Street Fighter Alpha 2: Difference between revisions

From SuperCombo Wiki
(In progress. Added a glossary for very basic concepts, and moved simple mechanics up, created a new category. Will divide in basic mechanics, then strategy. Text will flow better. Advanced players will jump right into strategies.)
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==Notations==
==Notations==
 
===Inputs and special commands===
Expressed in the form: Notation - Move - Symbol
Expressed in the form: Notation - Move - Symbol
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
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* D - Crouch/Down - [[File:D.png]]
* D - Crouch/Down - [[File:D.png]]
* ''Note: Directions can be combined, such as crouch/block, or diagonal jump.''
* ''Note: Directions can be combined, such as crouch/block, or diagonal jump.''


* LP - Light/Jab Punch - [[File:Lp.png]]
* LP - Light/Jab Punch - [[File:Lp.png]]
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|}
|}


==== Video: Basic gameplay ====
<youtube>qUVFu4LwZDg</youtube>


----
----


===Combos and gameplay notation===
====Combos and gameplay notations====
 
* j., n., nj. c., sj - diagonal jump, neutral position, neutral jump (up), crouching, super jump (Rolento only), respectively.
* j., n., nj. c., sj - diagonal jump, neutral position, neutral jump (up), crouching, super jump (Rolento only), respectively.
* Plus symbol (+) - Press the button  together
* Plus symbol (+) - Press the button  together
* X symbol (x or xx) - Cancel the previous move before the end of animation into a new one.
* X symbol (x or xx) - Cancel the previous move before the end of animation into a new one.
* [ ]xn - A bracket refers to a sequence that is repeated x n. Example: "CC, c.HK, qcb+HK, [mp srk]x3, HP shoryuken."
* [ ] x n - A bracket refers to a sequence that is repeated "n" times. Example: "CC, c.HK, qcb+HK, [mp srk]x3, HP shoryuken."
* Comma sign (,) - Press one button after the other in sequence, e.g.: Raging demon, lp, lp, f, lk, HP (or lp x2, f, lk, HP), or linking combos (e.g.: c.lp, c.lk, c.mp).
* Comma sign (,) - Press one button after the other in sequence, e.g.: Raging demon, lp, lp, f, lk, HP (or lp x2, f, lk, HP), or linking combos (e.g.: c.lp, c.lk, c.mp).
* Piano: Refers to rolling your fingers through an arcade stick as if the buttons were piano keys to increase your chances of pressing a button at the right time.
* Piano: Refers to rolling your fingers through an arcade stick as if the buttons were piano keys to increase your chances of pressing a button at the right time.
* Negative edge: Release, instead of push, a button to execute a special command move.  
* Negative edge: Special command moves can be executed by releasing, instead of pushing, a button.




<youtube>qUVFu4LwZDg</youtube>


--[[User:Scanman|Scanman]] ([[User talk:Scanman|talk]]) 10:19, 20 February 2019 (MSK)
--[[User:Scanman|Scanman]] ([[User talk:Scanman|talk]]) 10:19, 20 February 2019 (MSK)


==Basic Game Mechanics==
==Glossary==
These are common terminologies used in Alpha 2 and other games. Additional terminology will be explained in each specific session.
 
===Normal, unique normals, special and super moves===
Aside from walking, jumping and blocking, we call attacks by these names.
*Normals: Moves are moves you can input together with directions.
*Unique normals: Special commands, usually with a special function, such as Rose's slide [[File:Df.png]] + [[File:Mk.png]], Ryu's overhead [[File:F.png]] + [[File:Mp.png]], and Chun's neck kick [[File:PDf.png]] + [[File:Hk.png]].
*Special moves: A sequence that must be done fast and precisely enough to be executed. Example: [[File:Qcf.png]] + [[File:P.png]] is the "hadouken."
*Super moves: Very damaging attacks that cost meter. Example: [[File:Qcf.png]], [[File:Qcf.png]] + [[File:P.png]] in the Shinkuu Hadouken. They are done in 1, 2 or 3 levels, or doable only with 3 stocks.
**Press 1, 2 or 3 punches or kicks to use 1, 2 or 3 stocks of your meter, respectively. Other moves such as Akuma's Raging Demon require 3 stocks to be executed.
 
===Frames, startup, duration and recovery===
*Frame: One image in a movie roll as in the old days. Alpha 2 runs at 60 frames per second. That means 60 images will be shown in 1 second, although the game is capturing inputs at a higher frequency. Whatever you do now will show up right on the screen on the next 1/60 of a second. Therefore, in games, we count the duration of things in frames.
*Startup: The start of a move, before it hits.
*Duration: The portion of a move that can hit. Light attacks usually lasts of 1 or 2 frames, harder and special attacks last longe. For instance, a fireball duration lasts for as long as it exists.
*Recovery: At the expense of trying to attack, there is a period of time where you are recovering from that move, and your guard will be open, unless you cancel the previous attack into a new one.


===Blockstun and hitstun===
===Blockstun and hitstun===
Blockstun and hitstun - during a hit or block, the game freezes both characters for 8 frames (or 7 for hit according to the note below).
*Blockstun and hitstun - "Stuns" are pauses. During a hit or block, the game freezes both characters for 8 frames (or 7 for hit according to the note below). This notion will be very important when discussing alpha counter denial/reversal.
Apparently, for alpha 2 there is an important change in frame data: for all grounded normals, hitstun is 1 frame faster (7f) than blockstun (8f).


This notion will be very important when discussing alpha counter denial/reversal.  
===Counter hit===
A move attempt that takes a "counter hit" during its start or recovery animation by another move will cause a counter hit. It gives 10% additional damage and 2 extra frames of hitstun (10f), allowing bigger combos and hit confirmations. Two frames are not too much too see, but you may try a follow up even if you don't see if it worked.  


''An important note on frame data''
===Combos===
Combos allow you to attack in sequence. Once hit, your opponent cannot block it. The sequence of hits are usually executed by cancelling moves into specials or supers. You can also link normal moves.


For all grounded normals, hitstun is 1 frame faster than blockstun.
===Negative edge & piano===
In alpha 2, you can execute special moves by releasing (negative) instead of pushing it, to give you extra leniency against execution mistakes. This concept is important later on in advanced tactics.


===Counter hits===
A piano input is just rolling your fingers in an arcade stick as in piano keys, increasing your chance of getting a move right.
A move that takes a hit during its start or recovery animation by another move will cause a counter hit. It gives 10% additional damage and 2 extra frames of hitstun, allowing combos and hit confirmations. Two frames are not much too see, but you may try a follow up even if you don't see if it worked.  


===Cancels, combos, links and meaty attacks===
===Other terminology===
'''Cancels:''' Some normal moves can be cancelled into special moves on hit or block. When a move is cancelled, the recovery animation is switched to a new animation.  
Specific terminology that pertains to some advanced gameplay, such as juggle, will be explained when required.


*Not all moves are cancelable. For instance, Ryu can cancel his c.HK, but not Chun-li. This balances the game and creates a character's individuality. Pay attention to these to understand how each character is supposed to be played. If it is there, it is because it has an important function. See each character for details.


'''Combos:''' A sequence of hits, usually are executed by cancelling moves into specials or supers. You can also link normal moves.
--[[User:Raf|Raf]] ([[User talk:Raf|talk]]) 22:33, 9 November 2019 (MSK)
'''Links:''' Links are normals comboed into normals. Some are easy, such as Rose's c.lp, c.lk, c.mp, and some are hard, such as Chun's c.mp, c.mp.
'''Meaty:''' Meaties attacks are "fat"attacks, in a sense of a longer duration. They are attacks of more than 1 frame duration on the active part, executed on a downed or landing opponent. Since all attacks will leave the opponent in a hitstun animation of fixed duration, hitting your opponent on your last active frame can create new combo opportunities, otherwise not doable if it hits on the first active frame, or just facilitate to combo a harder link.


===Chain combos===
----
Gen and Guy can do much easier links as the buttons can be pressed much sooner with a larger room for error, canceling the end of an animation into the next move in sequence. Those are called chain combos.  See these character sections for more information.


===Air block===
==Basic Game Mechanics==
You can block things in the air in the alpha series. Here are the rules.
These are basic mechanics, which are rules of the game, and some concepts.
*You can block fireballs in the air, but not super fireballs.
*You can block several hits of certain air attacks, such as air tatsumakis, and air-to-air normals, such as Chun's diagonal j. HK.
*You cannot air block grounded normals (when you are in the air and the opponent is grounded).
*You cannot block specials for the part they are grounded, such as Akuma's and Ken's mp and HP dragon punch in the first hit, but you can block the final hits. That is why some anti-air moves must be done late, such as HK flash kick.
*Some special throws only work against aired opponents and are not escapable unless (not sure if you can time a CC activation well to avoid it), such as Zangief's slam dunk, Dhalsim AA super, Rose's Soul throw.


If you block in the air, you can land with a tech roll.
===Throws and throw tech/escape===
====Throws====
Press [[File:F.png]] or [[File:B.png]]+ [[File:Mp.png]]/[[File:Hp.png]]/[[File:Mk.png]]/[[File:Hk.png]] to throw an opponent who is blocking. Not all characters can throw with these buttons. For example Rose and Sagat only have [[File:Mp.png]] and [[File:Hp.png]] throws.


====Tech-throw, a.k.a. throw escape ====
Basically, when thrown, you have a short window to escape and avoid most damage. Press any forward or back direction + any medium or strong P or K. Some throws do no damage at all when teched, for example, Rolento's [[File:K.png]] throw (Dan too, but because of a glitch). Some throws are "mash type" throws, and you can get more damage from them by repeatedly press the button.


===Alpha Counters===
A softened throw does very little damage except for vs. mash type throws. Mash type throw takes the entire damage of the first hit, but avoid the remaining ones. Example: Sagat.
Move text here as it is a basic mechanic.


===Tech rolls/quick stand===
Notes:
Move it up here
*Despite not being able to throw with any medium or strong buttons, any character can escape with these four buttons.
*If you play Super SF2 Turbo, there is something called "throw for the win" (TFW) because the damage for a throw is calculated before the game checks if there was an escape or not. This does not occur in the Alpha series.
*Some throws have such a long animation that they are punishable when softened/teched. More on it later.
 
===Combos===
As explained in the glossary, combos are sequences. There are a few types and differences between them.
====Combos, cancels links and meaty attacks====
*Combos: Combos allow you to attack in sequence. Once hit, your opponent cannot block it. The sequence of hits are usually executed by cancelling moves into specials or supers. You can also link normal moves.
*Cancels: Some normal moves can be cancelled into special moves on hit or block. When a move is cancelled, the recovery animation is switched to a new animation.
Note: Not all moves are cancelable. For instance, Ryu can cancel his c.HK, but not Chun-li. This balances the game and creates a character's individuality. Pay attention to these to understand how each character is supposed to be played. If it is there, it is because it has an important function. See each character for details.
*Links: Links are normals comboed into normals. Some are easy, such as Rose's c.lp, c.lk, c.mp, and some are hard, such as Chun's c.mp, c.mp.


