Zangief

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Zangief

Zangief in Street Fighter Alpha 3.
Game series Street Fighter series
First game Street Fighter II
Voiced by (English) William Johnson (Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie)
Voiced by (Japanese) Wataru Takagi (Street Fighter Alpha series)
Tesshō Genda (Capcom vs. SNK series, Capcom Fighting Evolution)
Tetsuo Kanao (Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie)
Hidenari Ugaki (Street Fighter Zero: The Animation)
Live action actor(s) Andrew Bryniarski (Street Fighter)
Mike Fass (Street Fighter: The Later Years)
Information
Birthplace Soviet Union
Blood type A
Fighting style Professional wrestling, Sambo
Likes Wrestling, Cossack Dancing
Dislikes Projectiles, young beautiful women
Special skill Drinking vodka in one gulp, enduring the cold, deflecting energy-based projectiles

Zangief (ザンギエフ Zangiefu?, based on Russian Зангиев) is a video game character created by Capcom. He is part of the Street Fighter series of fighting games. Zangief is revolutionary in the fact that his appearance in Street Fighter II marks the first time a player could control a predominate grappler in a fighting game. He also was the first "360o" fighter, whose main special move, a grappling move named the Spinning Piledriver, required spinning the joystick in nearly 360 degrees and pressing a punch button. The timing of this move is tricky, as Zangief will simply jump if the stick is tilted upwards for too long and often it has to be chained with another attack to get it to work properly. Mastering this maneuver would eventually pay off since, in the first few versions of Street Fighter II, the Spinning Piledriver is the most powerful move in the game for any character.

Contents

[edit] Plot overview

Zangief in Street Fighter IV
Zangief in Street Fighter IV

As the greatest professional wrestler in the Soviet Union, Zangief was contacted by a man referred to as Erai Hito (Great Man) to represent his country in the second World Warrior tournament; this individual clearly resembles former Soviet leader and President, Mikhail Gorbachev.

Zangief agreed and began training in the extreme climates of Siberia. He built his strength by wrestling polar bears, gaining many fearsome scars in the process, concocting his trademark Spinning Piledriver after being picked up by a cyclone while performing a piledriver on a bear. With the assistance of his government, Zangief emerged from his training as "The Red Cyclone", determined to demonstrate Russia's magnificent power to all of the world.

A patriot through and through, Zangief opposed the activities of Shadaloo. During the course of his battles, Zangief would come to meet one of his biggest fans, the Japanese pro wrestler R. Mika, co-operate with the Sumo wrestler E. Honda to destroy M. Bison's Psycho Drive[1], co-operate with X-Man Colossus against Omega Red[2], and dance with his Gorbachev - like benefactor after later winning the World Warrior tournament[3]; in later editions in the Street Fighter II series, Zangief addresses him as "Mr. Ex-President"[4], yet Zangief is listed as being from the USSR, making it unclear as to whether these events take place before or after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

[edit] Gameplay

Zangief is a close range character as he is a wrestling type. Many of his moves are more complicated to pull off due to the 360o motions input required to perform the moves, making him a character for advanced players. Zangief is one of the slowest of all characters in the Street Fighter games and presents a large target, yet compensates for this with his evasive techniques (Spinning Lariat and Banishing Flat) can control large amounts of space whilst negating the ability of other characters to do so with their projectile moves, and his Spinning Piledriver can grab opponents out of most ground-based moves.

His "Spinning Piledriver" was the single most damaging special move in the original Street Fighter II series, until the introduction of T. Hawk, and is capable of 'sucking in' opponents from a surprising distance. Zangief's Flying Stomach block attack (U, D + FP) is the only standard move capable of dizzying a character in one hit in the Street Fighter II series. In most incarnations, Zangief is extremely dangerous against floored opponents as he is able to force them to block regular attacks so that he can pin them in place to deliver a powerful throw or hold. From Super Street Fighter II Turbo onwards, Zangief became capable of performing a dynamic rushdown with the addition of his Banishing Flat.

[edit] Actors

In many games, Zangief is voiced by Wataru Takagi. In the Capcom vs SNK series, Tesshō Genda voices Zangief. In Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie, he is voiced by Tetsuo Kanao (Japanese) and William Johnson (English).

He was played by Andrew Bryniarski in the Street Fighter movie. Here he was a lackey of Bison's and served as comic relief in the movie, uttering silly lines at inappropriate times (for example, after seeing televised feed of a truck loaded with explosives about to crash into the villains' camp, he yells out the now-infamous line, "Quick! Change the channel!"). He also had a long fight with E. Honda and one "hero moment" near the end of the movie. Zangief was also a loyalist to Bison until Dee Jay explained Bison was the "bad guy." Zangief then learned that Bison promised Dee Jay that he would be paid, while he himself was not.

In 2007-2008, the website CollegeHumor produced a spoof series titled Street Fighter: The Later Years in which Zangief, played by Mike Fass, plays a central role in the first half of the story[5].

[edit] Design and development

Zangief's name is possibly based on real-life pro wrestler Victor Zangiev, a former Soviet amateur who trained as a professional in NJPW, and who also competed in WCW and UWF International. Zangief's prototypical name was Vodka Gobalsky. Zangief's biography apparently plays upon the association between Stalinist regimes and state-funded athletics programs utilising bodybuilding drugs following the domination of the 1954 World Weightlifting Championships by the Soviet Union.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Street Fighter Alpha 3
  2. ^ X-Men vs. Street Fighter
  3. ^ Street Fighter 2 series
  4. ^ Ending for Super Street Fighter 2-Zangief(SNES)
  5. ^ 'Street Fighter The Later Years' Stuff on CollegeHumor

[edit] External links