Strider Hiryu

This article is about the character named Strider Hiryu. For the coin-operated video game, see Strider (arcade game). For the Nintendo Entertainment System video game, see Strider (NES video game).
Strider Hiryu
Strider character

First appearance Strider Hiryu manga (1988)
First game Strider (arcade) (1989)
Created by Kouichi Yotsui, Masahiko Kurokawa and Tatsumi Wada (helped by Akio Sakai and Tokurou Fujihara)[1]
Designed by Tatsumi Wada (Strider Hiryu)
Shoei (Strider (arcade))
Harumaru (Strider 2)[2]
Bengus (Marvel vs. Capcom)
Voiced by (English) Marc Biagi (Strider (2014))[3]
Mike Willette (Strider (2014; combat voice-over))[3]
Voiced by (Japanese) Kaneto Shiozawa (Strider (PC Engine))
Kōsuke Toriumi (Strider 2, Capcom X (Namco X Capcom, Project X Zone 2) series)
Yūji Ueda (Marvel vs. Capcom series)
Fictional profile
Fighting style Taijutsu and sword arts
Weapon Tonfa/plasma sword hybrid (Cypher)
Weapon name Falchion
Occupation Strider agent

Strider Hiryu (ストライダー飛竜 Sutoraidā Hiryū) is a fictional character jointly owned by Capcom and Moto Kikaku. Although primarily known as a game character, Hiryu (飛竜, "Flying Dragon") debuted in 1988 as the protagonist of a manga Strider Hiryu, published exclusively in Japan by Kadokawa Shoten.

Hiryu made his first video game appearance in the arcade game Strider (1989) Since his debut, he has appeared in various video games produced by Capcom, notably in the Marvel vs. Capcom series. Several publications and polls have regarded him as one of the most popular Capcom characters, one of the top ninja characters in video games, or even one of the best heroes in all of gaming.

Character and design

In most versions of the Strider story, "Hiryu" is an elite-class member of a group of futuristic, high-tech ninja-derived agents known as the Striders, who specialize in various kinds of black ops and wetwork such as espionage, sabotage, and assassinations. His signature weapon is his "cypher" (a plasma-generating blade with a tonfa-like handle) named Falchion.[4] He also has three Option support robots that he can call in for assistance (Option A is a satellite drone, Option B is a robotic panther, and Option C is a robotic hawk), as well as tools such as the all-terrain climbing instrument "climb sickle".[4] An active Strider agent, all personal data pertaining to Hiryu outside of his codename, such as real name, age, nationality, career and any other background information, are top secret.[5] In fighting games, several of Hiryu's moves are named after various legendary weapons of various lore, including Ame-no-murakumo, Excalibur, Gram, and Vajra.

According to Kouichi Yotsui, the planner of the original Strider coin-op game, the Strider Hiryu franchise was conceived as a multimedia collaboration between video game company Capcom and manga collective Moto Kikaku, the two companies previously collaborated with each other to work on the video game versions of the manga Tenchi wo Kurau. Moto Kikaku produced the manga version, while Capcom developed two separate video game versions, a coin-operated video game and a console version for the NES. All three works share common plot elements, while featuring their differences as well.[6] Because of Moto Kikaku's involvement in the character's creation, his name appears alongside Capcom's in the copyrights byline of the character.

Kouichi Yotsui said it was he who "pushed for a ninja concept" as they were leaning towards an action game, a ninja setting would've been convenient. "The hero would be derived from a ninja. We loosely decided on that."[1] Regarding Hiryu's three robot helpers, he said that he was inspired by the 1960s ninja comics (the one that most influenced him was Shirato Sanpei's Kamui Gaiden), in which the ninja often had various animals to support them or attack their enemies.[1] Speaking with Retro Gamer, Yotsui said that Strider Hiryu's climbing abilities were inspired by his personal experience when he got himself stranded on the roof of Capcom’s building; fearing freezing to death and with no way to call for help, he climbed down the side of the building to reach a nearby fire escape stairway.[7]

A Capcom artist known as Harumaru redesigned the character for Strider 2, inspired by American comics he had found at a bookshelf of the Design Office (among them DC Comics, Mike Mignola, Simon Bisley, and Spawn by Todd McFarlane).[2] In 2014's Strider Hiryu's scarf serves as a visual cue for the Cypher upgrade the player is using (Reflect, Explosive, Cold, Magnetic), changing colors accordingly.[8]