===Throws and throw tech/escape===
====Meaty attacks===
Move it up here
*Meaty: Meaties are not combos, but "fat" attacks, in a sense of a longer duration that can be used for link combos. They are attacks of more than 1 frame duration on the active part, executed on a downed or landing opponent. Since all attacks will leave the opponent in a hitstun animation of fixed duration, hitting your opponent on your last active frame can create new combo opportunities, otherwise not doable if it hits on the first active frame, or just facilitate to combo a harder link.
To-do:
Add: Any character can escape with medium and strong buttons, but you need to input any forward or back direction and a medium or a strong button.  
Add: Throw softening: Some have no damage at all. Rolentos (Dan too b/c a glitch?)
Add: No throw for the win as in ST.
Add: Throw softening vs. mash type throws.


====Chain combos====
Chain combos are a special mechanic introduced in the Alpha series, but it is character specific in Alpha 2.
Gen and Guy can do much easier links as the buttons can be pressed much sooner with a larger room for error, cancelling the end of the current animation into the next move in sequence. Those are called chain combos.  As these sequences are specific, visit these characters sections for more information.


===Juggles ===
Move it up here


===Damage scaling - to be confirmed===
====Damage scaling====
In combos, every new move, not hit, in sequence, will have its total damage progressively reduced by 10% from the third hit and on.  
Since combos can be too powerful, every new move in sequence will have its total damage progressively reduced by 10% from the third hit and on.  
Examples supposing 100 damage for each hit.  
Examples supposing 100 damage for each hit.  
*2 hits: No scaling, 200 damage.
*2 hits: No scaling, 200 damage.
*3 hits: 3rd hit is scaled to 90% damage, total = 100 + 100 + 90 = 290 (instead of 300).
*3 hits: 3rd hit is scaled to 90% damage, total = 100 + 100 + 90 = 290 (instead of 300).
*4 hits: 3rd hit is scaled to 90%, 4th hit is scaled to 80%, total = 100 + 100 + 90 + 80 = 370 (instead of 400).
*4 hits: 3rd hit is scaled to 90%, 4th hit is scaled to 80%, total = 100 + 100 + 90 + 80 = 370 (instead of 400).
Do not confuse a move with hits. Some moves have multiple hits, such as Rolento's c. Mp.


Note: Someone, please, confirm the scaling in a consolized training mode. This was assumed from a general Capcom rule since ST or so. It is unconfirmed, but scaling certainly feels like this.  
Note: This was assumed from a general Capcom rule since ST or so. Must confirm in a consolized version.


--[[User:Raf|Raf]] ([[User talk:Raf|talk]]) 20:36, 29 October 2019 (MSK)
--[[User:Raf|Raf]] ([[User talk:Raf|talk]]) 20:36, 29 October 2019 (MSK)


===Pre round charge===
===Pre round charge===
You can charge special moves before a round begins. This works for supers sonic booms, Birdie's Bull horn headbutt and Gen's stance/style switch. You can execute these moves immediately after the round starts.
You can charge special moves before a round begins. This works for supers sonic booms, Birdie's Bull horn headbutt and Gen's stance/style switch. You can execute these moves immediately after the round starts.  
 
 
===Air block===
In the alpha series, you can block things in the air, but there are some rules and exceptions.
*You can block fireballs in the air, but not super fireballs.
*You can block air-to-air attacks, whether special or normals, such as air tatsumakis, and air-to-air normals, even if they are to hit multiple times, such as diagonal j. HK (2 hits).
*You cannot block grounded normals when you are in the air (the opponent is grounded).
*You cannot block specials for the part they are grounded. Although they may look grounded, they may be actually air-to-air. Examples: Akuma's and Ken's mp and HP dragon punch are 3 hits special moves. They grounded during the first hit, which you cannot block, but you can block the final 2 hits because they are aired, which falls into the air-to-air category. That is why some anti-air moves must be done very late and may seem hard to hit at first, because they have a long startup and a short duration of the grounded portion, such as Charlie's HK flash kick.
*Special throws only work against aired opponents such as Zangief's slam dunk, Dhalsim AA super, Rose's Soul throw. They are not escapable unless you can time a CC activation that leaves you invincible, but their bodies you also push you up a bit.
 
IMPORTANT: If you block something in the air, you can land with a tech roll.
 
 
----


===Negative edge===
In alpha two, you can execute special moves by releasing (negative) instead of pushing it, to give you extra leniency against execution mistakes. This concept is important later on advanced tactics.


==Advanced game mechanics==
For the sake of organization, not-so-basic game mechanics and concepts will be listed as special mechanics. They require either special conditions or need a special-like movement to be executed.


===Buttons priority & special move priority===
===Tech rolls/quick stand===
Move it up here
 
===Alpha counter(AC)===
Execute the inputs during the blockstun animation to do an alpha counter at the cost of 1 meter. The blocking animation is cancelled into a pre-determined attack, which has some invincibility and temporarily creates a freeze effect (about 16 frames, the same duration of a parry freeze in 3s, to be confirmed).
 
Knockdowns from ACs have a special animation and cannot be tech rolled except, by Sodom's Tengu Walking, and the opponent cannot get up with a reversal CC for 28f. Therefore, some ACs take you from a defensive position to an opportunity to turn the tables.
 
'''INPUT:'''
[[File:B.png]], [[File:D.png]]+[[File:P.png]] or [[File:K.png]].
 
 
====AC input leniency====
AC has little to none input leniency. You cannot AC from:
* [[File:Db.png]] to [[File:D.png]]
* [[File:B.png]] to [[File:Db.png]].
 
This is the reason why some people find it difficult to execute an AC, especially from low attacks.
(Now that I wrote this, I was reminded to check whether B to DF directions would work, but I do not think so). 
 
Piano and negative edge your buttons for best results (more below).
 
 
====Ac usages====
The animation, usefulness and effects vary per character. Some just leat you escape pressure and do some damage, while are very strong. Examples:
*ROSE: [[File:P.png]] AC allows damaging combos and great pushback with a fireball, while she switches sides with the opponent. If cornered, she will reverse the corner situation and may drain your health with a soul illusion set up even if you block, and she has unblockables. Plus, she regains meter during the combo she does afterwards.
*Ken/Sagat: [[File:K.png]] AC hits at middle height, being fast enough to work as both high and low ACs, and are far-reaching. As those are fireball characters, the strong fireball game makes these AC even more powerful.
*Sodom: [[File:K.png]] AC  Very far-reaching and knocks down close to you, so you can follow up with a damaging ambiguous cross up.
 
 
===Juggles===
Some moves have juggle properties. Some start a juggle state while some will hit someone in a juggle state and function as juggle follow-ups. Usually, juggles are pre-programmed moves to work as the developers imagined, but a few moves seem to be accidentally left there, such as Adon's grounded normal.
 
Juggle and juggle follow-ups list (some are follow-ups only):
*Ryu: j.mp
*Akuma: Tatsumaki, mp and HP shoryuken, air fireball.
*Ken: mp and HP shoryuken.
*Adon: s.lp, s.mp vs. aired opponents (useless, seems accidentally left there), rising Jaguar DP. Example: s.lp/mp into rising Jaguar as anti-air. Useless due to how bad the hitxboes of s. lp and s. mp are, but can be used if you cross under a jumping opponent.
*Rose: C.HP (first active hitbox) xx Soul Throw super (DP super).
*Sagat's Tiger Uppercut
*Guy: QCF+P throw, QCFx2 + P in corner. Tatsumaki is also technically a juggle but cannot be used as a follow-up.
*Chun-li: Upkicks, super upkicks, super puffball, [[File:D.png]]+[[File:Mk.png]] in the air, [[File:Df.png]]+[[File:Hk.png]] - follow up with super puffball or upkicks, charge [[File:B.png]],[[File:F.png]][[File:B.png]],[[File:F.png]]+[[File:K.png]] super - follow up with upkicks.
*Dan: Tatsumaki, Kouryuu rekka super (qcfx2 + k).
*All fireball supers*
 
Notes:
*Fireball supers only juggle for 3 hits, so, best if used only lvl 1. Ex.: Ryu's air-to-air mp, land, lvl 1 Shinkuu Hadouken.
*DP follow-ups will only hit twice for those hits that are aired, for instance, Akuma and Ken mp and HP dps, which normally hit 3 times against grounded opponents, will do 2 hits only at the right height, including during custom combos.
 
Tech rolls from juggles:
*After being hit by Akuma's [[File:Lk.png]] hurricane you can execute a tech roll motion (b, d/b, d + P) in the air and Akuma's follow-up dp will miss.
 
 
==Buttons Priority & Special Move priority==
When two buttons are pressed together, the system prioritizes light attacks before heavy, and punches before kicks. That priority will be sustained for special moves, and supers.
When two buttons are pressed together, the system prioritizes light attacks before heavy, and punches before kicks. That priority will be sustained for special moves, and supers.


It is important to understand button priority to take advantage of it in matches, as they provide you with some of the best outcomes automatically. For instance, this knowledge is very useful to escape tick throw attempts or for combos. It also means that if you do not "piano" right but end up pressing two buttons at the same time, the weaker button will have priority and may come off accidentally.
It is important to understand button priority to take advantage of it in matches, as they provide you with some of the best outcomes automatically. For instance, this knowledge is very useful to escape tick throw attempts or for combos. It also means that if you do not "piano" right but end up pressing two buttons at the same time, the weaker button will have priority and may come off accidentally.


