Sifu



Sifu (occasionally rendered as SIFU) is an action Beat'Em Up video game developed and published by indie developer Sloclap in 2022 for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5.

The game puts players in the shoes of an unnamed child of a kung fu master somewhere in China whose school was massacred by a group of rogue martial artists led by a former student named Yang. One of his accomplices leaves the child for dead, only for the latter to be resurrected by a magical talisman. The child later grew up to train themself for a Roaring Rampage of Revenge against those who wronged them and their father.

A central mechanic of the game is its resurrection feature, whereby the player can come back to life on the spot, albeit at the cost of accelerated ageing: as the player character gets older, their strikes will be more powerful, but they have less health. Dying too many times will lead to a Game Over. This, along with skill-related elements, made the game akin to a Roguelike.


 * Acrofatic: Juggernaut enemies are just as fast and deadly as regular mooks.
 * Affably Evil: Apart from Fajar and Sean, who run a drug cartel and a dojo with an emphasis on pain, respectively, most of the bosses are otherwise respectful, with Kuroki even telling the player to give up their quest for revenge.
 * An Aesop:
 * And Your Reward Is Clothes: Beating the game by unlocks the Vengeance outfit, while beating the game by  unlocks the Wude outfit.
 * Owning the Deluxe Edition entitles you to the "Young Man" outfit which is a sly reference to Oldboy.
 * Anti-Frustration Features: Due to the game's third-person perspective, the camera may occasionally bump into scenery such as pillars. To compensate for this, the game fades them out of view. In addition, characters occluded by the environment or scenery are outlined in red for players to spot them more easily.
 * The Atoner:
 * Book Ends: The game's prologue puts you in the shoes of the antagonist Yang
 * Drugs Are Bad: Fajar, aka "The Botanist", runs a drug cartel in a rundown part of the city.
 * Everybody Was Kung-Fu Fighting: Pretty much everyone you encounter would dish out some martial arts moves back at you, even the drug junkies and receptionists.
 * Excuse Plot: You're the child of a slain kung fu master out for those who wronged you and your late father. Though while the main plot is paper-thin and made purposely ambiguous the lore is still worth reading about.
 * Game Mod: Plenty of them showed up shortly after its release, thanks to its use of an off-the-shelf version of Unreal Engine 4. Standouts include John Wick and Shaggy Rogers, though there's also the far sillier ones like CJ from Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Queen Elsa from Frozen and even Snow White of all people.
 * Homage: One scene in the Squats takes up a fixed side-on perspective akin to the famous Oldboy corridor scene.
 * Idiosyncratic Difficulty Levels: The Spring Content Update adds the following difficulty levels due to popular demand:
 * Student - Easy
 * Disciple - Default/Hard
 * Master - Harder Than Hard
 * Nintendo Hard: Both fans and reviewers alike have likened Sifu to either Dark Souls or most especially Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice due to its immense difficulty and use of the posture mechanic, termed in-game as "structure".
 * One-Man Army: Difficulty notwithstanding, the player character will have defeated dozens of mooks on the way to Yang.
 * Purely Aesthetic Gender: The choice of male or female for the player character doesn't affect move availability, stats or anything gameplay-related.
 * Rapid Aging: Getting yourself killed allows you to be resurrected on the spot, but at the cost of adding years to your age and decreasing your maximum health. You're able to strike harder, however.
 * Roaring Rampage of Revenge: The player character is driven by vengeance following the murder of his/her father in the hands of Yang and his posse, who would later go on to form their own criminal enterprises.
 * What Measure Is a Mook?: