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{{CharNavbox_XV}}
{{CharNavbox_XV}}
==General Gameplan==
==General Gameplan==
=== Meter Usage ===
Overall, meter improves Shun'ei's anti-airs, whiff punishes, ability to deal with projectiles, and defensive options.  Having 1 bar of meter available shores up a lot of Shun'ei's weaknesses, improving his neutral and his defense significantly.
* 214AC can be used occasionally as a burst approach tool.  It can also punish certain grounded projectiles on reaction.
*
* 236236P is an excellent tool for buffering anti-airs out of whiff cancels or recovery.
*
* 236236K is an excellent tool for buffering whiff punishes out of whiff cancels or recovery.
*
* 236236BD is great for punishing projectiles on reaction at mid-range.
*
* GC Blowback, GC Roll, and Shatter Strike are all very helpful for Shun'ei due to his naturally poor defense.
*
* Shatter Strike improves Shun'ei's anti-air game significantly.
*
* 236AC can be used to clash with EX-level projectiles, can punish regular projectiles if you're close enough, and can also be used for whiff punishes.
*
* 623AC is a risky hard read option in mid-ranged neutral, and has some surprising utility when defending against blockstrings or sliding through "high" projectiles (i.e. Robert/Athena/Ash).
*
* j.236AC is plus on block in the corner when used after 6B and can be used to set up further frametraps and extended blockstrings.
*
* j.236BD can be used to reset your pressure after 6B in blockstrings, just keep in mind it's a punishable gimmick against prepared opponents.
*
* 214236CD is a great anti-air that can punish opponents trying to exploit Shun'ei's weakness to crossups.


==Neutral==
==Neutral==
=== Approaches ===
* j.CD is your main approach tool.  Its range isn't amazing, but it does have a decent hitbox for air-to-ground interactions.  Its startup is a bit slow as well, but overall it's still a functional tool for approaching and controlling space.  You can counterhit confirm j.CD into 214C pretty much anywhere on the screen, and sometimes even stronger conversions like 623AC, or j.236C/AC in the corner.  j.CD's hitbox interacts a bit worse with jump normals coming from above, so be wary of your opponents landing on top of your j.CD approach with their own jump normal.
* j.D can be used in situations where you need a bit more range when approaching/landing.  At these farther spacings, you can try to frametrap after j.D with far.C or CD.  j.B can be a good alternative against low profiles or crouchers, due to having more active frames.
* CD defines your ground approach game.  It converts on trade, it's mostly safe on block when buffered into 214A, it can convert on aerial counterhit into 214A, it crushes lows, and it's very easy to dump meter into a conversion if you open an opponent up with it.  Be very alert for aerial approaches which might punish CD's recovery, and be cautious of opponents that use their movement to try and bait a whiff for a hard punish.  The prospective threat of CD can really allow you to control space, intimidate your opponent into not throwing out as many grounded pokes, and overall gives you some much needed dominance in the grounded neutral.  You may want to buffer 236236 after 214A if you see your opponent in the air when you throw CD out, that way you can 236236P out of recovery to try and punish opponents that jump on top of your CD with late timing.
* Aqua Spear is similar to CD, interacting well against pokes that don't have enough range to trade against it.  The reward on hit isn't as high as CD, but the lack of forward movement and whiff cancel property can make it a safer and more stable option.  Don't forget to use the 2369 input technique to guarantee you don't get DP after running.  You can buffer another 236 after the Aqua Spear to try and confirm into 236236K on reaction after any incidental whiff punishes.
* Far C can lead to some okay stagger pressure on block, with a variety of cancel routes available including safe on block specials like 214A or 236A/C.  Overall, while it has passable range and startup, it still isn't a particularly impressive approach tool.
* 214A can interact favorably against hops, and is fine to use against opponents that are sitting still and blocking.  However, it often loses to keepout buttons and is disastrous on whiff.
* 214AC is a bit like 214A with more range, but leads to more reward on hit in exchange for slower startup.  You can also use 214C - but 214C is firmly unsafe on block.
* 2D's weak range makes it an underwhelming approach tool.  It will even lose interactions to certain far As or other hop check normals due to how stubby it is and how much you have to run in to get in range for it.
* Running up for a throw or a light confirm is mostly functional for Shun. 
* 2A can actually be a relatively safe approach tool that can lead into frametrap/stagger pressure with 6B/6A/236A/236C cancels, and can confirm into 214A on hit.  There's actually an OS that can be used for this - do 2A with a slightly delayed cancel into 6A/6B/214A/236A.  The window for special/command normal cancels out of 2A is smaller than the cancel window for chains, so if you delay your 6A/6B/214A/236A input the right amount you'll get 5A/5B instead on whiff, and throwing out 5A/5B in neutral is much safer than whiffing 6A/6B/214A and less committal than Aqua Spear.  You can also use this OS for keepout.         
* Forward Airdash can be used to approach from unexpected angles, but your hops/jumps more or less give away your possible trajectory - a prepared opponent can try to pre-emptively catch your airdash approach, or move to a more favorable position.  Use precaution when approaching with airdash, but feel free to use it frequently against opponents that aren't good at stuffing it out.