 
=== Button Priority Rules ===
''BUTTON PRIORITY RULES''


*The priority of normal attacks in A2 DOES NOT FOLLOW A ZIG-ZAG pattern on an arcade stick as it is with other Capcom games. Don't ask me why. In A2 it is as follows, from top to lower priority: lp > mp > HP > lk > mk > HK.  
*The priority of normal attacks in A2 DOES NOT FOLLOW A ZIG-ZAG pattern on an arcade stick as it is with other Capcom games. Don't ask me why. In A2 it is as follows, from top to lower priority: lp > mp > HP > lk > mk > HK.  
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EXAMPLES AND APPLICATIONS
==== Button priority usages ====
 
Button priority are important but are diverse and character-specific. Here are some examples.
*Example 1: Mash c.lk+HK to poke your opponent while blocking to escape a tick throw or poke. If you are thrown, you will escape. If you mash c.lk+HP, HP will come out instead, as HP has priority over lk. You will not hit your opponent before you are thrown.  
*THROW ESCAPE: Mash c.lk+HK to poke your opponent while blocking to escape a tick throw or poke. If you are thrown, you will escape. If you mash c.lk+HP, HP will come out instead, as HP has priority over lk. You will not hit your opponent before you are thrown.  
*Example 2: An easy combo with Chun-li: J.mk -start pressing c.mp+mk (c.mp has priority over mk) xx mk legs (specials have priority over normals). Not a very useful combo, but an example of the system priority.
*AUTO-COMBO: An easy combo with Chun-li: J.mk -start pressing c.mp+mk (c.mp has priority over mk) xx mk legs (specials have priority over normals). Not a very useful combo, but an example of the system priority.
*Example 3: Sagat j.HK, c.mp xx HK tiger shot. If you do not release c.mp fast enough, you get a high tiger shot accidentally when you release mp (negative edge). Holding mp in this case would prevent this. The high tiger shot will cost you the match. In A2, since there is no zig zag priority, you cannot get around overlapping moves with say, qcf+mp+HK/lk.
*AVOID MISTAKE: Sagat j.HK, c.mp xx HK tiger shot. If you do not release c.mp fast enough, you get a high tiger shot accidentally when you release mp (negative edge). Holding mp in this case would prevent this. The high tiger shot will cost you the match. In A2, since there is no zig zag priority, you cannot get around overlapping moves with say, qcf+mp+HK/lk.
*Example 4: Ambiguous deep cross ups without hit confirm: With Ryu after knockdown, j.mk to hit deep, c.hp, qcf (or qcb, you are not sure what side you landed) + HP+HK. Since you do a qcf w/ P+K, you finish the combo with a Tatsumaki or a Hadouken. You don't need to know which side you landed or whether it hit or not during the j.mk or c.HP part. You just have to finish the sequence with a move that is whether safe on block or hard to punish. The game does not care about your initial intention, only the final result.  
*AUTO-COMBO AFTER AMBIGUOUS CROSS-UPS: Ambiguous deep cross ups without hit confirm: With Ryu after knockdown, j.mk to hit deep, c.hp, qcf (or qcb, you are not sure what side you landed) + HP+HK. Since you do a qcf w/ P+K, you finish the combo with a Tatsumaki or a Hadouken. You don't need to know which side you landed or whether it hit or not during the j.mk or c.HP part. You just have to finish the sequence with a move that is whether safe on block or hard to punish. The game does not care about your initial intention, only the final result.  


Notice how useful the priority of buttons is when special moves do not overlap (Ryu) vs. how bad it is when it overlaps for characters that cannot confirm hits into damaging combos (Sagat).
Notice how useful the priority of buttons is when special moves do not overlap (Ryu) vs. how bad it is when it overlaps for characters that cannot confirm hits into damaging combos (Sagat).
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===Juggles===
Some moves have juggle properties. Some start a juggle state while some will hit someone in a juggle state and function as juggle follow-ups. Usually, juggles are pre-programmed moves to work as the developers imagined, but a few moves seem to be accidentally left there, such as Adon's grounded normal.
Juggle and juggle follow-ups list (some are follow-ups only):
*Ryu: j.mp
*Akuma: Tatsumaki, mp and HP shoryuken, air fireball.
*Ken: mp and HP shoryuken.
*Adon: s.lp, s.mp vs. aired opponents (useless, seems accidentally left there), rising Jaguar DP. Example: s.lp/mp into rising Jaguar as anti-air. Useless due to how bad the hitxboes of s. lp and s. mp are, but can be used if you cross under a jumping opponent.
*Rose: C.HP (first active hitbox) xx Soul Throw super (DP super).
*Sagat's Tiger Uppercut
*Guy: QCF+P throw, QCFx2 + P in corner. Tatsumaki is also technically a juggle but cannot be used as a follow-up.
*Chun-li: Upkicks, super upkicks, super puffball, [[File:D.png]]+[[File:Mk.png]] in the air, [[File:Df.png]]+[[File:Hk.png]] - follow up with super puffball or upkicks, charge [[File:B.png]],[[File:F.png]][[File:B.png]],[[File:F.png]]+[[File:K.png]] super - follow up with upkicks.
*Dan: Tatsumaki, Kouryuu rekka super (qcfx2 + k).
*All fireball supers*
Notes:
*Fireball supers only juggle for 3 hits, so, best if used only lvl 1. Ex.: Ryu's air-to-air mp, land, lvl 1 shinku hadouken.
*DP follow-ups will only hit twice for those hits that are aired, for instance, Akuma and Ken mp and HP dps, which normally hit 3 times against grounded opponents, will do 2 hits only at the right height, including during custom combos.
Tech rolls from juggles:
*After being hit by Akuma's [[File:Lk.png]] hurricane you can execute a tech roll motion (b, d/b, d + P) in the air and Akuma's follow-up dp will miss.
===Alpha counter(AC)===
Execute the inputs during the blockstun animation to do an alpha counter at the cost of 1 meter. The blocking animation is cancelled into a pre-determined attack, which has some invincibility and temporarily creates a freeze effect (about 16 frames, the same duration of a parry freeze in 3s, to be confirmed).
Knockdowns from ACs have a special animation and cannot be tech rolled except, by Sodom's Tengu Walking, and the opponent cannot get up with a reversal CC for 28f. Therefore, some ACs take you from a defensive position to an opportunity to turn the tables.
'''INPUT:'''
[[File:B.png]], [[File:D.png]]+[[File:P.png]] or [[File:K.png]].
'''AC INPUT LENIENCY'''
AC has little to none input leniency. You cannot AC from:
* [[File:Db.png]] to [[File:D.png]]
* [[File:B.png]] to [[File:Db.png]].
This is the reason why some people find it difficult to execute an AC, especially from low attacks.
(Now that I wrote this, I was reminded to check whether B to DF directions would work, but I do not think so). 


Piano and negative edge your buttons for best results (more below).




'''AC USAGES'''


The animation, usefulness and effects vary per character. Some are very strong. Two examples:
*ROSE: [[File:P.png]] AC allows damaging combos and great pushback with a fireball, while she switches sides with the opponent. If cornered, she will reverse the corner situation and may drain your health with a soul illusion set up even if you block, and she has unblockables. Plus, she regains meter during the combo she does afterwards.
*Ken/Sagat: [[File:K.png]] AC hits at middle height, being fast enough to work as both high and low ACs, and are far-reaching. As those are fireball characters, the strong fireball game makes these AC even more powerful.
*Sodom: [[File:K.png]] AC  Very far-reaching and knocks down close to you, so you can follow up with a damaging ambiguous cross up.




Line 470: Line 512:
Rose- c.fp xx mp or hp reflect
Rose- c.fp xx mp or hp reflect
Charlie- c.mp xx sonic boom
Charlie- c.mp xx sonic boom
===Throw===
[[File:F.png]] or [[File:B.png]]+ [[File:Mp.png]]/[[File:Hp.png]]/[[File:Mk.png]]/[[File:Hk.png]]. Not all characters can throw with all buttons, for example Rose and Sagat only have [[File:P.png]] throws.


===Throw juggles===
===Throw juggles===
Line 478: Line 517:
<youtube>uakBZHvr8q8</youtube>
<youtube>uakBZHvr8q8</youtube>


===Tech-throw, a.k.a. throw escape ===
===List of punishable throws when teched==
Basically, when thrown, you have a slight window to reverse by throwing and avoid most damage from the throw. Press any forward and back direction + any medium or strong P or K. Some throws do no damage at all when teched, for example Rolento's [[File:K.png]] throw. Some throws are punishable when softened/tech.
 
'''List of punishable throws when teched:'''
* In progress - to be populated.
* In progress - to be populated.


Line 650: Line 686:
== Tier List ==
== Tier List ==


'''1996 USA:'''<br>
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! '''1996 USA'''
! '''1996 Japan'''
! '''2018 - Debatable Modern Tier List'''
|-
|
 
1) Ken<br>
1) Ken<br>
2) Chun-Li<br>
2) Chun-Li<br>
Line 669: Line 712:
17) Birdie<br>
17) Birdie<br>
18) Dan<br>
18) Dan<br>
<br>




'''1996 Japan:'''<br>
 
|
 
1) Chun-Li<br>
1) Chun-Li<br>
2) Charlie<br>
2) Charlie<br>
Line 691: Line 735:
17) Gen<br>
17) Gen<br>
18) Dan<br>
18) Dan<br>
<br>
 
<br>
 
''' "Highly debatable" Modern Tier List (2018):'''<br>
|
 
''Top Tier''<br>
''Top Tier''<br>
Chun-Li<br>
Chun-Li<br>
Line 719: Line 764:
Dan<br>
Dan<br>
Birdie<br>
Birdie<br>
|}




Line 750: Line 798:
* Playstation 4
* Playstation 4
* Xbox One
* Xbox One
Note: The game has a "body pushbox" that, when touching the corner, will not allow a switch sides unless it projects the attacker outside the screen and only works on the 2P/right corner. The only move I know of that can cause this effect is Chun's df+HK, which aligns the body perfectly in line with the downed character body push box, so the hitbox will be aligned behind the hurtbox of an opponent standing up. This does not work on the 1P corner, suggesting there is a "move x+1 when this situation occurs" somewhere in the code.
--[[User:Raf|Raf]] ([[User talk:Raf|talk]]) 21:34, 30 October 2019 (MSK)


==Glitches & oddities==
==Glitches & oddities==

Revision as of 15:33, 9 November 2019

Title Screen

Introduction

Street Fighter Alpha 2, known as Street Fighter Zero 2 in Japan, Asia, South America, and Spain, is a 1996 fighting game originally released for the CPS II arcade hardware by Capcom. The game is a sequel to Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams, which is itself a prequel to the Street Fighter II series in terms of plot and setting.

The game featured a number of improvements over the original, such as new endings, stages, sound, animations moves and gameplay systems. Some character's endings were retconned from the original, overwriting their prior story (i.e. Akuma's), or tweaked.

All thirteen characters from the original Alpha return, with previously secret characters M. Bison, Akuma, and Dan now part of the immediate roster. Five additional characters are featured, extending the selectable roster to 18. The new characters include Zangief and Dhalsim from Street Fighter II; Gen from the original Street Fighter; Rolento from Final Fight; and Sakura, a new character who is a schoolgirl that idolizes Ryu and emulates his fighting techniques.

Street Fighter Alpha 2 also features an alternate version of Chun-Li in her Street Fighter II outfit as a hidden character, as well as Shin Akuma, a more powerful version of Akuma who appears as a secret computer-controlled opponent in the single-player mode. The North American version of the arcade game also features three additional hidden characters who were not in the Japanese version: Evil Ryu, an alternate version of Ryu who uses the same power as Akuma; as well as extra versions of Zangief and Dhalsim who play like their counterparts from Street Fighter II: Champion Edition, including the omission of gameplay features such as super moves and air blocking.

--Scanman (talk) 10:00, 20 February 2019 (MSK)


The Characters

Ryu
Adon
Chun-Li
Guy
Ken
Dhalsim
Gen
Sakura
Rolento
Zangief
Charlie
Birdie
Rose
Sodom
Sagat
Evil Ryu
Akuma
M. Bison
Dan

--Scanman (talk) 10:19, 20 February 2019 (MSK)

Notations

Inputs and special commands

Expressed in the form: Notation - Move - Symbol

Single inputs Multiple inputs and special commands
  • F - Move forward - F.png
  • B - Move Backward/Block - B.png
  • U - Jump/Up - U.png
  • D - Crouch/Down - D.png
  • Note: Directions can be combined, such as crouch/block, or diagonal jump.


