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* Extremely good range for a light poke | * Extremely good range for a light poke | ||
* Avoids most crouching sweeps and kicks | * Avoids most crouching sweeps and kicks | ||
* VERY negative on hit, so be careful | |||
Can be used against every character to reset the opponent in the corner after an EX Hayate. Against certain characters (e.g.: Dudley, Urien) you can even dash under them. | Can be used against every character to reset the opponent in the corner after an EX Hayate. Against certain characters (e.g.: Dudley, Urien) you can even dash under them. | ||
{{3S Button FAT|link=https://fullmeter.com/fatonline/#/framedata/movedetail/3S/Makoto/normal/Shibuki}} | {{3S Button FAT|link=https://fullmeter.com/fatonline/#/framedata/movedetail/3S/Makoto/normal/Shibuki}} |
Revision as of 03:37, 14 March 2025
Introduction
Makoto, a tomboyish Japanese teenager, seeks to restore her father's dojo to its former glory. She is one of the new characters introduced in SF III: 3rd Strike, based around a more traditional concept of Japanese Karate compared to Ryu/Ken's more supernaturally-flavored Ansatsuken.
Makoto is the first female Street Fighter to be tough and hard-hitting with just as much stamina as the average males (like Ryu and Ken), instead of being a "glass cannon" archetype. Although her normal walk speed is incredibly sluggish, she has the fastest dash in the game, as well as quick feints and overheads. Perhaps her best tool is the Karakusa, a unique command grab which can be comboed from, making way for devastating damage and stun. Put all of this together and you have a character who can survive long sets until her highly explosive fighting style can win with a single opening.
Super Arts
SA I (Seichuusen Godanzuki)
Highly recommended for beginners. It does excellent damage and has numerous hit-confirms, in addition to the guaranteed Karakusa ones. It is especially good if you can confirm it after Hayate and Oroshi. Weaknesses include lack of range and bad anti-air, but the first shouldn't be an issue if you combo into it, and the second isn't a big deal, as she has plenty of good anti-air normals. It also confers no positional advantage after hit, as your opponent is sent across the screen and often recovers before you will (some characters can even get a free punish if you hit them with it in the corner, most notably Dudley, Necro and Yang). Some top players use this super exclusively against all characters as it allows for fast punishes and is universally easy to connect with.
SA II: (Abare Tosanami)
High execution, high reward Super. A lot of its usefulness depends on your ability to land Karakusa (or the threat thereof), especially on your half of the screen, as it can be comboed into with HP after the Karakusa (or simply with HP to catch your opponent trying to jump away out of Karakusa reach. It is potentially the most powerful super in the game and can lead to 100% kill combos from full health using the Double Fukiage technique. For the most damage, you can use early MK Tsurugi, Fukiage, jump Fierce, but for the most reliable combo, use MK Tsurugi, Hayate, Hayate.
Makoto has 100% stun setups from Karakusa on almost everyone except the 5 characters with the longest stun bar (Alex, Q, Hugo, Oro, and Dudley) using the "Double Fukiage" (W-Fukiage in Japan) followup, but they involve an advanced kara-cancel technique on at least the first Fukiage (using neutral HK), and even more advanced methods against Oro, Ibuki, and Chun-Li (the Telesniper technique). Akuma and Remy, having the shortest stun bars, have the easiest 100% stun combo (the "Fukiage, HP" follow-up to the super), and can also be fully stunned with even a raw SAII using the Double Fukiage follow-up. Timing before the first Fukiage also varies greatly by character (Necro, Urien, Dudley, and Hugo very slowly, Shotos tend to fall moderately fast, and Yun, Yang, and Alex fall extremely quickly, for example). Also, it can 100% stun every character in the game if comboed into from jump HP, though this is highly situational.
The main downsides (aside from its usefulness being mostly tied to your ability to land Karakusa on your side of the screen) is that it has huge startup time and no upper body invulnerability on startup, unlike her other two supers. However, it can be used to counter fireballs from full screen, and throws even on wakeup (if you are actually unhinged enough to do this).
