Noob question, just starting the game but what are some rush down characters in SFV? At the same time beginner friendly and reasonably ranked in the tier list.
Nah he’s very offense-oriented; V-Skill/V-Trigger rewards you for going balls to the wall as well as good mixup potential.
With that said, Karin, Cammy, and Rashid are all good options for a rushdown character. You could also play a more offensive Nash if you want though he’s more of an all-around/balanced type.
Spoiler
You could also play rushdown Sim to rustle some jimmies
I didn’t bother to mention him cause I see like 1 Necalli player every 2 days of playing (meanwhile I see like 50 Kens, occasionally a couple of Karin or Cammy players and maybe a surprise special guest appearance from 2 or 3 less popular characters like Laura or F.A.N.G). The Necalli players I do run into are usually playing him defensively, though that may be because I play Karin and so I keep them in the corner.
There are 2 traditional rushdown characters in the game: Necalli and Ken. There is also Nash, although his fireball lets him play a little differently. There are two speedy grappler characters as well in Laura and R.Mika who have a much tougher time getting in or playing footsies but are demons once they are in. Characters such as Cammy rely much more heavily on footsies and aren’t anywhere close to as scary once they’re in.
Hm, well I guess I’ve just been running into too many Kens that they kinda all just melt together into one big scrubby pot of mashers. I’ve rarely run into a Ken who actually knows what they’re doing, but when I do it’s usually someone who is heavily offense-oriented. I suppose it’ll differ with higher level play though, since I consider myself intermediate at my best and a novice at my worst.
While an interesting video, that actual ideas in it other than “your anti-airs are really good” and “you can hop fireballs in VT with HK Tatsu” are pretty bad. Confirming into a Tatsu off a single cr.mp? Really?
Ken, Nash, and Necalli are meant to be played at two ranges. At the edge of their long poke (generally st.hk or in Nash’s case f.hk) where they try and force a mistake to get in and then right in your face where they can mix up throws, strikes, and overheads due to having very strong frametrap games.
The hell? Necallis goes the most ham of all the characters in the game. If you try and play him defensively against any footsie character you’ll just lose flat out as he can’t compete.
How is Ken rushdown?
Run cancel is not something you can just throw out.
I feel like Ken is more of a whiff punish and poke->confirm kinda guy.
He has the ability to capitalize on stuff for big damage and he kind of lacks the ability to really easily crack people open from up close imo.
Compared to Ryu his close range game feels like way more of a risk.
Whiff punishing, yes. Poking, not so much in this game because his normals are pretty stubby, especially compared to Ryu. With Ken IMO you should work for a good counter-poke > punish setup and then get right in their grill and just start mixing things up ham. You have a good three things (back throw, heavy/EX tatsu especially when in Heat Rush, step kick if you are good at spacing) that have stupid amounts of corner carry. It’s also not a mistake that combos ending in tatsu finish with you basically standing over the opponent.
Then once you have them close, you have a pretty fast MK overhead (-4 on block), a cr.MP thats probably his best poke (+2 on block), an HK overhead (-4 on block) that also has a feint version that can be crazy mind games if you have good meaty timing, two target combos that can be mixed in either by themselves or as part of a string (both -2 on block if you stop on the first hit), a neutral jump HP and cross up MK that can both lead to solid confirmable combos using either target combo…
He has a lot of mostly safe options once you are close; it’s just all about not pushing too many buttons and trying not to get thrown.
I don’t agree really.
To each their own but in my (of course limited) experience, he does not have the kinds of normals for that kind of pressure gameplay.
If you want rushdown you want Necalli. Ken cannot safely press advantage. Jabs don’t link to low strong, low strong at anything but point blank does not connect with back strong. Back strong is -2 on block. These things don’t add up to the ability to just press buttons and keep pressuring.
This is a stupid article written during the beta, where Ken was trash.
In the live version:
Ken has the fastest dash in the game.
Ken has the fast shoto walkspeed like Ryu.
Ken has true blockstrings after V-Trigger.
Ken has set play after MK tatsu.
Ken has long range confirmable whiff punishes from s.MK.
Ken has a 10 frame V-Reversal (fastest in game tied with Chun IIRC), which is +2 on hit and even on block.
Ken has a 3 frame LK tatsu that is -3 on block.
Why in the hell are you ending blockstrings in Hadouken? This isn’t SFIV.
There’s a lot of different things about Ken rn and I think a lot of us are still trying to really learn him.
As someone who mains Ken, I can tell you that Ken isn’t someone who can easily pressure as say Karin or necalli, and you kinda have to play a little safe and wiff punish here and there. But once you are in, you are in. Any good Ken knows how to utilize his good dash in with St. Or Cr. Strong and mix it up with run grab, overhead kicks, and his dive kick-like ex air tatsu to pressure opponents.
He’s got a fast dash for keeping pressure up and does really good damage off a close hit confirm. A solid throw game rounds that out along with what is probably the best divekick in the game.
I’m not judging based on how good he is but rather what he’s designed for. Ken’s poking game outside of st.hk is abysmal. His whiff punishing game isn’t that special. Where he shines is if he can either land a close range cr.mp for loads of damage or anything into a MK Tatsu which lets him do some setplay.
Also, if you have meter you can do b.mp xx hp xx EX Hadoken for a full frametrap that leaves you at advantage. Really nasty in the corner because it effectively acts like a Rekka; technically minus (but for the EX Hadoken) but will catch you pressing buttons, giving him a chance to end it early for the throw or overhead.