  • LP - Light/Jab Punch - Lp.png
  • MP - Medium/Strong Punch - Mp.png
  • HP - Heavy//Fierce Punch - Hp.png
  • P - Any punch - P.png
  • LK - Light/Short Kick - Lk.png
  • MK - Medium/Forward Kick - Mk.png
  • HK - Heavy/Roundhouse Kick - Hk.png
  • K - Any kick - K.png
  • 3P or PPP - P.pngP.pngP.png - All three punches
  • 3K or KKK - K.pngK.pngK.png - All three kicks
  • QCF - Quarter circle forward - Qcf.png
  • QCB - Quarter circle backward - Qcb.png
  • HCF - Half circle forward - Hcf.png
  • HCB - Half circle backward - Hcb.png
  • DP or SRK - Dragon punch/Shoryuken - Dp.png
  • FB - Fireball - Your character fireball motion or sometimes the synonim of quarter circle forward - Qcf.png
  • 360/FC - Full circle - 360.png
  • 720 - N/A - 360.png 360.png
  • Charge - Hold for a bit - Hold the stick in either B.png or D.png (Or both- Db.png) then complete the move (i.e., move to F.png).

Video: Basic gameplay


Combos and gameplay notations

  • j., n., nj. c., sj - diagonal jump, neutral position, neutral jump (up), crouching, super jump (Rolento only), respectively.
  • Plus symbol (+) - Press the button together
  • X symbol (x or xx) - Cancel the previous move before the end of animation into a new one.
  • [ ] x n - A bracket refers to a sequence that is repeated "n" times. Example: "CC, c.HK, qcb+HK, [mp srk]x3, HP shoryuken."
  • Comma sign (,) - Press one button after the other in sequence, e.g.: Raging demon, lp, lp, f, lk, HP (or lp x2, f, lk, HP), or linking combos (e.g.: c.lp, c.lk, c.mp).
  • Piano: Refers to rolling your fingers through an arcade stick as if the buttons were piano keys to increase your chances of pressing a button at the right time.
  • Negative edge: Special command moves can be executed by releasing, instead of pushing, a button.


--Scanman (talk) 10:19, 20 February 2019 (MSK)

Glossary

These are common terminologies used in Alpha 2 and other games. Additional terminology will be explained in each specific session.

Normal, unique normals, special and super moves

Aside from walking, jumping and blocking, we call attacks by these names.

  • Normals: Moves are moves you can input together with directions.
  • Unique normals: Special commands, usually with a special function, such as Rose's slide Df.png + Mk.png, Ryu's overhead F.png + Mp.png, and Chun's neck kick File:PDf.png + Hk.png.
  • Special moves: A sequence that must be done fast and precisely enough to be executed. Example: Qcf.png + P.png is the "hadouken."
  • Super moves: Very damaging attacks that cost meter. Example: Qcf.png, Qcf.png + P.png in the Shinkuu Hadouken. They are done in 1, 2 or 3 levels, or doable only with 3 stocks.
    • Press 1, 2 or 3 punches or kicks to use 1, 2 or 3 stocks of your meter, respectively. Other moves such as Akuma's Raging Demon require 3 stocks to be executed.

Frames, startup, duration and recovery

  • Frame: One image in a movie roll as in the old days. Alpha 2 runs at 60 frames per second. That means 60 images will be shown in 1 second, although the game is capturing inputs at a higher frequency. Whatever you do now will show up right on the screen on the next 1/60 of a second. Therefore, in games, we count the duration of things in frames.
  • Startup: The start of a move, before it hits.
  • Duration: The portion of a move that can hit. Light attacks usually lasts of 1 or 2 frames, harder and special attacks last longe. For instance, a fireball duration lasts for as long as it exists.
  • Recovery: At the expense of trying to attack, there is a period of time where you are recovering from that move, and your guard will be open, unless you cancel the previous attack into a new one.

Blockstun and hitstun

  • Blockstun and hitstun - "Stuns" are pauses. During a hit or block, the game freezes both characters for 8 frames (or 7 for hit according to the note below). This notion will be very important when discussing alpha counter denial/reversal.

Apparently, for alpha 2 there is an important change in frame data: for all grounded normals, hitstun is 1 frame faster (7f) than blockstun (8f).

Counter hit

A move attempt that takes a "counter hit" during its start or recovery animation by another move will cause a counter hit. It gives 10% additional damage and 2 extra frames of hitstun (10f), allowing bigger combos and hit confirmations. Two frames are not too much too see, but you may try a follow up even if you don't see if it worked.

Combos

Combos allow you to attack in sequence. Once hit, your opponent cannot block it. The sequence of hits are usually executed by cancelling moves into specials or supers. You can also link normal moves.

Negative edge & piano

In alpha 2, you can execute special moves by releasing (negative) instead of pushing it, to give you extra leniency against execution mistakes. This concept is important later on in advanced tactics.

A piano input is just rolling your fingers in an arcade stick as in piano keys, increasing your chance of getting a move right.

Other terminology

Specific terminology that pertains to some advanced gameplay, such as juggle, will be explained when required.


--Raf (talk) 22:33, 9 November 2019 (MSK)


Basic Game Mechanics

These are basic mechanics, which are rules of the game, and some concepts.

Throws and throw tech/escape

Throws

Press F.png or B.png+ Mp.png/Hp.png/Mk.png/Hk.png to throw an opponent who is blocking. Not all characters can throw with these buttons. For example Rose and Sagat only have Mp.png and Hp.png throws.

Tech-throw, a.k.a. throw escape

Basically, when thrown, you have a short window to escape and avoid most damage. Press any forward or back direction + any medium or strong P or K. Some throws do no damage at all when teched, for example, Rolento's K.png throw (Dan too, but because of a glitch). Some throws are "mash type" throws, and you can get more damage from them by repeatedly press the button.

A softened throw does very little damage except for vs. mash type throws. Mash type throw takes the entire damage of the first hit, but avoid the remaining ones. Example: Sagat.

Notes:

  • Despite not being able to throw with any medium or strong buttons, any character can escape with these four buttons.
  • If you play Super SF2 Turbo, there is something called "throw for the win" (TFW) because the damage for a throw is calculated before the game checks if there was an escape or not. This does not occur in the Alpha series.
  • Some throws have such a long animation that they are punishable when softened/teched. More on it later.

Combos

As explained in the glossary, combos are sequences. There are a few types and differences between them.

Combos, cancels links and meaty attacks

  • Combos: Combos allow you to attack in sequence. Once hit, your opponent cannot block it. The sequence of hits are usually executed by cancelling moves into specials or supers. You can also link normal moves.
  • Cancels: Some normal moves can be cancelled into special moves on hit or block. When a move is cancelled, the recovery animation is switched to a new animation.

Note: Not all moves are cancelable. For instance, Ryu can cancel his c.HK, but not Chun-li. This balances the game and creates a character's individuality. Pay attention to these to understand how each character is supposed to be played. If it is there, it is because it has an important function. See each character for details.

  • Links: Links are normals comboed into normals. Some are easy, such as Rose's c.lp, c.lk, c.mp, and some are hard, such as Chun's c.mp, c.mp.

=Meaty attacks

  • Meaty: Meaties are not combos, but "fat" attacks, in a sense of a longer duration that can be used for link combos. They are attacks of more than 1 frame duration on the active part, executed on a downed or landing opponent. Since all attacks will leave the opponent in a hitstun animation of fixed duration, hitting your opponent on your last active frame can create new combo opportunities, otherwise not doable if it hits on the first active frame, or just facilitate to combo a harder link.

Chain combos

Chain combos are a special mechanic introduced in the Alpha series, but it is character specific in Alpha 2. Gen and Guy can do much easier links as the buttons can be pressed much sooner with a larger room for error, cancelling the end of the current animation into the next move in sequence. Those are called chain combos. As these sequences are specific, visit these characters sections for more information.


Damage scaling

Since combos can be too powerful, every new move in sequence will have its total damage progressively reduced by 10% from the third hit and on. Examples supposing 100 damage for each hit.

  • 2 hits: No scaling, 200 damage.
  • 3 hits: 3rd hit is scaled to 90% damage, total = 100 + 100 + 90 = 290 (instead of 300).
  • 4 hits: 3rd hit is scaled to 90%, 4th hit is scaled to 80%, total = 100 + 100 + 90 + 80 = 370 (instead of 400).

Do not confuse a move with hits. Some moves have multiple hits, such as Rolento's c. Mp.

Note: This was assumed from a general Capcom rule since ST or so. Must confirm in a consolized version.

--Raf (talk) 20:36, 29 October 2019 (MSK)


Pre round charge

You can charge special moves before a round begins. This works for supers sonic booms, Birdie's Bull horn headbutt and Gen's stance/style switch. You can execute these moves immediately after the round starts.


Air block

In the alpha series, you can block things in the air, but there are some rules and exceptions.

  • You can block fireballs in the air, but not super fireballs.
  • You can block air-to-air attacks, whether special or normals, such as air tatsumakis, and air-to-air normals, even if they are to hit multiple times, such as diagonal j. HK (2 hits).
  • You cannot block grounded normals when you are in the air (the opponent is grounded).
  • You cannot block specials for the part they are grounded. Although they may look grounded, they may be actually air-to-air. Examples: Akuma's and Ken's mp and HP dragon punch are 3 hits special moves. They grounded during the first hit, which you cannot block, but you can block the final 2 hits because they are aired, which falls into the air-to-air category. That is why some anti-air moves must be done very late and may seem hard to hit at first, because they have a long startup and a short duration of the grounded portion, such as Charlie's HK flash kick.
  • Special throws only work against aired opponents such as Zangief's slam dunk, Dhalsim AA super, Rose's Soul throw. They are not escapable unless you can time a CC activation that leaves you invincible, but their bodies you also push you up a bit.

IMPORTANT: If you block something in the air, you can land with a tech roll.




Advanced game mechanics

For the sake of organization, not-so-basic game mechanics and concepts will be listed as special mechanics. They require either special conditions or need a special-like movement to be executed.

Tech rolls/quick stand

Move it up here

Alpha counter(AC)

Execute the inputs during the blockstun animation to do an alpha counter at the cost of 1 meter. The blocking animation is cancelled into a pre-determined attack, which has some invincibility and temporarily creates a freeze effect (about 16 frames, the same duration of a parry freeze in 3s, to be confirmed).

Knockdowns from ACs have a special animation and cannot be tech rolled except, by Sodom's Tengu Walking, and the opponent cannot get up with a reversal CC for 28f. Therefore, some ACs take you from a defensive position to an opportunity to turn the tables.