SA III: (Tanden Renki)
Obviously the last super of choice, this is more a "fun" super than a practical one. If you can get your opponent on the back foot and guessing wrong once or twice, you can get insane damage by the time the meter runs out. However, if you're on the back foot against an experienced player (while it's already active), you're pretty much screwed. It does confer temporary invulnerability upon startup with zero recovery time (with additional invulnerability if you don't press anything), so it's possible to use this as a one-time Get Out of Jail Free card, but it's likely to take you out of the frying pan and directly into the fire.
Strengths | Weaknesses |
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|
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Makoto #3S_MA | |
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Vitals | |
Life Points | 1200 |
Stun Points | 64 |
Super Art Stock/Size | |
SA1 | 1/120 |
SA2 | 2/88 |
SA3 | 1/96 |
Ground Movement | |
Forward Dash duration/distance | 11 (30) (150px) |
Back Dash duration/distance | 14 |
Jumping | |
Back Jump duration | 42(4+35+3) |
Neutral Jump duration | 41(4+34+3) |
Forward Jump duration | 41(4+34+3) |
Back Super Jump duration | 46(6+37+3) |
Neutral Super Jump duration | 45(6+36+3) |
Forward Super Jump duration | 45(6+36+3) |
Wake up | |
Wake up duration | 71 |
Quick rise duration | 43 |
3S Frame Data Glossary | |
---|---|
Active |
How many frames a move remains active (can hurt opponents) for. Consecutive sets of active frames on a multi-hit move are separated by an asterisk (ex: 3*5). If there is a gap between sets of active frames, the gap is denoted by a number in parentheses (ex: 2(4)2) |
Attack |
Attack level is L for low attacks (must be blocked crouching), H is for High attacks (which can be blocked high or low) and M for overhead (must be blocked standing). T is for throw attacks (which cannot be blocked). |
Cancel options |
Available cancel options.
|
Damage |
Attack damage on hit in life points. Notation may denote multi-hit or "sweet spot" damage values on certain frames. |
Hit/Block |
These are frame advantage values when the attack hits or is blocked. If the number is positive, then the move will end before the defender can act again. If the number is negative, the defender will be able to act before the attacker and maybe even punish. D refers to knockdown on hit. "Cr. Hit" is an additional frame advantage value denoting if the advantage on hit changes when the defender is being hit while crouching. |
Kara Range |
Almost all normal attacks can be canceled into a special or a multi-button command within three frames of startup. During that time, some attacks will shift position forward or backward and affect the reach of the special or command accordingly. This is denoted in pixels of range. There are a handful of moves in the game that can be kara-canceled after this initial window and will be denoted as a late kara-cancel. |
Link |
A combo that is performed by inputting the second move after the first move has completely recovered (as opposed to cancelling the first move's animation). In 3S, the final frame of a move's hitstun allows a character to block a normal or special move, as well as some projectile supers. Therefore, an attack's frame advantage must be 2 frames greater than the followup move's startup in order to link. Ex: a +6 normal can link into a 4f normal/special, or a 5f super. |
Parry |
This field will show a value of A if the attack can be parried standing or crouching, H if it must be parried standing or L if it must be parried crouching. |
Recovery |
How many frames it takes for a move to finish after it's been active. |
Startup |
How many frames it takes before the move becomes 'active' or has a hitbox. 3S uses classic startup notation, which does not include the first active frame. A move with 3 startup becomes active on frame 4. |
Stun |
Amount of stun added to the opponent's stun bar on hit. |
Throw range |
Range in pixels from the center of the character to the center of the opponent which allows a grab to connect. |
Frame Data
Standing Normals
5LP
5MP
5HP
5LK
5MK
5HK
Command Normals
6LP
6MP
6HP
6LK
6MK
6HK
6HK (Hold)
Crouching Normals
2LP
2MP
2HP
2LK
2MK
2HK
Jumping Normals
8LP
j.LP
8MP
j.MP
8HP
j.HP
j.LK
j.MK
j.HK
Target Combos
5LK, MK
6MK,HK
6HP, HP, HP
Throws
LPLK
4/6LPK
Universal Overhead
MPMK
Taunts
HPHK
None
None
Special Moves
236P
236P (7F hold)
236P (27F hold)
236P (47F hold)
236P (67F hold)
236P,K
236P, HPK
623P
214P
214K (air)
63214K