Ansatsuken Explained
is a Japanese neologism used frequently in fictional works to describe any martial art style or fighting technique that has been developed with the purpose of killing an opponent. The term is used interchangeably as well and the homophonous term is used when the martial art style or technique explicitly revolves around swordsmanship rather than barehanded combat.
Examples in fiction
- Hokuto Shinken from the Fist of the North Star franchise, which is described as an .[1] The term ansatsuken has also been applied as well to other fighting styles in the series, particularly Nanto Seiken, Gento Kōken and Hokuto Ryūken (see list of fighting styles in Fist of the North Star).
- Tenshū, Suichū and Chishū, the three sons of Zekū in Ironfist Chinmi, are collectively known as the, as each of them are proficient in their own assassination styles:, and respectively.
- [2] [3] is a live-action feature film. It depicts the fighting style used by Street Fighter characters Ryu, Ken, Akuma and Gouken is described as a .[4] Although Ansatsuken is a general term in Japanese, it has been used in the English language edition of Street Fighter: Eternal Challenge and other English-language Street Fighter media specifically as the name of Ryu and Kens fighting style which is heavily based on striking-based martial arts such as Karate and Kempo. Though not a mistranslation, it likely stems from a wrong understanding of the usage of the term when converted to the English media from the Japanese sources.
- Gen from the Street Fighter series employs two assassination styles, and .
- used by El Gado in Final Fight Revenge.
- The in .
- used by the Mysterious Warrior in the NES version of . In Double Dragon Advance, this style is renamed and its now used by a group called the Five Emperors.
- The Japanese language edition of Avenger!, the first book in the Way of the Tiger series, is titled .
- The character Myousai Kakouen in Ikki Tousen has been described as a .
- The character Kuzuki Soichiro in Fate/stay night uses a rare martial arts technique known as .
- has "Satsujinken" as the main opposition to the protagonists. It's a principle followed by warriors who do not hold back in a fight and aim to kill their opponent, as they believe martial arts were created for this purpose.
See also
Notes and References
- Opening sequence of Hokuto no Ken (in Japanese), Episodes 23-82
- Web site: Comic-Con: Street Fighter Live-Action TV Series In Development - Ken and Ryu get their own show.. 13 July 2012 . IGN.
- Web site: Episode 62- Shane Carruth, Andrew Leavold, Joey Ansah. Street Fighter: Assassin's Fist. 15 April 2013 . Film Pulse. 13 May 2013.
- Book: STREET FIGHTER IV MASTER GUIDE 拳の書. 2008 . Enterbrain. 6–7, 23. Japanese. 978-4-7577-4513-1.