INPUT: B.png, D.png+P.png or K.png.


AC input leniency

AC has little to none input leniency. You cannot AC from:

  • Db.png to D.png
  • B.png to Db.png.

This is the reason why some people find it difficult to execute an AC, especially from low attacks. (Now that I wrote this, I was reminded to check whether B to DF directions would work, but I do not think so).

Piano and negative edge your buttons for best results (more below).


Ac usages

The animation, usefulness and effects vary per character. Some just leat you escape pressure and do some damage, while are very strong. Examples:

  • ROSE: P.png AC allows damaging combos and great pushback with a fireball, while she switches sides with the opponent. If cornered, she will reverse the corner situation and may drain your health with a soul illusion set up even if you block, and she has unblockables. Plus, she regains meter during the combo she does afterwards.
  • Ken/Sagat: K.png AC hits at middle height, being fast enough to work as both high and low ACs, and are far-reaching. As those are fireball characters, the strong fireball game makes these AC even more powerful.
  • Sodom: K.png AC Very far-reaching and knocks down close to you, so you can follow up with a damaging ambiguous cross up.


Juggles

Some moves have juggle properties. Some start a juggle state while some will hit someone in a juggle state and function as juggle follow-ups. Usually, juggles are pre-programmed moves to work as the developers imagined, but a few moves seem to be accidentally left there, such as Adon's grounded normal.

Juggle and juggle follow-ups list (some are follow-ups only):

  • Ryu: j.mp
  • Akuma: Tatsumaki, mp and HP shoryuken, air fireball.
  • Ken: mp and HP shoryuken.
  • Adon: s.lp, s.mp vs. aired opponents (useless, seems accidentally left there), rising Jaguar DP. Example: s.lp/mp into rising Jaguar as anti-air. Useless due to how bad the hitxboes of s. lp and s. mp are, but can be used if you cross under a jumping opponent.
  • Rose: C.HP (first active hitbox) xx Soul Throw super (DP super).
  • Sagat's Tiger Uppercut
  • Guy: QCF+P throw, QCFx2 + P in corner. Tatsumaki is also technically a juggle but cannot be used as a follow-up.
  • Chun-li: Upkicks, super upkicks, super puffball, D.png+Mk.png in the air, Df.png+Hk.png - follow up with super puffball or upkicks, charge B.png,F.pngB.png,F.png+K.png super - follow up with upkicks.
  • Dan: Tatsumaki, Kouryuu rekka super (qcfx2 + k).
  • All fireball supers*

Notes:

  • Fireball supers only juggle for 3 hits, so, best if used only lvl 1. Ex.: Ryu's air-to-air mp, land, lvl 1 Shinkuu Hadouken.
  • DP follow-ups will only hit twice for those hits that are aired, for instance, Akuma and Ken mp and HP dps, which normally hit 3 times against grounded opponents, will do 2 hits only at the right height, including during custom combos.

Tech rolls from juggles:

  • After being hit by Akuma's Lk.png hurricane you can execute a tech roll motion (b, d/b, d + P) in the air and Akuma's follow-up dp will miss.


Buttons Priority & Special Move priority

When two buttons are pressed together, the system prioritizes light attacks before heavy, and punches before kicks. That priority will be sustained for special moves, and supers.

It is important to understand button priority to take advantage of it in matches, as they provide you with some of the best outcomes automatically. For instance, this knowledge is very useful to escape tick throw attempts or for combos. It also means that if you do not "piano" right but end up pressing two buttons at the same time, the weaker button will have priority and may come off accidentally.

Button Priority Rules

  • The priority of normal attacks in A2 DOES NOT FOLLOW A ZIG-ZAG pattern on an arcade stick as it is with other Capcom games. Don't ask me why. In A2 it is as follows, from top to lower priority: lp > mp > HP > lk > mk > HK.
  • Special attacks take this order: super moves > special moves > normals.
  • Buttons have priority over unique normals, so f+lp+mp with Ryu will give you a light punch instead of the overhead.

Throws are special hitboxes. If it appears and the opponent is grounded and within range, it will throw no matter what, as it has priority over normals, with a few exceptions, discussed later.


Button priority usages

Button priority are important but are diverse and character-specific. Here are some examples.

  • THROW ESCAPE: Mash c.lk+HK to poke your opponent while blocking to escape a tick throw or poke. If you are thrown, you will escape. If you mash c.lk+HP, HP will come out instead, as HP has priority over lk. You will not hit your opponent before you are thrown.
  • AUTO-COMBO: An easy combo with Chun-li: J.mk -start pressing c.mp+mk (c.mp has priority over mk) xx mk legs (specials have priority over normals). Not a very useful combo, but an example of the system priority.
  • AVOID MISTAKE: Sagat j.HK, c.mp xx HK tiger shot. If you do not release c.mp fast enough, you get a high tiger shot accidentally when you release mp (negative edge). Holding mp in this case would prevent this. The high tiger shot will cost you the match. In A2, since there is no zig zag priority, you cannot get around overlapping moves with say, qcf+mp+HK/lk.
  • AUTO-COMBO AFTER AMBIGUOUS CROSS-UPS: Ambiguous deep cross ups without hit confirm: With Ryu after knockdown, j.mk to hit deep, c.hp, qcf (or qcb, you are not sure what side you landed) + HP+HK. Since you do a qcf w/ P+K, you finish the combo with a Tatsumaki or a Hadouken. You don't need to know which side you landed or whether it hit or not during the j.mk or c.HP part. You just have to finish the sequence with a move that is whether safe on block or hard to punish. The game does not care about your initial intention, only the final result.

Notice how useful the priority of buttons is when special moves do not overlap (Ryu) vs. how bad it is when it overlaps for characters that cannot confirm hits into damaging combos (Sagat).


SPECIAL/UNIQUE NORMALS & THROWS

As mentioned, special normals, also known as unique normals or unique attacks, such as Ryu's f+mk will not have the priority over the normal moves. In this game, they are just normal moves. Throws are just a hitbox that shows up early a d briefly during the startup of some medium and hard buttons, so with Ryu, f+mp in the right distance will get a throw, not an overhead. The overhead animations starts, but is then switched to a throw. Finally if Ryu press f + lp+mp at throw range, the lp will come out, and not a throw, because, again, the mp throw is a hitbox of the mp. It must be executed to actually exist. There is no "Kara lp throw" or "Kara priority." If the moves are not executed perfectly together, whatever came first will be executed.

SPECIAL MOVES

Some moves have priority over other moves and may require strict timing or off accidentally. Shoryukens have the priority over fireballs. Example: Ryu tries to walk forward, c.mk xx hadouken, but accidentally gets a shoryuken instead, as the game accepts f,qcf+P as a dragon punch. The solution is waiting a bit before pressing the button so that the first "forward" inputted is out of a watched a list of stored inputs the game keeps for a period to define whether or not a special move was executed.

SUPER MOVES

Obviously, when you do two circle motions and punch, the game will accept and prioritize the two circular motions instead of the last one, provided it is done within a time limit. Even if there are some wrong directions in-between, the super will be executed. E.g, d, df, f, b, db, d, df, P, f - A super such as shinkuu hadouken will be executed because the two qcf required are withing this window, and the game has some leniency for when you press the button at before the end of motion, which is also executed when released.

THROWS VS. THROWS

There is no priority in throws vs. throws. When you both throw at the same time, the result of who wins is apparently random, with a guaranteed throw softening. Since can escape/soften throws by inputting any a medium and strong button with a back or forward direction, but the throw escape will occur even if you press it with another button.


--Raf (talk) 08:26, 29 October 2019 (MSK)

Custom Combo (CC)

Known in Japan by Oricom, as in "Original Combo," CC plays a huge part in the game. It allows you to do multiple normal or special moves in a row, cancelling its recovery animation. The higher the level, the longer invincibility and duration you get. Generally for a normal-sized character, at levels 2 and 3 you can go through a fireball. You cannot block, jump or walk back in CC state.

CC is a "super state," invincible at the initial frames after the freeze animation that automatically moves your character forward, non-stop, with a faster-than-normal walk speed.


CC DAMAGE CHANGES & SCALING

In CC, damage for normal moves are reduced greatly, but damage for special moves are maintained. Moves on block barely do any damage. Moves on hit are scaled normally. This general rule instead of careful tailoring allowed Rolento's attacks in super jump, weirdly considered special move, to do an absurd amount of damage (90% or so on level 3) with just a few hits.


BROKEN RULES

Custom combos temporarily break some rules of the game, while itself is especially limited by a 28f special rule (more on it later). The direction lock may cause some oddities, such as forcing you to block using the wrong direction. If you don't learn about it, it may cost you dearly. The two main glitches it causes is the block inversion (bad to who activated) and the high knockdown ("HKD", good to who activated). Some other situations will also force you to block or reversal inverted. More on it later.

Four important rules CC changes:

  • 1) how fast you need to press repeated attacks of the same strength is alleviated, allowing you to easily start HK legs with Chun-li, and,
  • 2) Charge time for everything is disregarded, so you can do standing flash kicks and sonic booms moving forward,
  • 3) Exclusively to Birdie, "turn-around" headbutt charge time is lowered to an unknown amount allowing you to "Final, Final, Final, Final..." headbutts for massive damage,
  • 4) Block stun and hit stun into command throws are allowed, allowing Zangief to end combos or block strings with inescapable SPDs.


ACTIVATION INPUT

  • Press at least 2 punches and 1 kick (P.png+P.png+K.png) or 2 kicks and 1 punch (K.png+K.png+P.png) when you have at least 1 super meter stock.

The game has very little leniency for buttons to be pressed together, so press 3P+K, or PP+KK if you are using an arcade stick. On emulators, Fightcade and GGPO, you can bind PPP+KKK to one button, but currently (2019), all main tournaments that are kept by aficionados of the fighting game community (props to you, heros!) are played on CPS2 original boards, so there is no easy CC and you may miss some activations, so try to practice it as it will be on real tournaments. Also, remember the button priorities as a safeguard to use custom as a free out of jail card during block strings, to get a c.lp/s.lp/CC/throw escape "option select" since you can escape a throw by inputting a CC. Home versions accept 8 buttons and CC binds, so you can bind CC to one button and KKK to the other and become an absolute monster with Zangief.


INVINCIBILITY DURATION

  • Level 1: 3 frames
  • Level 2: 5 frames
  • Level 3: 9 frames (i.e., huge).

CC invincibility works against throws. This is very important to know when playing against Sodom and Zangief. The activation of a CC occurs on the next frame after you start it, vs jumping away from a throw, which takes 4 frames on the pre-jumping frames, making it a better option to escape throws.


