Sagat
Sagat | |
---|---|
Street Fighter character | |
File:Sagat (Street Fighter).png Sagat in Street Fighter Alpha 2 | |
First appearance | Street Fighter (1987) |
Portrayed by | Wes Studi |
Voiced by |
|
Motion capture | Wes Studi |
Information | |
Fighting style | Muay Thai |
Origin | Thailand |
Nationality | Thai |
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Sagat (Japanese: サガット Hepburn: Sagatto, Thai: สกัด, Sakat) is a fictional character in Capcom's Street Fighter fighting game series. Originally an unplayable boss in the first installment, he became a playable character in later games. Sagat is depicted as a renowned Muay Thai expert known for his incredible power and height. His signature move is the "Tiger Knee". He is often called the "Emperor of Muay Thai" in his home country. He was possibly named after Sagat Petchyindee.[1][2]
Appearances[edit]
In video games[edit]
Sagat first appears as the main antagonist and final boss of the original Street Fighter. After the player defeats the eight initial opponents, their character Ryu (or Ken on Player 2's side) is taken to Thailand to face the final two opponents: Adon, Sagat's apprentice and Sagat himself. After being defeated, Sagat tells the player that he or she is the "strongest Street Fighter in the world".
His next appearance was in Street Fighter II: The World Warrior, where he appears as one of the four Grand Masters, being the third CPU-controlled boss in the single player mode before M. Bison. He appears in this game with multiple scars, including a large diagonal one across his chest that he received from Ryu as a result of his loss in the first game. This scar reminds Sagat of the grudge he harbors against Ryu after the loss in the first tournament.[3] Like the other bosses, he became a playable character in the subsequent revisions of the game beginning with Street Fighter II': Champion Edition.
Sagat appears in the prequel series Street Fighter Alpha. In addition to fleshing out his rivalry with Ryu, a rivalry with his former apprentice Adon is introduced there as well, along with Dan Hibiki, a character whose father, Go, was killed by Sagat in a fight years before. It was also revealed that Sagat lost his right eye while fighting Dan's father. The Alpha series also show him to become part of M. Bison's criminal organization Shadaloo, but leaves in Street Fighter Alpha 3 after he discovers that Bison had wanted to experiment his Psycho Power against Ryu, allowing him to realize the pettiness of his vendetta against Ryu. Sagat is an unlockable character in Street Fighter EX3, where his story has his resentment for Ryu fading.
Sagat returns in Street Fighter IV once again as a playable character with the animosity in his feud with Ryu no longer present and even referring to him in his ending as a "friend". In Street Fighter V, Sagat is featured as part of the third season of downloadable content. During his story, he is briefly tempted by Satsui no Hadō but overcomes it, coming to understand Ryu's struggles in the process.
Sagat also appears in crossover games such as Capcom vs. SNK 2 and Street Fighter X Tekken, in which he is paired up with Dhalsim and in other titles, including mobile puzzle game Street Fighter: Puzzle Spirits, where he is a super-deformed character.[4]
Character design[edit]
Sagat is very tall at 224 cm (7 ft 4 in), two heads taller than Ryu in Street Fighter, a trait he uses to his advantage in his long-reaching attacks. He possesses a hulking, muscular build at 130 kg (280 lb). His hands are massive enough to close around the entire head of many of his opponents. He is depicted as being bald.
In the Street Fighter II series, Sagat's in-game sprite does not display the highly muscular build of the Street Fighter Alpha series, although even at that time he had been consistently portrayed so in his Super Street Fighter II Turbo ending, and other Capcom artworks. Later on, the game graphics developed to match those of the comics. Sagat wears an eyepatch over his severely damaged right eye, though the lack of depth perception and loss of peripheral vision do not seriously hamper his ability as a powerful fighter. Sagat lost his eye during a fight with Dan Hibiki's father, Go, in which Sagat killed him. The massive scar on his chest is a constant reminder of Ryu's victory. Sagat makes no attempt to conceal the disfigurement, and in fact draws power from the hateful memory it invokes; in Capcom vs. SNK 2, Sagat's scar glows while he charges energy for his S-Groove super meter.
Sagat wears traditional Muay Thai shorts (which have the word "Tiger" printed on the waistband) and classic wraps. The trunks have colors varying from purple with white trim in the original Street Fighter, to blue with red trim in Street Fighter II and to blue with yellow trim in Street Fighter Alpha. He wears tape around his hands and feet to protect his knuckles and shins.
In Street Fighter V he is given a pet tiger named Willa Maiu (แมว).
In other media[edit]
In the anime film Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie, Sagat appears in the opening scene fighting against Ryu during a thunderstorm, receiving his iconic chest wound at the climax of the fight. The battle takes place at a grass field during a stormy night, a scenery which was remade as a stage in Street Fighter Alpha 2 for Sagat's final match in the single-player mode against Ryu. Afterwards, he is seen working for Bison. Though he has little impact on the film's main story, he asks Bison for a chance to fight Ryu again when they locate him, but Bison refuses and instead sends Sagat to New York to dispatch Cammy and Vega. His fate after this is unknown. He was voiced by Shigezo Sasaoka in Japanese and Peter Spellos (as David Conrad) in English.
