Ultra Street Fighter IV/Ryu/Introduction

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Introduction

Ryu only has one goal in life: to perfect his skills and become the ultimate martial artist. A fairly aloof warrior, Ryu continually travels the globe in search of stronger and stronger opponents to help him achieve this goal. After defeating Sagat for the World Champion Street Fighter title, he was considered by most to be the most powerful fighter in the world. And yet, Ryu's true potential may still remain untapped, and only a glimpse of it was seen in his climactic battle with Shadaloo's leader, M. Bison. Only time will tell if Ryu can avoid being swallowed up by the dangerous power of the Satsui no Hado...

Ryu epitomizes the saying of "A minute to learn, a lifetime to master" the most of any Street Fighter character. Ryu has all the basic tools you need: great normals, a projectile, an effective anti-air, Focus Attack Dash Cancel (FADC) combos, etc. But as a result, he has very few gimmicks and shenanigans. You can get by playing Ryu with a solid understanding of his basic strategy, but learning Ryu at the highlest level requires very solid mind games and very solid fundamentals.

Pick if you like: Avoid if you dislike:


Players to Watch

Alex Valle (US), John Choi (US), Yomi Joel (US)


Ultra SFIV Changes

Ryu SF4 Changelist

Frame Data Glossary - USFIV
Active

How many frames a move remains active (can hurt opponents) for. For projectiles with a limited active period, a value may be listed in [brackets], but this number is not factored into the move's total frame count.

  • For multi-hit moves with no gaps between the active hitboxes, active frames are listed as X,Y.
  • For multi-hit moves with gaps between hits, active frames are listed as X(n)Y where n = the frame gap between active hitboxes.



Cancel

Available options for canceling one move into another move.

  • "Chn": Chain cancel (Light normals)
  • "TC": Target Combo
  • "Sp": Special move
  • "Su": Super Combo
  • "FA": Focus Attack
    • Note: Su and FA almost always share the same cancel properties, except that EX moves can't cancel into Supers outside Training Mode
  • "j" or "Jmp": Jump cancel (usually on hit only, if applicable)
  • "sj" or "hj": Super Jump or High Jump cancel (Ibuki and C. Viper only)
  • "Dash": Dash cancelable (e.g. Focus Attack dash cancel)
    • If one hit of a multi-hit attack is cancelable, this can be indicated with (1st), (2nd), etc.



Damage

Attack damage on hit. Multi-hit moves may have the damage listed for individual hits as X,Y. Damage listed in () parentheses may be the total damage of all hits, or the damage of an alternate version (like a non-cinematic Ultra connect) based on context. This will usually be explained in the description.

Guard

Refers to the direction an attack must be blocked. L is for Low attacks (must be blocked crouching), H is for High attacks/overheads (must be blocked standing), HL is for attacks that can be blocked crouching or standing. T is for Throw attacks which cannot be blocked. If an attack cannot be blocked, like a Level 3 Focus Attack, no Guard property will be listed (and no Block data will be given in the frame data columns).

On Hit/Block

These are frame advantage values when the attack hits or is blocked. If the number is positive, then the move will recover 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.

  • In general, Counter-hit adds +1 hit advantage to Light normals and +3 to Medium/Heavy normals. Exceptions or unique Counter-hit properties should be noted in the move data.

KD refers to knockdown on hit, with SKD = Soft Knockdown (allows quick wake-up) and HKD = Hard Knockdown (no quick wake-up). If a KD Advantage is listed (HKD +30), this refers to the amount of time the attacker is free to move before the defender has recovered from their knockdown. This also assumes that Delayed Wake-up is not used.

  • Some USFIV characters have non-standard wakeup timings, so this refers to the most common timing (tested on Ryu).



Recovery

How many frames it takes for a move to finish after the active frames have finished. For projectiles, recovery is considered to begin after the first active frame.

  • Airborne moves may have recovery listed as X+Y land, where X is the airborne recovery and Y is the landing recovery.



Startup

How many frames it takes before the move becomes 'active' or have a hit box. The last startup frame and the first active frame are the same frame, meaning all values are written as Startup + 1.

  • Moves with multiple relevant startup values may be listed as X(Y); for example, a move that hits airborne first before hitting grounded opponents, or a 2-hit move where the first hit whiffs at some ranges.



Juggle Info

When a character is put into an Air Knockdown state, it is often possible to follow up with a Juggle attack before they hit the ground. In the simplest terms, there are 2 main juggle states:

  • Free Juggle: any attack can juggle, causing an Air Reset or an Air Knockdown
  • Limited Juggle: only specific attacks with juggle potential may juggle


The following is a more detailed overview of the juggle system:

Juggle Count (JC): The status of the character being juggled. A high JC limits which attacks can work in juggles.

  • JC0: free juggle state - any attack that can hit an airborne opponent will work
  • JC1+: limited juggle state - juggle only works if the attack's Juggle Limit ≥ defender's Juggle Count

Juggle Start (JS): When starting a juggle, the opponent's JC will be set to this value.

  • Attack with Juggle Start value of 3 will put opponent at JC3, so only attacks with Juggle Limit value ≥ 3 can follow up

Juggle Increase (JI): When opponent is already in a juggle state, attacks will increase the opponent's JC by this amount.

  • Airborne opponent at JC1 followed by attack with Juggle Increase value of 3 will set opponent to JC4

Juggle Limit (JL): Property of an attack hitbox that determines whether it connects on a juggled opponent. The JL must be ≥ the opponent's JC to hit successfully.

  • An uppercut with a JL value of 5 will connect on an opponent at JC5 or below, but will whiff on JC6 opponent
  • Most normals have a JL value of 0, meaning they only work in Free Juggle (JC0) states
  • Some multi-hit attacks have different JL values on each hit, so a 3-hit move may only hit twice in juggles

An example to tie everything together:

  • An attack (JS3) launches opponent into the air (Opponent now at JC3)
  • Followed up with an attack (JI2/JL4); it connects, because JL4 ≥ JC3 (Opponent now at JC5)
  • Attempts to juggle again with same attack (JL4), but whiffs because JL4 < JC5 (Opponent hits the ground)



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Abel
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Cammy
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Dan
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Fei Long
Gen
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