--Raf (talk) 20:36, 29 October 2019 (MSK)


INVINCIBILITY APPLICATIONS

Invincibility on CC can be used to:

  • Blow through tick throws
  • Blow through fireballs
  • Avoid anti-airs, especially useful against characters with no good anti-airs, so you can jump a lot and be random against them, and they will never know when to block a string, AC, or anti-air, or block a confusing CC activation.
  • Save yourself from chip death from super
  • Throw escapes - your hitboxes disappear entirely
  • Anti-air when grounded
  • Air-to-air disputes
  • Counter CC - a CC activated immediately after your opponent activates a CC.


Other CC applications

  • Run away, move faster and take positional advantage (Zangief), chase someone (e.g: a runaway air tatsumaki or a runaway CC)
  • Fill the screen with fireballs for some chip damage (barely does damage, except for Akuma's Shakunetsu)
  • Use a fireball and move faster behind it to get closer
  • Punish whiffs in the absence of faster moves
  • Maximize damage from a good opportunity at a maximum distance (i.e., Valle CC)

Basically, having one meter stored allows you to take better control of the match. At a high level, it may considerably change footsies.

Due to its importance, CC will have a session dedicated to it.

Custom combo strategies

Valle CC

Valle CC is a low, unblockable custom combo.

A bit of history: Valle CC got this name because of the historical B3 (Battle By the Bay) tournament that later became the Evolution series. Alex Valle won the B3 in the finals against John Choi (Ryu vs Ken, then Sagat vs Ken), taking advantage of this CC many times during the tournament. The players and organizers (John Choi, Tom Canon, Jeff Schaeffer) later partnered with Capcom to release a magazine with a series of tips and tricks for SF Alpha 2. This was a huge milestone for fighting games in the Americas, and one important step for the fighting games as esports. GGPO later started in it's alpha stage with SF alpha 2, which was, again, the introduction of a rollback-based net code that once more changed the future of fighting games.

HOW IT WORKS

  • If the opponent is standing, when you activate a custom combo, the opponent cannot block low for a few frames (8-10, see below). This means it is 100% unblockable into any low move (crouching kicks) CC you want, provided it is faster than this window and you time it right.
    • It is especially useful for Ryu, Ken, Akuma, Zangief and Rose that have far-reaching tripping c. HK (c. roundhouse).

Notice how this change footsies considerably. From a maximum distance, you are forced to block low constantly and cannot move forward, as you risk taking too much damage, and then have to submit to the fireball game, where the list of characters above excel at. Notice also that they can risk it and be safe if it fails.

  • Some say this occurs because you cannot change blocking direction for as long as 8-10 frames (needs confirmation) after a CC is popped. If true, this means that, in theory, there are unblockables for jump-ins as well.

Blowout CC

When around point blank to your opponent, when cc is activated and the opponent did any normal attack or was not blocking, they go into a stun animation. This allows you to hit them with pretty much anything for free.

Counter CC

Basically, your opponent does a cc, and you cc right back. This isnt easy but not impossible, allowing you to counter Valle ccs and blowouts.

Air super CC glitch

As a curiosity, when in CC mode, as long as you have the meter, you can perform your air super if in the air. Akuma can super fireball kara-cancelled from a F.png+Mk.png, which is very impractical, but it exists.


Custom combo 28f limitation

You cannot wake up and activate a custom combo in the following situations for up to 28 frames (a lot).

  • After you are thrown
  • After you soften a throw
  • After being alpha countered

This greatly limits the wake-up options of some characters, especially those who lack good reversals or depend on the super meter, like Dhalsim, Bison, Birdie, Rose, and so on.

--Raf (talk) 21:05, 29 October 2019 (MSK)





Advanced Alpha counter strategies

Alpha counter reversal

Delay any safe normal into any invincible move that will beat an alpha counter but will not come out unless the normal was ac'd. Ex. Shoto's cr.Hp.png, attempt to cancel it into a shoryuken right after cancel frame window is up. If the opponent acs, your cr.Hp.png will be on the active frames since the acs freeze it temporarily and you will uppercut them. Ryu/Ken/Akuma - As mentioned before c.fp, s.mp, c.mp, or c.mk, cancelled late into DP. Any of these are easy and probably the most basic and most seen AC reversals. In Akuma’s case you can AC-reversal with teleport and be really safe while baiting their AC in the process.

Adon - Only really has c.mp into RH DP Chun - s.mp, c.mp, c.mk into qcb + k overhead special. Overhead has a good bit of invincibility so it beats a lot of ACs but not everything. Guy - A bit iffy. I’d just use c.mp or really late c.mk (2nd hit) into MK hurricane but it can lose to a lot of things. If you wanna burn meter c.mp/c.mk into qcf + P x2 Super should beat most ACs. Dhalsim - Can bait with teleport just like Akuma, other than that not too much. Wouldn’t even use a super to AC reversal, better off saving the meter. Gen - Probably the only character I don’t have much experience with AC reversals. I’d assume c.mp, c.mk into RH DP would work fine. Sakura - Not a lot she can do since her shoryuken is too slow startup. You either have to AC reversal with a super or just eat the AC. Use s.mp or c.mp. Rolento - Mainly c.mk into qcb + jab. Doesn’t escape everything but it’s pretty nice. Gief - C.lk or d/b c.mk into KKK lariat. Will beat pretty much anything :party: Birdie - c.mp into turn punch? (And cancel into super, but not worth it) Rose- c.fp to super fireball or lvl 3 grab Sodom - s.mp, s.mk, c.fp into qcf + p x2 super Sagat - Mainly just c.mp into fierce DP. use s.mp for late cancel if they can’t duck it Bison - c.mk or c.mp into teleport. Dan - c.mp, c.mk, or c.fp into a white DP, or just a super. Sim- b+mp or fp to super or teleport, but best save the meter unless you have a big lead or it will kill them. Gen- pretty much anything, but best it s.fp to dp or dizzy super/lvl 2 rush. Lk dp is really good and safe. Charlie- c.mp to mk FK Bison- anything to immediate teleport

Negative edge AC

Have you ever had that feeling that an AC came out for you when you did not do anything? That is probably because it was done when you released a button.

Since you have to input it fast and finish with DOWN, which is not a defensive position, an AC is somehow risky, much more than a 3rd strike parry that is active for 10 frames. Therefore, if you hold any P and K, you can execute low-risk AC attempts in negative edge (releasing the button) instead of preemptively press a button and release your defense.

Examples:

  • Hold several P and K after a knockdown to wakeup doing an AC with low risk. Pres b,d/b, and finish the command with d/b if you need.
  • During footsies, hold the kicks button held down, walk forward, execute a d, d/b, d motion and release the button, or press it again to counter a whiff poke attempt.
  • You can also do a far empty jump ending with b, d/b, d + P/K to AC a trip guard attempt.

Also, remember the BUTTON PRIORITY. You can input c. 3K during footsies to get a c. lk animation, then release the buttons during an AC motion in piano sequence to increase the chances of getting an AC by 3x against fast counter pokes (say lk vs lk). This is especially useful if your opponent has low enough health to bother with being hit by a c. lk and have to take higher risks, while you keep safe with fast poke attempts that allow you to anti-air or take other actions during footsies. This way, you do not need to rely on fireballs or other risky tools for chip damage, where you could eat a jump in or an alpha counter from Ken.

Negative edge is very useful to Ken, Sagat, Sodom, Rose's far-reaching kick ACs. Also, Rolento and Bison teleports towards the opponent, cannot be AC denied/reversed, and you can safely end the match using those ACs. Although it is confusing to be worried about releasing, instead of pressing buttons during the match, just hold the buttons and let the game rules automatically work for your benefit.

Kara-cancel

Canceling any normal quickly before the hit frames come out. For example: F.png+Mp.png xx raging demon or cr.Hk.png xx fireball. This allows for quicker meter building, for example Rolento kara cr.Hk.png xx Lp.png roll.

Has a miniscule role in A2 but it does have its use. Some characters can build meter very fast, ex.: c.fp kara into lp backroll with rolento, or c.fp kara into fireball with all shotos.

Kara-cancels for meter: Chun- c.HP/s.HK xx kikoken or overhead Rolento- c.fp xx lp back roll Birdie- c.fp xx 360+lp Shotos- c.fp or c.rh xx hadouken, lk hurricane, or lp shoryuken Sodom- c.fp xx lp jitte scrape Zangief- c.fp xx lp glove Guy- c.mk xx lk hurricane Rose- c.fp xx mp or hp reflect Charlie- c.mp xx sonic boom

Throw juggles

Some throws leave the opponent in a juggle state and can be juggled by follow-ups. Dan, Gen, Guy, Sodom, Akuma and Zangief have them.

=List of punishable throws when teched

  • In progress - to be populated.

Tech roll

After a non-ac non throw knock down, do B.png, Db.png, D.png+Lp.png, Mp.png, or Hp.png. This will roll you towards you opponent depending on strength used, with Lp.png getting up in place and Hp.png rolling far. These are punishable by any LOW enough hit as the hurtboxes are quite small during roll, so be careful when using.

There are three distances available for the roll:

Lp.png; an on-the-spot tumble - useful for when you want to be on your feet as quick as possible.

Mp.png; travels a few character spaces forward, enough to cross to the other side at point-blank. Used when you want to avoid rush-down and need a bit of breathing room, I guess.

Hp.png; similar to the Mp.png version but can be used against opponents who throw a projectile immediately after you’ve been floored. allows you to get right back in their face. Somewhat useful for grapplers.

Keyword: mix-up.

Rolling can also be used to alter your falling trajectory and thus escape specific juggles. Ryu’s air Hk.png-> j Mp.png and Gen’s kiryu (3k.png style) cr.Lk.pngxx Jakouha are two examples.


Stage lag and stage selection

The following Stages have stage lag, and stage selections is recommended to avoid it.

  • SEVERE LAG: Rolento, Chun-Li, Birdie.
  • MODERATE LAG: Ken, Sodom, Dhalsim.

The other stages are good, but the best stages seem to be Ryu and Gen's since there isn’t anything going on in the stage.


STAGE SELECTION

Hold start for about 3 seconds on the character's portrait before you select your character.


SPECIAL STAGES:

Hold start on Bison (grass) or Sagat (waterfall) and continue to hold start and pick your character.

Basic Strategy

As in any other game, you have to think about and understand how developers intended the game to be played, what tools they designed to be strong, and what balance approaches they took. To excel at footsies, you have to know hitboxes and frame data. Since we do not have a good source of frame data, stick to what is simple: How fast some moves are.


-FOOTSIES BY DESIGN

"Footsies" means taking little steps back and forward and correctly spacing your normal attacks to gain an advantage over your opponent.

A2 is heavily relying on footsies. The game was designed with fast jumps and moves that allow you to punish strong attacks executed on the ground and moves not executed at a proper distance to hit or be blocked, and therefore cannot be cancelled into a second attack that would make it safe. During footsies, prefer using light attacks and patiently just wait.


