In 2022, Brawlers Are Hitting Stronger than Ever

Saying that brawlers are having a moment in videogames would be a disservice. Deck-building games had their moment in the past few years. Space horror games are having a moment in 2023, by the looks of it. In 2022, however, brawlers are having a reckoning.
You only need to look back a couple of years to see how the genre came back swinging its feet and throwing trash cans through the air like never before. Streets of Rage 4, River City Girls, The Friends of Ringo Ishikawa: Each brought back the nostalgic feeling of fighting dozens of enemies at a time, but through a modern lens. After all, while the genre stopped being as popular as it once was as arcades continue to fade into obscurity, the influence permeated dozens of different examples since. The lessons learned in recent times, as well as the technological freedom that have liberated developers from the limitations of the ‘90s, all intertwine with each other.
It’s no surprise, then, that it’s mostly independent developers who have been in charge of bringing back a genre that spent years fighting in the underground to keep the prestige alive, as the rest of the industry shrugged them off until they became too successful to ignore. Shank wouldn’t have happened without Castle Crashers. Madworld wouldn’t be the same without Godhand preceding it. There’s a lineage of fingerprints in the boxing ring that the genre stands on today, each set of hand wraps covered in blood contributing to its history.
2022 kicked off with Sloclap’s Sifu, introducing its carefully refined combat reminiscent of the studio’s often overlooked Absolver. With its issues around cultural appropriation notwithstanding, it stands as a showcase of a modern brawler that stays close to its roots. Progressing through the game means unlocking more movements and attacks, not fancy powers. You learn to trick the enemy with a bait and switch combination, or to kick environmental objects at anyone who dares to attempt to attack you. There’s a strong foundation that benefits from practice, and hitting the ground time and time again until you’re comfortable enough to do it all over again, succeeding on the next run.