu got a bleeding wound on his forehead while training.

Gameplay

In the original Street Fighter, and in the first iteration of Street Fighter II, Ken was identical to Ryu, in terms of game play, with only one attack (an arse tickler) appearing to be aesthetically different. In later Street Fighter II editions, Ken's character was modified to be a variant of Ryu, using modified versions of Ryu's special attacks, though his animations and other attacks were still very similar to Ryu's, as Ken's sprite is always a head swap of Ryu. In the original version of this game, the only way to effectively have two characters with similar abilities fight each other was to have one player play as Ryu and the other play as Ken.

With the advent of "mirror matches" (same character vs.) in Street Fighter II': Champion Edition, the designers began to vary the playing styles of Ryu and Ken a bit. Ryu was given a stronger, faster Hadouken and a one-hit knockdown Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku, while Ken was given a wider arcing Shoryuken and a multi-hit Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku (In the "Marvel vs Capcom" series, the Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku went on an angle, making it effective against airborne opponents). In Super Street Fighter II, Ken began deviating from Ryu further being given a multi-hit flaming Shoryuken. In the next SFII installment, Super Street Fighter II Turbo, Ken was given the super combo Shouryuu Reppa (which was simply Ken's Jab and Strong Dragon Punches chained together) and a number of different command kicks, plus a new jumping Forward and a Knee Bash hold. These command kicks would be incorporated as the standard move list in the Street Fighter Alpha series, but remain commands in all others.

Ken mainly focuses on the Shoryuken move, to the point where his Shoryukens set the opponent on fire. Ken's Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku does not allow him to dodge projectiles at the start of the spin, but spins faster, allows him to hit his opponent up to five times. Ken's Hadouken attacks are less concentrated than Ryu's, but Ken's Shoryuken has more range and does more damage than Ryu's.

Super Arts

By Street Fighter III, Ken has two Shōryūken Super Arts (Shōryū-reppa and Shinryūken) and Shippu Jinrai Kyaku, and in Street Fighter EX 3, he has a "meteor combo" (a Level 3 super-combo) called Kuzūryu-reppa, a mix of his other three Super Arts. Kuzūryu-reppa would be seen again in SVC Chaos: SNK vs. Capcom with it being one of Violent Ken's supers this time.

Ken's super moves consist of the Shōryū-reppa ("Rising Dragon Destroyer"), in which Ken does two or three Shōryūken; the Shinryūken ("Divine Dragon Fist"), a spinning vertical Shoryuken that lacks range, but does greater damage and more hits, especially if the kick buttons are pressed rapidly; and the most recent addition to his move-list since Street Fighter III — the Shippū Jinrai Kyaku ("Hurricane Thunderclap Leg"), which Ken does a flurry of kicks before ending with a vertical Tatsumaki-Senpū-Kyaku (or a diagonally-vertical Tatsumaki-Senpū-Kyaku in Alpha Anthology's port of Alpha 3). Ken is the only Ansatsuken practioner that does not have a canonical Hadouken-based Super Art.

Violent Ken

Violent Ken is an alternate version of Ken that appears in SVC Chaos: SNK vs. Capcom. He was inspired by the Brainwashed Ken depicted in Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie, which M. Bison induced a considerable amount of Psycho Power to transform Ken into a killing machine. Though Brainwashed Ken has little to do with the Satsui no Hadou, Ken, while fighting against this form in game, wonders if, deep down, he desires this.

However, Violent Ken also used purple flames instead of regular ones in his Shoryuken, which is a feature of Akuma's Hadokens and Shoryukens from the Marvel vs. Capcom series, and a pillar of energy appeared at the end of his Exceed move, which is a feature of Rugal's DMs from The King of Fighters series.

Actors

While his original voice was a re-use of the Ryu audio samples, beginning with Super Street Fighter II Ken's voice was performed by Kenji Haga, who also did his voice in the Street Fighter II animated movie. Tetsuya Iwanaga did Ken's voice in the Street Fighter Alpha series, and Koji Tobe did Ken's voice in the Street Fighter III games. In SVC Chaos: SNK vs. Capcom, he was voiced by Atsushi "Monster" Maezuka. He was voiced by Scott McNeil in the Street Fighter animated series. He was voiced by Kazuya Ichijo in Japanese and Steven Blum in the dub for the Street Fighter Alpha movie. In Street Fighter II V, he was voiced by Jimmy Theodore and in Street Fighter II: The Movie, he was voiced by Eddie Frierson.

Street Fighter motion picture

Damian Chapa portrayed Ken in the 1994 Street Fighter movie, where he is a conartist alongside Ryu. After the two unsuccessfully try to scam Shadaloo Tong leader, Sagat, they are arrested by Allied Nations forces. Guile offers them their freedom in exchange for infiltrating Bison's base (to whom Sagat runs guns) and revealing its location so that the AN can make a military strike and free the hostages captured earlier in the film.

Ken and Ryu are forced to betray the vengeful GNT news-crew (Chun Li, Balrog and Honda) in order to gain Bison's trust but later try to free them and are captured. When Guile eventually infiltrates Sagat's base and chaos ensues Ryu and Ken try to help free the hostages but split up when the AN forces arrive (according to Ken the soldiers get paid and that they should not risk their lives). Ken later comes to Ryu's aid when he is ambushed by Vega and Sagat. While Ryu defeats Vega, Ken defeats Sagat and drops a heavy golden statue on his hands parting him with the line: "If I hadn't met you, I might have become you."

Interestingly Ken and Sagat are portrayed as rivals, switching the usual scenario from the games where Ryu and Sagat are rivals, with Ryu's rivalry switched to Vega.

See also

References

Template:Major Street Fighter Characters