-A2 vs ST

If you play ST, this is for you. You may have a special interest in this commentary if you thought about playing A2. Basically, alpha 2 tried to approach itself to the SSF2 Turbo (ST) gameplay. However, it clearly intended to make the match last longer while keeping the same "turbo" feel and reduce pressure and ambiguous situations after a knockdown, leaving it to a higher risk/reward vs. meter management situation. The introduction of tech rolls to wake up quickly, along with games from the same era, like Vampire Savior, indicated Capcom's intention to alleviate post-knockdown pressure (sometimes referred to as "yomi").

To get a perfect blender/vortex setup, you have to manage your meter and get a knockdown at the cost of one AC. Since AC knockdowns they cannot be tech rolled, you may have to decide trading 1 super stock for an ambiguous cross-up, so if you do, make that count. In other words, you will not see Daigo doing 2 Tatsumaki's in Afrolenged's Boxer neck ending and the match (LINK: Afrolegends vs Daigo video).

Although some AC leaves you perfectly positioned for cross-ups, it looks like cross-ups were generally nerfed. For instance, Chun j. mk is super small. At the same time, Sakura's diagonal j. mk has a specific, larger, made-for-cross-up hitbox that only lasts for 2 frames (cannot remember of only 1 or 2f actually). Unfortunately, in Sakura's case it made it terribly worse. To know if you will be crossed-up you have to basically watch when she presses the button or at what height she is in relation to you when you are standing, which is quite hard and there are too many variables. Mostly you have to watch where and when she jumps from, then guess. It doesn't matter what I say or write, you will eat a lot of that, so let's just move on.


-HITBOXES JIGSAW

Alpha 2 was designed by people who were passionate about Street Fighter. Hitboxes and moves in Alpha 2 were carefully designed for an "if this, then that" situation. For instance, if Rolento does s.lp, answer with Chun c.mk, but if the does c.lp, answer s.lk.

Also, what you see is what you get and you can pick it up and play. There is no weird character with weird hitboxes, something that seems to hit high but hit low. If you think Sodom's slide was designed to go under fireballs, you are correct. If you think Rose's slide is also designed to go under fireball, you are also correct, but she can do it for only 8 frames, as her head hitbox disappears. Learn your character hitboxes. Whatever the feeling you have about a hitbox and how to use a move, in alpha 2, you are probably correct, so learn while you play. But have a look at the hitboxes section to get started with it.


-SUMMARY - PLAY ALPHA 2 LIKE THIS

  • Learn how to play footsies
  • Don't be predictable. If something isn't working, don't keep on repeating it. If you uppercut once, don't try to uppercut five more times. Of course, there's the mind game where they might not expect it but that's more advanced.
  • Mix things up but DON'T BE RANDOM. That's one of the worst things you can do.
  • Use the air-to-ground vulnerability to set up damaging combos for people who like to empty jump in a lot. For those that don't know what that means: There's a point between when you come from the air and landing where your character is vulnerable to attacks (mainly low) whereas even if you try to land to crouch block if your opponent hits you at the right time you'll get hit every time you try to empty jump in. I suggest finding this point put the training dummy on "ALL GUARD" to either jump at you or jump straight up. Once you've hit your opponent at that point they'll think twice about empty jumping again.
  • Don't jump a lot. It's a bad habit you should get rid of.


-GENERAL TIPS: FIGHT YOUR OPPONENT'S MIND, NOT HIS CHARACTER

Since winning in fighting games is more about attitude and getting to understand what your opponent is thinking, don't be a whining scrub. That is, don't say people are "CHEAP" for any reason. Learn how to appreciate the techniques used by your opponent to incorporate them into your arsenal.

If you do not know how to get out of a certain situation, remember how the game was designed, and remember the AC, and keep your cool in situations such as Guy's and Ken's string corner blockstring pressure. Wait until you can AC and remember throws do not do too much damage. Once again, when you do this, you are thinking about how developers designed the game to be. Guy was designed to be like that, and even under that immense pressure, the damage output is not so high. Learn also how to appreciate this carefully designed Street Fighter game.

Characters matter too and are part of the basics. Keep in mind how different it is fighting, for instance, Charlie/Nash, from other characters. If you know how the character was designed to be, i.e., to be defensive and win fireball battles or move behind his Sonic Boom, you will also understand why his alpha counters are so slow, as they were made to be used against fireballs and reach the opponent during this animation. Or for instance, you are always safe from far away when using fireballs, but Guy and Akuma can approach you anticipating the fireball. Another example is, you are totally safe against Birdie by annoying him with slow fireballs, unless he has supers, then he can get around it. Birdie can do that with his qcfx2+K, which can be done in response to a fireball, If you don't know that, then you don't know the game yet. As soon as you know it, you know you cannot fight in autopilot and do fireball all the time at maximum distance mode without considering all variables such as if the opponent has a meter or not. You are not a computer. By doing so, you can also jump away and pretend to do a fireball against an opponent who plays like a computer and use that super every time you do a qcf motion without completing it. You can also condition him to think that you are going to fireball every time from the maximum distance. Understand the characters you are fighting with and against, then move on to fighting a thinking player.


Finally, a character can only do a certain number of moves designed for predetermined situations. A player can do much more than that. In a fighting game, you are fighting against brains controlling characters. Remember that.

If you are overwhelmed:

1) Stop and learn the basics of the game, such as the characters and the game mechanics, to get out of these situations. I mean, remember alpha counter and other mechanics you are forgetting.

2) Next, move on to think one step ahead of your opponent, such as "he can do this because of that" and "if I do this, he will respond with that" so you can actually make your opponent move the way you want him to move. By this I mean, you may prefer forcing your opponent to use an alpha counter as a defensive option than having that one stock that could save his life or kill you.


--Scanman (talk) 10:20, 20 February 2019 (MSK)

Advanced Strategy

Hitboxes

First, you gotta learn about hitboxes.

See them here:

https://sfz2.wordpress.com/hitbox-data/

Custom Combo Tidbits

  • (Credit goes to bunnyconda on the A2 discord for the following findings)
  • If you activate CC and you BOTH are on the ground, and your opponent is not in hitstun, they are frozen for 10 frames (11 if blown out) and cannot do anything during that time
  • If you activate CC and your opponent is in the air, they are not frozen and can immediately counter CC
  • If you activate mid-air, you are completely invincible until you land or do a move; you also get ~7 frames of invincibility at the start regardless of what you do (invincible until shadows appear)

--SpryteMix 16:23, 15 October 2019 (EST)

Note to editors: Seems inaccurate. Please check invincibility duration frames (3, 5, 9). Use a level 1 with an early activation to no action vs a normal anti-air, there will be no invincibility. I'll do it when I have time.

--Raf (talk) 21:34, 30 October 2019 (MSK)

Counter hit/Throw Mixups

The basic idea behind a counter hit/throw mixup game is to have the opponent make a choice to defend one of these options and followup.

Let's say you have Rolento and you start doing standing jabs in front of the opponent. What you want to do is either have the opponent attack, giving you the option to do a counter hit jab into cr.Mk.png xx patriot circle combo, or have the opponent block so that you can throw them.

Counter hits do more damage and give more frame advantage than a normal hit.

Safe Jump-ins

A safe jump-in is when you jump-in with an attack and the opponents only options are to either block, or take the hit; If the opponent wakes up with a reversal uppercut/super/other invincible move, since they have a certain start up, mostly 3 to 4 frames, if you land during these frames, you'll still be able to land and block in time. If your jump-in connects, you can hitconfirm into the combo of your choice, or set up mixups.

Upon executing a jump attack, you have 2 frames of recovery time upon landing (zero in an empty jump). A safe jump-in is set up so that your jump attack hits on the very last frame of your jump before you land, basically a meaty attack. If the opponent successfully wakes up with a reversal invincible move, by the time said move's start-up has an active hitbox, you're on the ground and blocking already.

This applies to every invincible move/super. Safe jump-ins are character-specific and differ based on character WAKE UP SPEED (see glitches).

--Scanman (talk) 10:20, 20 February 2019 (MSK)

Hard to block setups

These are not real unblockables, but one may think so if not understanding how they work. They are ambiguous or hard to block.

Zangief:

To-do, 360+K and to check if corner specific.

Cross-ups

Sakura:

Sakura is a special case because her j.mk has specific frames where it crosses up or when it does not cross up. Besides being too hard to block, you may have to invert the blocking direction, as she may land behind you, depending on where you are during your standing animation, and whether you roll or not.

Sodom

As sakura, he may hit front and land behind you, or hit and land behind you with j. lk.


Note: Corner watch

Watch when you have someone not really cornered and can be crossed-up. Really hard to know during the fast pace of the match, so you can just go for a cross-up attempt.

--Scanman (talk) 10:20, 20 February 2019 (MSK)

Note: The game has a "body pushbox" that, when touching the corner, will not allow you to switch sides unless it projects the attacker outside the screen and only works on the 2P/right corner. The only move I know of that can cause this effect is Chun's df+HK, which aligns the body perfectly in line with the downed character body push box, so the hitbox will be aligned behind the hurtbox of an opponent standing up, and push him to the left. However, as this does not work on the 1P corner, it suggests that there is a "move x+1 when this situation occurs" somewhere in the code. I cannot remember, but will check if this corner switch is limited to playing as 1P or 2P, and if it would allow landing switches as in CVS2.

--Raf (talk) 21:34, 30 October 2019 (MSK)

Tier List

1996 USA 1996 Japan 2018 - Debatable Modern Tier List

1) Ken
2) Chun-Li
3) Rose
4) Ryu
5) Akuma
6) Adon
7) Sagat
8) Charlie
9) Rolento
10) M. Bison
11) Guy
12) Dhalsim
13) Sakura
14) Sodom
15) Zangief
16) Gen
17) Birdie
18) Dan


1) Chun-Li
2) Charlie
3) Rose
4) Adon
5) Birdie
6) Rolento
7) Guy
8) Dhalsim
9) M. Bison
10) Ryu
11) Ken
12) Sakura
13) Akuma
14) Sodom
15) Sagat
16) Zangief
17) Gen
18) Dan


Top Tier
Chun-Li
Rose
Ken
Ryu

Second Tier
Zangief
Rolento
Sakura

Middle Tier
Akuma
Sodom
Charlie
M.Bison
Adon
Sagat
Dhalsim
Guy

Bottom Tier
Gen
Dan
Birdie



Community Links

Miscellaneous

Japanese TV ad for Sega Saturn


How to fight against Shin Akuma (Alpha 2 Gold)


Game Versions

  • Arcade
  • PC - 30th anniversary edition
  • Playstation
  • Playstation 2
  • Sega Saturn
  • Super Nintendo
  • Nintendo Switch
  • Playstation 4
  • Xbox One

Glitches & oddities

Auto-Roll glitches

Some super moves cause a forced roll animation, which caused some glitches because the hurtboxes were maintained. Corner combo glitch - Dhalsim only

Juggle glitches

Juggle glitch - Dhalsim only

Wake up speed

Birdie wakes up much faster than all other characters due to his animation.

Inverted directions & pseudo unblockables

To-do - mention Zangief.

Unblockables

To-do. Maybe move to advanced strategy?

Rose: Soul Illusion


High Knock Down Juggle Glitch

Note: HKD is useful and will be moved up in the page.

  • This is best explain by an old post from Endy 22, so I'm gonna copy and paste. Basically it is a knock down that pops your opponent WAY up in the air, allowing juggles. If you are too lazy just know easiest way to set it up is after a cc, ex Sagat does his cc, opponent tech rolls when Sagat is done, Sagat does c.rh which creates a HDK, juggles with HP tiger uppercut.
    • Awhile back I posted an article about how special juggle combos could be done after knocking someone down with a CC(i.e. with Sagat; couching Roundhouse, juggle with Fierce Tiger Uppercut). Since then I've learned a lot more about how the high knockdown trick works as well as a bunch of combos that can be done using it. For those who missed the original article or have yet to see someone use the trick, I'll explain how it's done...
    • Basically, when you're in CC mode and you do a move that knocks down, the opponent is knocked higher than they usually are when you are out of CC mode. For instance, when you activate a CC and then do a crouching Roundhouse, your opponent is knocked up in the air higher than a normal sweep would, so it's easier to follow up with another attack during the CC(this is one reason why the Valle CC is so devastating). The interesting thing is, you can still get the benefit of a high knockdown(HKD for short) _after_ a CC ends (meaning your CC meter has completely run out, and your opponent is getting up from the knockdown your CC caused). In order to get a HKD, you must first hit your opponent with any kind of CC that ends in a knockdown. Then, as your opponent is getting up or _right_ after, if you connect with a move that knocks down(a sweep for instance) they will be knocked high in the air(much higher than they normally should) allowing you to hit them with a juggling move before they land. note: You can only follow up a HKD with a move that juggles, like Akuma's DP or Guy's HK, all non-juggling moves will whiff.
    • An interesting thing about HKD's is that you can normally only juggle an opponent knocked in the air on the way up or at the apex, as soon\ they start to fall you can no longer juggle. However, with a high knockdown, just like in CC mode, you can juggle an opponent no matter how high they are off the ground. This means, if you do a crouching Roundhouse that results in a high knockdown, you can wait till just before the opponent lands and still juggle them. Also, you aren't limited to initiating a HKD with a sweep, certain special moves that knock down will work, too. Another cool thing about HKD's is that they can be initiated with combos, as well. So, with E. Ryu as the opponent is getting up, you could do crouching Jab, crouching Short, Fierce Red Fireball(HKD), juggle with a Fierce Dragon Punch. It's also possible to do repeated high knockdowns. For instance, with Sagat I could do a crouching Roundhouse as their getting up(HKD), juggle with a Fierce Tiger Uppercut. Then as they're getting up from the TU, I could do another crouching Roundhouse(HKD), Fierce TU, crouching Roundhouse(HKD), Fierce TU, etc. As long as you keep getting consecutive HKD's it can be repeated.
    • Now, landing a CC and then hitting your opponent with a knockdown move or combo as they're getting up _will not automatically_ result in a HKD. Whether you get the high knockdown or not is _completely_determined by what your opponent does after getting knocked down by the CC. Obviously, if they just block as they're getting up, there is no way you can hit them, so there's no chance for a HKD. So, you can only get a HKD in certain circumstances(most of which involve your opponent doing a particular action as they're getting up). Those circumstances include:
      • 1. The opponent rolls after the CC - This is the easiest and most common way to land a HKD in a match. If your opponent rolls right after getting hit by a CC, simply hit them out of it with a knockdown move or combo and you will get a high knockdown, FOR FREE. note: This will only work in regular SFA2, since you can't roll after a CC in A2Gold(and I'm assuming, Z2A).
      • 2. The opponent whiffs a Reversal Attack("Reversal" _has_ to appear) - This means if they do any kind of Reversal Attack(including Supers), and it misses, you can hit them during the recovery with a knockdown move or combo and get a HKD. i.e. Ryu does a Reversal DP and it whiffs, if you do a knockdown move as he lands it will result in a HKD.
      • 3. You stuff their Reversal Attack - Just like #2, except if you knock them out of the Reversal Attack with a knockdown move you will get a HKD.
      • 4. You do an AC reversal - If you stick out an attack as the opponent is getting up which they AC and you reverse it, you will get a HKD. So with Sagat, you could do a crouching Strong(they AC), 2in1 Jab Tiger Uppercut(knocks them out of their AC and results in a HKD), then juggle with a Fierce Tiger Uppercut.
      • 5. The opponent is holding 'back' - Meaning, if they're simply holding straight back on the stick while they're getting up and you hit them with a knockdown move or combo, you will get a HKD. I have_no_ idea why this works, especially since holding in any other direction won't result in a HKD. note: While experimenting, this happens to be the easiest way to get a HKD, and is a great way for doing repeated high knockdowns.
      • 6. You dizzy them with a HKD move or combo - If you dizzy your opponent with repeated HKD's, then hit them while they're dizzy with a knockdown move or combo, it will result in another HKD. i.e. With Sagat, you do crouching Roundhouse(HKD), Fierce TU, repeatedly till your opponent gets dizzy. While they're dizzy you could do a combo like Jumping Roundhouse, crouching Roundhouse(HKD), Fierce Tiger Uppercut. note: This is only really useful while practicing, since landing repeated HKD's on someone in a real match is just about impossible.
      • 7. You counter them as they're getting up - This one is kinda hard to explain, since I'm not exactly sure why this sometimes works, and sometimes doesn't. When I originally posted about the HKD trick, I believed that all you had to do was counter your opponent with a knockdown move as they're getting up and it would result in a HKD. Meaning, that if your opponent is entering any kind of joystick command(besides blocking) or button command, as they're getting up and you hit them with a knockdown move, you'd get a HKD. I soon found out that is not always the case. It works a lot of times when your opponent is going for a Reversal and miss-times it, and your knockdown move hits them, but not always. I guess it's something specific that they're doing that makes a HKD possible, but I'm not exactly sure what it is yet. note: This makes jump-in or crossup HKD combos possible.
      • 8. You AC their Reversal Attack - AFAIK, this one is worthless. If you rebuild your meter through repeated HKD's then have your opponent do a Reversal and you do an AC that knocks down, the AC will result in a HKD. Unfortunately, you can't follow-up the HKD because your opponent will have that 'spinning' animation and apparently can't be hit. I only mention this one, because I haven't bothered to try it with all the different AC's, so I'm not 100% sure that none of them can be followed-up.
      • 9. You link a knockdown move at the end of a non-knockdown CC - This is a special circumstance where you don't actually have to knock your opponent down with the CC before getting a HKD. Basically, if you do a CC consisting of all non-knockdown moves(like a bunch of standing normals or stream of fireballs) you can link a knockdown move at the end of the CC, and get a HKD. So, with Sakura you could activate a CC, do a bunch of standing normals(lame, I know), then just as your meter runs completely out, link a normal crouching Roundhouse while they're still in hit stun(results in a HKD), and then juggle with a Strong DP.
    • Here's a list of moves for each character that will cause a HKD after a CC ends.
      • Ken: Crouching Roundhouse
      • Ryu/E.Ryu: Crouching Roundhouse/Crouching Roundhouse, Fierce Red Fireball
      • Chun Li: Crouching Roundhouse(close)
      • Rose: Crouching Roundhouse, Soul Spiral
      • Zangief: Crouching Roundhouse, df+Roundhouse
      • Sakura: Crouching Roundhouse
      • Akuma: Crouching Roundhouse, Fireball(close), Red Fireball(1,2 or 3 hit), d,db,f,uf+Punch move
      • Sagat: Crouching Roundhouse, Jab Tiger Uppercut
      • Charlie: Crouching Roundhouse
      • Rolento: Has no moves that will HKD
      • Dhalsim: db+Roundhouse, Strong/Fierce Yoga Fire, Yoga Flame
      • Guy: Crouching Forward, df+Roundhouse
      • Adon: Crouching Roundhouse
      • M. Bison: Crouching Roundhouse(slide)
      • Sodom: Crouching Roundhouse(slide)
      • Gen: Has no moves in either style that will HKD
      • Dan: Crouching Roundhouse
      • Birdie: Crouching Roundhouse
  • Ok, now there are two basic types of combos that can done using the HKD trick...
    • Normal HKD combos:
      • Combos that can be done by characters who have specials that juggle(Akuma, Chun Li, Guy, E. Ryu, Sakura, Adon, Sagat) and can be done after any CC that knocks down(every other character has to rebuild meter so they can juggle with a SC). Examples:
        • Adon - Jumping Fierce, crouching Roundhouse(HKD), Roundhouse Jaguar Kick
        • E. Ryu - Crouching Jab, crouching Short, Fierce Red Fireball(HKD), Short HK, Fierce DP. (vs. Zangief, corner only)
        • Chun Li - Jumping Roundhouse, crouching Roundhouse(HKD), Triple Up-Kick
        • Sagat - Crossup Short, crouching Strong, Jab Tiger Uppercut, Fierce Tiger Uppercut
    • After Rebuilding Meter:
      • Combos that are only possible after you rebuild your meter through doing repeated HKD's. Basically, there is no way you'd ever, EVER get this type of combo off in a real match, but do indeed work with some setting up. Examples:
        • Charlie - Jumping Roundhouse, crouching Roundhouse(HKD), Level 3 Somersault Justice (corner)
        • Guy - Jumping Roundhouse, crouching Forward(HKD), Level 3 Air Punch Super
        • Ken - Jumping Fierce, crouching Roundhouse(HKD), 2in1 Short Roll, Level 3 Shinryuken
        • Rose - Jumping Roundhouse, crouching Jab, crouching Short, crouching Strong, Short Drill(HKD), Level 2 Aura Soul Catch (corner)
        • Akuma - Jumping Fierce, crouching Roundhouse(HKD), Short HK, Short HK, jump towards Level 3 Air Super Fireball or Level 3 DP
        • Dhalsim - b+Fierce(headbutt), Jab Yoga Flame(HKD), Level 3 Yoga Inferno (corner)
        • Zangief - Crossup d+Fierce, bd+Roundhouse, Level 3 Air Catch Super(A2Gold, Z2A only)

There's a bunch of other combos that can done using the trick, but the examples should give you the idea. Also, it's possible to juggle with a CC after a HKD when you rebuild your meter.

Well, that's about all I have to report on the high knockdown trick. I hesitated to post all this, since A2 is such an old game, but figured someone may find it of interest. There's also another little CC trick I found that I was thinking of posting in the future, but this should be enough for now =).

--Jeff 22:17, 4 September 2008 (UTC)


Street Fighter Alpha 2
Characters
Adon - Akuma - Birdie - Charlie - Chun-Li - Dan - Dhalsim - Evil Ryu - Gen - Guy - Ken - M.Bison - Rolento - Rose - Ryu - Sagat - Sakura - Sodom - Zangief