Categories Features

Street Fighter is getting a big cinematic reboot with some big names

Here comes a new challenger

Earlier this week, the internet was sent into a tizzy when a big cast list was published for the upcoming Street Fighter movie. On the one hand, there are some big names attached to this project; on the other hand, there are so many names that this could just as easily be a dumpster fire as a cult classic. Since we’ve got some time to kill (Street Fighter doesn’t release until October 2026), I thought I would bombard you with my first impressions about these casting choices. 

The Cast

Ken – Noah Centineo


Ryu – Andrew Koji


Blanka – Jason Momoa


Chun-Li – Callina Liang


Zangief – Olivier Richters


E. Honda – Hirooki Goto


Dhalsim – Vidyut Jammwal


Guile – Cody Rhodes


Joe – Alexander Volkanovski


Cammy – Mel Jarnson


Dan Hibiki – Andrew Schulz


Balrog – 50 Cent


Vega – Orville Peck


Juli – Rayna Vallandingham


M. Bison – David Dastmalchian


Akuma – Roman Reigns


Don Sauvage – Eric André


Will Street Fighter be a hot mess?

We don’t know yet, but my spidey sense is telling me that this will be a committee-induced disaster (please let me be wrong). The Paramount press release announcing the film spends more time talking about Paramount’s “diversified growth strategy” than it does talking about the film. In fact, judging from the cast announced so far, it seems like the movie isn’t aware of or interested in any of the long-established Street Fighter lore.

It’s good that the eight street fighters from SFII are all here, but where in the hell is Sagat? Instead of the iconic Thai kickboxer, we have Joe from the first game … who Sagat was the boss of! Worse, there’s no point in having a Dan Hibiki character without Sagat, since that’s who killed Dan’s father, driving him to train under the same teacher as Ryu and Ken. I could go on with the nerdy lore, but I’ll spare you.

Truthfully, there are too many unknowns to begin wrapping this movie in doom. The first live-action adaptation was a creative disaster that only lives on thanks to Raul Julia and the memes. On the other hand, the animated movie that was released the same year is a classic made with love that has one of the best fight scenes of the decade. Personally, I’ll be paying attention to who they get to do their fight choreography before I make any more judgments.

Daniel has been writing about games, technology, and nerd culture for over 10 years both on his own and for sites like Grunge, Android Police, and XDA. When he's not writing or editing he enjoys playing with his kid, coding, 3D printing, playing music, and reading. Ask him about e-readers; he has opinions!

More From Author

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments