Street Fighter Wiki
Advertisement
MvC2-Dan-Autograph
This article does not have enough quality images or sprites.
If you have a good image for this article,
please upload it at Special:Upload

Street Fighter IV: Aftermath is a series of animated prequels that were released as trailers to Street Fighter IV. Street Fighter IV: Aftermath treats Street Fighter II as a near-canon discontinuity and retcons many of its events, such as Akuma's assassination of M. Bison.

Episodes[]

Chun-Li[]

Chun-Li is seen moving on with her life as a young single girl, keeping herself busy by working at an eatery, or by traveling. She reminisces the memories and the fights that took place during Street Fighter II. She admits to herself that the life she expected wasn't all she'd imagined it would be. Chun-Li finds her inner strength reawakened as she finds herself back into action, presumably to continue tracking down Shadaloo's movement's, M. Bison, as well as the S.I.N. Organization.

Meanwhile, Guile is informed by his superiors that the ongoing search for Charlie Nash would be called off, despite Guile's adamance. Guile once again leaves his family to continue searching for Charlie.

Despite the entire world believing Shadaloo's destruction, Cammy isn't convinced, convinced that the disappearance of M. Bison and his henchmen was not enough evidence to support that Shadaloo had been destroyed.

Crimson Viper[]

In her Aftermath episode, Viper is seen exploring the Temple Hideout that M. Bison once used as the final setting of his World Warrior Tournament but would fall into disrepair after the fall of Shadaloo. After reaching a nearly-abandoned village near the temple, she meets and interviews a man who is the sole inhabitant of the village, with the other inhabitants leaving after the fall of Shadaloo. The man reveals that while Shadaloo did subjugate the village and used it as a base of operations, they've also supplied the village with needs. The scene then shifts to a flashback where Bison's cause of death has been revealed. It was revealed that Ryu, Ken, Chun-Li, Guile and Cammy managed to reach Bison in the tournament and managed to defeat him in a fight that ensued in the wilderness.

After being urged by Guile to surrender, M. Bison refuses and attempts to kill all of them by unleashing all of his Psycho Power to kill all of them but fails as it only manages to blow them back. In the ensuing aftermath, M. Bison's body would be recovered the Shadaloo scientists so that he can be revived and the government would tirelessly investigate the Shadaloo base, which has been blown up following the death of Bison. Despite lacking any evidence that proves that the other members of Shadaloo have died, the government would presume that the other members have also died. However, Balrog, Vega, and Sagat were revealed to still be alive and well. After being partially resurrected, Bison would send some agents in an attempt to re-recruit the former members.

Despite succeeding in recruiting Balrog and Vega, Bison would fail to recruit Sagat, who tries to assault the agent Bison sent. The scene would then shift to Bison, whose body was incomplete but adequate enough to stand up and fight. Seth and Abel would then be revealed before Crimson Viper muses about the flowers and its luck in growing without intervention.

Ryu[]

In his Aftermath episode, Ryu is seen fallen conscious in the ground of a wide camp in the middle of the night, surrounding by many fireflies. As he watches a firefly flying, his surrounding starts to be hit by Gohadokens, launched by Akuma, resulting in an intence fire. As Ryu looks above him, he notices Akuma, who grabs him by the head. Akuma starts questioning Ryu why he refuses to use his Satsui no Hado, accusing him of cowardice.

Akuma then throws Ryu back to the ground, and tells Ryu he is following the same path as his deceased master, a path of that lead to weakness and straight to hell. Ryu then as he stares at the fire and has a series of flashbacks. First he rembembers of him watching the fight between his master and Akuma. Later he remembers Gen on a raining place after defeating him saying that let both of him and Akuma, as death comes to all of those who live by the warrior's code. Finally Ryu then remembers of his first memory, his younger self being carried by Gouken to his dojo.

As Akuma is about to leave, Ryu stands up and prepares to face him. As they battle, Ryu successfully throws Akuma at the sky, and charges a Shinku Hadoken, but Akuma interrupts and unleashes a series of Messatsu Gohados. Ryu manages to dodge them all, strikes a punch that puts Akuma back to the ground, and hit him with a Shoryuken. He then starts to charge a Metsu Hadoken, while Akuma is fastly approaching him. As Ryu is about to unleash his Hadoken at Akuma, the launch is interrupted by Ken using a Shinryuken. He tells Ryu that he's mad because Ryu tried to take down Akuma without his help.

In an unknown forest, a mysterious man unleashes a technique at a waterfall, spreading its water in a rain like move.

