Street Fighter V: Champion Edition Still Can’t Top Ultra Street Fighter IV

Street Fighter V launched with an identity problem. When it came out in 2016, it felt unfinished; it had a relatively small pool of fighters, and lacked some of the basic options usually found in fighting games, including a story mode. The actual fighting was fine—although the new V-Gauge system felt a bit confused, as it tried to simplify some parts of the game in a way that’s a little complicated and confusing. Its impact at the time was muted, and not just because it was (and remains) exclusive to the PlayStation 4 and PC. It felt like a game that didn’t really have any reason to exist, outside of Capcom’s financial interest in continually making new Street Fighter games.
Much has changed in the last four years. Capcom released a full story mode within a few months of launch, and has added 24 more fighters, both new and familiar, through DLC. What once felt light on content is now bursting at the seams, between the cinematic story, short cut-scene based individual stories for each character, multiple arcade modes patterned after the history of the franchise, and an online suite laden with options and alternatives. It’s all included in the new Street Fighter V Champion Edition, which is a major improvement over the original 2016 game. And even though Street Fighter V finally knows who it is, it now has a different identity problem: it’s still not clear who this game is for.
Street Fighter V’s problem is the same as it’s always been: Street Fighter IV still exists. Ultra Street Fighter IV, 2014’s final update of the 2008 original, is still the best modern Street Fighter game, with a deep roster of characters from throughout the game’s history, a more stylish art aesthetic, and an overwhelming number of bells and whistles. It made sense to update the series’ basic architecture for the new generation of gaming systems that launched in 2014, but Street Fighter V has still failed to capture the magic of its predecessor. And with Ultra Street Fighter IV being available on both the PlayStation 4 and PC—the same hardware as Street Fighter V—it’s even harder to see why anybody would play the newer game instead.