Appearances

Strider Hiryu manga

The manga Strider Hiryu by Tatsumi Wada and Tetsuo Shiba was serialized in the monthly magazine Comic Computique from May to October 1988, spanning six issues. During this time, there were already two Strider games in development.[9] A single volume collection was later published on November 10, 1989.[10] A short prequel story, titled Strider Hiryu Gaiden (ストライダー飛竜外伝), was published following the completion of the main series and is not included in the collected edition.[11]

The manga is set in the year 2048 and centers around Hiryu, a young Special A-Class[4] rank Strider who retired early during his career after he was forced to kill his elder sister Mariya, a Strider who went insane (as shown in the prequel story). The main series begins with Hiryu living peacefully in Mongolia when his former superior, Vice Director Matic, forces him out of retirement in order to kill his best friend Cain, who has been captured by hostiles in the Kazakh SSR and has become a liability to the rest of the Striders. With the help of Strider Sheena, Hiryu manages to rescue and extract Cain, but he attacks them after regaining consciousness. Hiryu manage to subdue Cain, but not before Sheena is mortally wounded and dies. Hiryu uncovers a small device implanted under Cain's neck and learns that he has been the subject of a mind-control weapon codenamed Zain and that Hiryu's sister Mariya was under the influence of Zain when she went rogue. After Cain regains his sense and freewill, he decides to make amends for Sheena's death by teaming up with Hiryu and stop the Zain project from reaching its completion. The two learn that an organization known simply as the "Enterprise" is behind the Zain project and that Matic himself was cooperating with the Enterprise leader Faceas Clay. With the help of Cain, Strider Chief Kuramoto, and a group of other Striders, Hiryu manages to thwart Matic and Clay, and destroy the main Zain terminal.

Strider video games

Two video game versions of Strider were produced following the publication of the manga. The NES version of Strider, released a few months after the arcade version, adapts the storyline of the Strider Hiryu manga, although a few changes were made to the presentation of the plot. However, the Strider coin-operated arcade game follows a completely different storyline, sharing only a few common elements such as Hiryu himself and the use of Kazakh SSR as the game's initial setting. In this game, Hiryu is hired by a rebel organization to assassinate the Grandmaster, an alien dictator who has gained control of all of the world's military. Hiryu's mission takes him not only to Kazakh, but also to Siberia and the Amazon, as well as the Grandmaster's flying battleship "Balrog". Eventually Hiryu travels to the Grandmaster's lair, the "Third Moon" space station, for the final battle against him.

Hiryu also stars in the second arcade game in the series, titled Strider 2 (released in 1999, almost ten years after the first game). In it, the Grandmaster has returned to life and has reconquered the Earth, and so Hiryu must once again fight against the Grandmaster and his minions, as well as Hien, a former Strider and Hiryu's rival.

An earlier, uncanonical Strider sequel has been released by British game publisher U.S. Gold years prior to Capcom's version of Strider 2. Titled Strider II in Europe and Journey from Darkness: Strider Returns in North America, the game was released for various European home computers in 1990 and remade for Sega consoles in 1992. In Strider II, however, the main character, while implied to be the same Strider from the original game, is addressed as "Hinjo" in the instruction manual for the Sega Genesis version. In this game, Hinjo must save a young woman, the leader of planet Magenta (whose name is Lexia according to the console versions) from a terrorist group (led by the Grandmaster himself in the console versions, who originally did not appear in the game's computer versions).

A new Strider game developed by Double Helix, was announced by Capcom in July 2013, and was released for the PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Xbox 360 and Microsoft Windows on February 18, 2014.[12][13]

Other appearances

Hiryu is also a playable character in the tactical role-playing game Namco × Capcom (2005) and in the crossover fighting games Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes (1998), Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes (2000), and Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 (2011), where he is one of many characters representing the Capcom universe. His ending in the first Marvel vs. Capcom game is an homage to the ending in the original Strider.[14] He was also supposed to appear in the cancelled arcade game Capcom Fighting All-Stars.[15] A cancelled remake/reboot game for the Strider series that was in development circa 2009 by Grin.[16] He appears as a playable character in Project X Zone 2, partnered with Hotsuma from SEGA's Shinobi series.[17]

In addition, Hiryu has made multiple cameo appearances in other Capcom games, including in the Game Boy version of Hatena Hatena no Daibōken, in the arcade quiz game Capcom World 2,[15] in the fighting game Street Fighter Alpha 2 (as a spectator in Ken's home stage),[9] and in the action game Mega Man Legends.[18] He is also featured in various cards in SNK's Card Fighters series (co-produced with Capcom), as well as in cards in Street Fighter x All Capcom and Dragon's Dogma Quest. Hiryu's action figure was produced by ToyBiz in 1999,[19] and a garage kit figure of him was manufactured by Chemical Reaction in 2008.[20]

Reception

[I]t was lead character Strider Hiryu who proved to be the real stand out. In addition to featuring an impressive number of frames of animation, he was easily the most athletic video game character around. Strider could nimbly climb up walls like a monkey, cartwheel majestically through the air, run down mountainsides, hang off and move along the undersides of platforms and even--in one of Strider's most impressive stages--defy gravity. He may not have been the first ninja to appear in a video game, but no ninja before him ever moved with his sense of deadly grace and purpose. He could seemingly do the impossible, and everything from leaping across giant chasms to simply sliding across the ground exuded a coolness that no other hero at the time could match.

Darran Jones, Retro Gamer[21]

The character has received positive reception both from critics and the general public. In 2000, Edge opined that "in terms of visual appeal and agility, Strider Hiryu ranks as one of the best characters ever designed."[22] In 2008, GameDaily ranked him as the fourth top Capcom character of all time, noting that he "has become an extremely popular character in Capcom's arsenal."[23] That same year, IGN's Travis Fahs called him "one of Capcom's best loved characters", commenting that "there's no denying the iconic appeal, but for all of his flashy moves and fashion sense, Capcom has never really known what to do with him."[9] Strider Hiryu was one of the 64 characters chosen for the GameSpot's 2009 poll All Time Greatest Game Hero.[24] In 2012, GamesRadar ranked this "somewhat of an enduring classic" as the 59th "most memorable, influential, and badass" protagonist in games, commenting that his "sheer levels of badass cool have seen him endure long past his clichés sell-by date, making him now an archetype rather than a stereotype."[25] In 2013, GamesRadar staff included him among the 30 best characters in the three decades of Capcom's history.[26]

According to Hanuman Welch of Complex, Strider Hiryu and Ryu Hayabusa of the Ninja Gaiden series were the "two ninjas synonymous with both the NES era and enduring all the way to the current generation of consoles."[27] Hiryu defeated Ryu in ScrewAttack's Death Battle show, emerging superior from a comparison of strength, speed and weaponry.[4] In 2010, Game Informer chose Strider Hiryu as one of the 20 Capcom characters they would like to see in a rumored crossover fighting game Namco Vs Capcom, his Namco side equivalent being Taki from the Soulcalibur series.[28] In 2012, Complex included "Capcom vs. Sega" as sixth fighting game crossover they would like to see the most, imagining Hiryu clashing with Sega's classic ninja Joe Musashi from the Shinobi series.[29]

Strider Hiryu has been often featured in the various lists and rankings of top ten video game ninja characters. As such, he was ranked as the seventh top ninja in games by 1UP.com in 2004, even as he "loses a few points for not even trying to be stealthy,"[30] and placed fourth on a similar list by ScrewAttack in 2010.[31] Complex declared Strider Hiryu the swiftest ninja in games in their 2012 list, calling him "pretty much the perfect ninja."[32] In 2013, WatchMojo.com ranked Strider as the tenth top playable game ninja, calling him an "arcade legend",[33] and Jon Ledford of Sushi Arcade too included among the ten best video game "ninjas".[34] In 2010, Retro Gamer rated him as number one "Athlete King" of video games, beating the likes of the Prince, Lara Croft, or Sonic the Hedgehog.[35] In addition, he was also ranked as the third most acrobatic character in video games by Complex in 2011,[36] and as the ninth top swordsman in gaming by Cheat Code Central's Shelby Reiche in 2012.[37]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Scion; Dire 51 (24 April 2010). "Interview with Kouichi "Isuke" Yotsui". LSCM 4.0. Translated by Gaijin Punch. Accessed 5 October 2011.
  2. 1 2 "「特A級ストライダー諜報局」". Capcom.co.jp. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  3. 1 2 "Behind The Voice Actors - Voice Of Strider Hiryu". behindthevoiceactors.com. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "DEATH BATTLE! - Ryu Hayabusa VS Strider Hiryu". ScrewAttack.com. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  5. Capcom (October 24, 2006, PlayStation). Capcom Gamebooks|Capcom Gamebook: Strider Hiryu (Japanese). Pg. 42. ISBN 4-86233-076-2.
  6. Tane, Kiyofume; Gaijin Punch (translation) (February 2009). "The Father of Strider Who Made the Game World Explode: Kouichi Yotsui Discography". Gameside (16). Retrieved 30 December 2009.
  7. Dave Cook, 5 Insane & Amazing Origins Of Iconic Game Characters (Feature), NowGamer, February 29, 2012.
  8. "Strider Starts Out With All Of His Core Abilities And Has Touches For MvC Fans". Siliconera. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  9. 1 2 3 Travis Fahs, The Shrouded Past of Strider Hiryu: Celebrating two decades of sword-slashing., IGN, August 20, 2008.
  10. Wada, Tatsumi. Strider Hiryu. Kadokawa Shoten. ISBN 4-04-713009-5.
  11. "ストライダー飛竜/柴哲郎/和田たつみ" (in Japanese). 9 May 2005. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  12. "Capcom Announces New Strider Game - News". GameInformer.com. 2013-07-18. Retrieved 2013-07-22.
  13. Earnest "Nex" Cavalli. "The Escapist : News : Strider Returns To Action Next Year". Escapistmagazine.com. Retrieved 2013-07-22.
  14. Studio Bent Stuff. All About Capcom Head-to-Head Fighting Game 1987-2000 (in Japanese). Dempa Publications Inc. p. 322. ISBN 978-4-88554-676-1.
  15. 1 2 Retro Gamer issue 76 page 53.
  16. "Bionic Commando dev Grin worked on Strider reboot, Streets of Rage remake". Eurogamer.net. 21 February 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  17. "Project X Zone 2 Is Coming To The West This Fall". Siliconera. Retrieved April 24, 2015.
  18. Capcom. Official Japanese Site for Rockman DASH. Secret Gallery.
  19. "Marvel vs. Capcom - Strider Hiryuu (Capcom Toybiz)". Myfigurecollection.net. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  20. "Strider Hiryuu (Chemical Reaction)". Myfigurecollection.net. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  21. "Ultimate Guide: Strider" in Retro Gamer 121.
  22. Edge issue 84 page 67.
  23. Top 25 Capcom Characters of All Time, GameDaily, September 26, 2008.
  24. "All Time Greatest Video Game Hero contest - Standings". Web.archive.org. 2011-06-28. Archived from the original on August 11, 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  25. 100 best heroes in video games, GamesRadar, October 19, 2012.
  26. "The 30 best Capcom characters of the last 30 years". GamesRadar. 2013-06-25. Retrieved 2014-04-12.
  27. Hanuman Welch (2013-07-15). "Ryu Hayabusa, Strider Hiryu, Video Game Brawls". Complex. Retrieved 2013-07-22.
  28. Tim Turi, 20 Namco Vs Capcom Matches We'd Love To See, Game Informer, July 20, 2010.
  29. Capcom vs. Sega 10 Fighting Game Crossovers We Want To See, Complex.com, April 10, 2012.
  30. Nich Maragos and David Smith, Top Ten Ninjas, 1UP.com, July 23, 2004.
  31. Top Ten Ninjas, ScrewAttack's Top 10, GameTrailers, January 8, 2010.
  32. Rich Knight, The 10 Swiftest Ninjas in Games, Complex.com, January 25, 2012.
  33. "Top 10 Video Game Ninjas". WatchMojo.com. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  34. Jon Ledford (2013-06-15). "10 Best Video Game Ninjas". Arcadesushi.com. Retrieved 2013-12-21.
  35. Retro Gamer issue 77 page 28.
  36. 3. Strider, Strider series Move Something: The 12 Most Acrobatic Characters In Video Games, Complex.com, May 11, 2011.
  37. Shelby Reiches (2012-09-04). "Top 10 Swordsmen - Cheat Code Central". Cheatcc.com. Retrieved 2013-07-22.
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