In the live-action film version of Street Fighter, Sagat was portrayed by Native American actor Wes Studi as one of the film's main antagonists. He was given the full name of Viktor Sagat and is depicted in the film as a black market arms dealer that runs the Shadaloo Tong and gets conned by Ryu and Ken. He is also depicted with his eye patch over his left eye, instead of his right.[5] In this version, he was a former Muay Thai cagefighter who went by the name "Iron Fist" before retiring. In the film's climax, he is defeated by Ken, but escapes from Bison's base before it explodes and apparently evades capture. In the video game versions of Street Fighter: The Movie for the arcade and home consoles, the film version of Sagat is a selectable character, where he wears yellow boxing trunks and lacks his chest scar. Uniquely, this portrayal was also of a more average size instead of being well over 210 cm (7 ft) tall.
In the American animated TV series Street Fighter, which combined plot elements of the game and the live-action movie mentioned above, he is depicted as Bison's second in command. Once again, he is given the full name of Viktor Sagat.
In the Japanese Street Fighter II V animated series, Sagat is a former Muay Thai champion who was falsely incriminated by a drug ring known as the Ashura (a division of Shadaloo) after refusing to throw a fight for them. He encounters Ryu after he is imprisoned in the same jail as a result of a frame-up by the same gang. They start off as rivals, but eventually develop a mutual respect for each other and team up against the prison's corrupt warden, Nucci. Ryu and Ken eventually take down Ashura and uncover evidence to clear Sagat's name, resulting in Sagat's release. In gratitude, Sagat directs Ryu and Ken to seek out Dhalsim in India to learn Hadou. Dhalsim himself mentions that Sagat once visited him, seeking to learn Hadou, but Dhalsim refused. The Sagat in this series lacks the eye-patch and scar from his video game counterpart. He also has a darker skin tone and wears a Mongkhon on his head. This version is not antagonistic and is not affiliated with Shadaloo as opposed to other versions. In the English dub, he makes a reference to his sisters, confirming that he is not an only child.
1990s rapper Sagat derived his stage name from the character. He even wore an eye patch over one eye, similar to the character.
Reception[edit]
Sagat ranked at number 22 in the list of Best Characters of 1991 from the February 1992 issue of Gamest magazine in Japan.[6] In a 2018 worldwide poll by Capcom, Sagat was voted seventh most popular Street Fighter character.[7]
Basim Usmani of Dualshockers described him as the most believable villain of the series, a celebrated kickboxer that used very few words. They additionally praised his design compared to other fighters in the series, stating "He is tall, arrogant, and muscular in a way that is only slightly exaggerated, [...] He lives to fight and usually appears to be having a good time."[8] IGN's D. F. Smith noted that while much of his design didn't stand out, "Throw in that face, though, and everything changes," adding that elements such as his scar and eye patch "come together to make a guy who means business." Smith further noted his importance as one of the few characters from the original Street Fighter to appear in later installments of the series, stating that while he wasn't as popular as Ryu, "he's certainly pulled together a following of his own."[9] Gavin Jasper of Den of Geek described him as "a bit of an antihero", whose personality is reflected in how he fights, comparing him to Ryu but describing him as "far more blunt, unforgiving, and controlling". He further praised his story for being one of redemption, and how he eventually comes to see the world the same way his rival Ryu does.[10]
References[edit]
- ↑ ธนศุทธิสกุล, รัชพล (11 April 2016). "ราชาน็อกเร็ว! "สกัด พรทวี" ยอดมวย 9 ชีวิต! หนึ่งโมเดลเกม "สตรีทไฟเตอร์"" [Fast Knockout King! "Sagat Porntawee" Legendary 9 Lives Boxer! One of the model in "Street Fighter"] (in ไทย). Archived from the original on 17 September 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2016. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Serrels, Mark (6 February 2015). "Street Fighter's Sagat Was Based On A Real Life Fighter". Retrieved 12 April 2016.
- ↑ Capcom. Street Fighter II ' - Champion Edition.
Sagat: COME BACK RYU! GET TOUGHER AND LEARN WHAT IT IS TO BE A LOSER... TODAY, MY GREAT SCAR SHOWS I HAVE LEARNED AND OVERCOME... UNTIL THEN, I'LL BE WAITING!
Search this book on - ↑ "Capcom Announces New Street Fighter Mobile Title with Puzzle Element". MMOsite. October 12, 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-10-15. Retrieved 2014-10-20. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ "Movie Moments". GamePro. No. 67. IDG. February 1995. p. 13.
- ↑ 第5回ゲーメスト大賞. GAMEST (in 日本語) (68): 4.
- ↑ "第1回 キャラクター人気投票 | CAPCOM:シャドルー格闘家研究所". game.capcom.com (in 日本語). Retrieved 2019-12-27.
- ↑ Usmani, Basim (2022-12-22). "10 Unannounced Street Fighter 6 Characters Fans Want To See". Dualshockers. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
- ↑ Smith, D. F. (2012-06-14). "Top 25 Street Fighter Characters - Day III". IGN. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
- ↑ Jasper, Gavin (2019-02-22). "Street Fighter Characters Ranked". Den of Geek. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
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- CS1 ไทย-language sources (th)
- CS1 uses 日本語-language script (ja)
- CS1 日本語-language sources (ja)
- Fictional character
- Capcom antagonists
- Fictional characters missing an eye
- Fictional henchmen in video games
- Fictional martial artists in video games
- Fictional martial arts trainers
- Fictional Muay Thai practitioners
- Fictional Thai people
- Male characters in video games
- Street Fighter characters
- Video game bosses
- Video game characters introduced in 1987