Kyo Kusanagi | |
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The King of Fighters XIV final concept by Ogura | |
Profile | |
Birthdate | December 12; 19 years old (KOF '94), 20 years old (KOF series) |
Birthplace | Tokyo, Japan |
Height | 181 cm (5'11½") |
Weight | 75 kg (165 lbs) |
Blood type | B (RH-) |
Family/Relatives | Saisyu Kusanagi (father) Shizuka Kusanagi (mother) Souji Kusanagi (cousin) Aoi Kusanagi (cousin) Kyo-1, Kyo-2 (clones) K', Krizalid, K9999, Nameless (possess your DNA) Kusanagi (clone created by Chizuru Kagura) Yuki (girlfriend) |
Job/Occupation | Student, heir to the mandate of the Kusanagi clan |
Likes | His motorcycle, his girlfriend (Yuki) |
Dislikes | Effort |
Hobbies | Writing poetry |
Favorite Food | Broiled fish |
Forte in Sports | Ice Hockey |
Special skill | Pirokinesis |
Favorite music | Rock |
Measurements (bust, waist, hip) | Unknown |
Weapon | Does not have |
Fighting style | Kusanagi style of ancient martial arts + personal style of Chinese boxing (Kenpo) |
Kyo Kusanagi (草薙 京, Kusanagi Kyō) is the main protagonist in the game series, The King of Fighters. He was first introduced in The King of Fighters '94 as the main leader of the Japan team. He is known as the rival of, Iori Yagami.
He was first introduced as a cocky delinquent high school student who is the hair of the Kusanagi clan, one of the three clans that sealed the legendary snake entity, Orochi, 1,800 years ago, His clan wields pyrokinetic powers, an inherited power that few members obtain. They, along with the Yasakani and Yata clans, keep one of the three sacred treasures used to contain Orochi long ago. His family's treasure is the Kusanagi Sword, and his family crest is the sun, represented in a stylized halo of fire. His official nickname is Scion of the Flame [1][2] or The Cleansing Exorcising Flame.[2][3]
Aside from the main series, Kyo also has a spin-off manga story based on his adventure in The King of Fighters '96, entitled The King of Fighters: Kyo. A video game under the same name was also created to further expand his character. In addition, a number of image songs and audio dramas featuring Kyo's character have been released, including the contents of his own character image album consisting of all of his theme songs. He is a member of SNK's character image band, The Band of Fighters and also co-star alongside Iori in one of SNK's promotional series, Part Time Stories: Kyo & Iori. At Vigamus,[4] a museum of videogames sponsored by the municipality of Rome, a lists Kyo as the mascot of the mid-90's era of Neo Geo.[5]
Development
When designing characters for the first The King of Fighters, developers wanted a new hip hero who would easily rival the Fatal Fury and Art of Fighting characters in style.[6] Through most of his development, Kyo was meant to be called Syo Kirishima, and was dressed in martial arts clothing common with fighting games at the times. But late in production, his name became Kyo Kusanagi, likely due to the KOF story's change in direction towards the Yamata no Orochi legend. When designing Syo, Shinichi Morioka (Kyo and Iori's creator) used Shotaro Kaneda from the Akira manga as inspiration. When Syo appears as a striker in KOF 2000, he would be voiced by Mitsuo Iwata who also voiced Kaneda.[7] The idea for his flames -as well as the other elemental powers for the rest of the Japan team- was derived from the anime Getter Robo; in the show, there were three featured heroes who served as the inspiration for the KOF trio: the protagonist had a "fiery" persona, his friend was "down-to-earth giant". It is also a homage to a Japanese phrase of giving birth to fire (roughly translated as "lighting strikes the earth which sparks the flame").[8]
Sprites
References
- ↑ Official character profile from The King of Fighters XII
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Official character profile from KOF Maximum Impact Regulation "A"
- ↑ Official site for The King of Fighters XIII
- ↑ Vigamus official website.
- ↑ SNK Legends at Italian Museum of Videogames, Vigamus! Archived from the original
- ↑ - "The King of Fighters ’94 - Developer Interview" Archived from The original'
- ↑ From Air Duel and Last Resort to The King of Fighters ‘94 and Daraku Tenshi: the early years of Mitsuo Kodama from VGDensetsu
- ↑ Akihiko Ureshino, ed. (2005). The King of Fighters Perfect Reader (in Japanese). Nikkei Business Publications, Inc. pp. 136~139.