Sakura Kasugano[]

In her Aftermath episode, Dan and Blanka support Sakura as she steps into a fighting ring to fight Zangief. Right as she's about to punch Zangief, the scene cuts to Sakura getting interviewed by many people, causing her to feel uncomfortable and eventually leave in a taxi alongside Dan and Blanka.

While sitting in the car, she recalls getting knocked to the floor by one of Zangief's punches. The scene cuts to Sakura returning home after a long 3 months of training. A voice, presumably her mom, calls to her saying Kei wanted to talk to her about something. Kei Talks to Sakura about what she has planned for post graduation. Kei goes on to explain how they had so many dreams when they and many others were younger, and how it seems impossible to reach those dreams; so they go after things they can do. Kei explains that she's slightly envious of Sakura because she can achieve her dreams from all those years ago.

The scene starts to show Sakura fighting Zangief while she explains how she wonders if her own dreams will ever become true because she just runs into her goals blindly. When that fails or she realizes that' it's not what she made it out to be, she gets depressed and repeats the cycle continuously. She goes on to explain how she continues to tell herself that this time is it. By doing this, Sakura believes that she will one day fulfil her dreams, going one step at a time, and going beyond where she was yesterday.

The scene shifts one final time, this time to Sakura, Dan, and Blanka being interviewed after the fight. The main interviewer questions Sakura what it means for her to fight. As Sakura looks at the picture she took of Ryu a few years ago, she explains that it's to see what kind of future she can reach and grab a hold of.

Videos[]

Street Fighter series
Video games (Full list)
Main games Street Fighter · Street Fighter II (Champion Editon · Hyper Fighting · Super · Turbo · Hyper · HD Remix · Ultra) · Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams (Alpha 2 · Alpha 3) · Street Fighter III (2nd Impact · 3rd Strike) · Street Fighter IV (Super · Arcade Edition · Ultra) · Street Fighter V (Arcade Edition · Champion Edition) · Street Fighter 6
Spinoffs Street Fighter EX (EX2 · EX3) · Street Fighter 2010 · Street Fighter: The Movie (Arcade version · Home version) · Street Fighter II: The Interactive Movie · Street Fighter: The Storytelling Game · Chun-Li ni makase China · Street Fighter: Puzzle Spirits · Street Fighter: Battle Combination · Super Street Fighter IV: PachiSlot Edition
Crossovers Marvel vs. Capcom series · SNK vs. Capcom series · Namco × Capcom series · Taisen Net Gimmick Capcom & Psikyo All Stars · Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo · Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix · Capcom Fighting All-Stars · Capcom Fighting Jam · Cannon Spike · Tatsunoko vs. Capcom · Street Fighter Online: Mouse Generation · Street Fighter × Mega Man · Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U · Street Fighter × All Capcom · Japan Sumo Cup: Yokozuna vs. Street Fighter · Puzzle Fighter · Super Smash Bros. Ultimate · TEPPEN · Street Fighter: Duel
Compilations Street Fighter Anniversary Collection · Street Fighter Alpha Anthology · Street Fighter Collection · Street Fighter Collection 2 · Street Fighter 30th Anniversary Collection
Shared Universe Final Fight series · Slam Masters series · Rival Schools series · Captain Commando
Miscellaneous List of games · List of playable characters · List of non-playable characters
Other media
Film/Television Future Cops · Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie · Live-action film · Street Fighter II: Yomigaeru Fujiwara-kyō · Street Fighter II V (List of episodes) · US TV series (List of episodes) · Street Fighter Alpha: The Animation · Street Fighter Alpha: Generations · Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li · Street Fighter IV: The Ties That Bind · Super Street Fighter IV OVA · Street Fighter - Round One: Fight! · Balrog: Behind the Glory · Street Fighter: Legacy · Street Fighter: Assassin's Fist · Street Fighter: World Warrior · Matador · Street Fighter: Resurrection
Comics Street Fighter II (manga) · Street Fighter Gaiden · Street Fighter (UDON) (Legends: Chun-Li · Legends: Ibuki · Issue 0 · Street Fighter IV Issue 2 · The Life and Death(s) of Charlie Nash · Street Fighter vs. Darkstalkers) · Street Fighter Alpha (manga) · Sakura Ganbaru! · Cammy Gaiden · World Warrior Encyclopedia (Hardcover) · Ryu Final · Street Fighter Zero (HK comic) · Street Fighter (Brazilian comic series) · Street Fighter Zero (Brazilian comic) · EX2 Plus (comic) · Street Fighter (Malibu comic) (Issue 1 · Issue 2 · Issue 3)
Advertisement