* Down Forward Airdash can be used to approach in a similar fashion, best used when the airdash will get you into range for a light confirm or a throw - a bit more dangerous and 'gimmicky' than forward airdash, since your opponent gets a full grounded combo if they manage to react and punish.
* Down Airdash can be used to adjust the spacing of your hops/jumps, but its most practical use is probably to bait and punish anti-airs when jumping in.  Again, this sort of strategy can be much less effective against an opponent that's aware of the bait.
* 6B can be kara-cancelled into air specials, allowing for very tight and useful airdashes from the ground.  You can also kara-cancel into j.236P, which allows for unique movement and approaches with blue claw.  You can Tiger Knee j.236C for a keepaway tool.  Lastly, you can Tiger Knee EX Airdash Forward for incredibly fast approaches in neutral.  Tiger Knee-ing regular airdashes is difficult because you need to delay your airdash input both after your pre-jump frames AND a little bit longer so you can reach minimum height - EX Airdashes do not have a minimum height restriction which makes them a bit easier to Tiger Knee.
=== Anti-Airing ===
* Anti-air close jump-ins with 623A.  The upper body invuln and soft knockdown oki on hit make standing at the range where you can anti-air jumps on reaction a reasonable tactic.
*
* Anti-air jumps from farther away on reaction with 2C, far D, or j.A.  You get air reset pressure off 2C, allowing you to dash up and get a meaty 2A at least - if you hit your opponent with 2C when they are particularly high in the air, right above you, or slightly behind you then you may end up having enough time to run up and go for a spaced light confirm.  j.A air-to-airs allow you to run up for a grounded mixup of your choosing, and a well spaced air-to-air might even allow you to get a meaty hop on their air reset.
*
* A good place to start is by anti-airing most jumps on reaction with 623A, and anti-air farther jumps with far D.  You can incorporate 2C and j.A once you have a better feel for anti-airing at different ranges.
*
* j.A gives good pressure on hit and can be fast enough for anti-airs on reaction, but this strategy is vulnerable to opponents that throw out their jump normal earlier in their jump arc.  You can try to punish their landing with 2B into a light confirm if they throw out their jump normal too early.  However, Shun'ei doesn't have the greatest range on his light confirms, and 2B doesn't special cancel.  2D may be a preferable choice due to the slight range advantage over 2B.  It may be preferable to avoid playing a game of "guess the jump normal timing" altogether and just roll out of any hop/jump approaches if you aren't at the right spacing for anti-air 623A/far D.
* Hop/jump back j.A buffered into j.236B can be a solid and rewarding way to deal with crossups.  Normally fade-away air-to-airs don't reward you with oki after an air reset, but diagonal airdash allows you to keep the pressure on.  If the enemy's model is right above you when you air-to-air them, you can end up sliding under them with your diagonal airdash resulting in a free crossup for some ambiguous left/right mix.
*
* Aqua Spear and CD can be decent choices for pressuring landings from further away.
*
* If you have meter to spend, Gaianic Burst (236236P) has a sizeable hitbox, invuln, and comes out on frame 7, making it a powerful and relatively consistent anti-air...it even converts on trade!  You can either buffer 236236 in neutral and look for jumps to anti-air OR buffer a 236236 input after your pokes - 2D/Aqua Spear can both be whiff cancelled into 236236P, and hiding a buffer behind the recovery of your moves makes your ability to play grounded footsies a fair bit safer.
*
* Shatter Strike is a great, consistent option for anti-airing jumps on reaction in neutral and offers excellent reward.  Just keep in mind that it can move you forward underneath the opponent's jump, so you want to avoid using this against steep jump-in angles, and it helps to time the input right around the peak of your enemy's jump or a little bit after for better consistency.
*
* Phantom Singulation (214236CD) is 1 frame faster than 236236P while also hitting behind Shun'ei, making it a reliable tool for dealing with crossups.
*
* Running under steep/crossup jump-ins and punishing the opponent's landing frame with 2D can be doable, but Shun doesn't do this too much better than other characters.  The range and low profile on his 2D are both just sort of average and he only gets a little bit of a low profile when running.
*
* Overall, it should generally be best to look for 623A anti-airs as much as possible to start with.  Shun'ei's other anti-airs are all more situational.  Rolling out of scary hop/jump approaches is a valid and reasonable habit, but be careful of doing it too late against characters with good roll punish tools.  Keep an eye out for opportunities to hop in on your opponent's landing if they're too far for 2C anti-air or 2D landing punish.
=== Keepout ===
* j.D, j.B, j.CD, and j.A are all valid options when trying to keep your opponent out with jumps/hops - j.D has good horizontal range and a hitbox angled for air-to-ground interactions, j.CD has a bit less range but can trade more favorably, and j.A has a hitbox good for air-to-air interactions.  j.B can be good for 'fade-away' backward hops/jumps and is a good alternative to j.D due to its fast startup and longer active duration.
*
* CD converts on trade and can be buffered into 214A or 236A/C safely, but watch out for Guard Cancel Rolls.  It can interact decently against hops, but you'll whiff if they're at the peak of their hop when your hitbox comes out.  It's a reasonable tool to keepout with, but it's very easily whiff punished.  Use it with precaution.
*
* Aqua Spear has a nice disjointed hitbox, but also extends your hurtbox.  It can trade very easily, and requires precise spacing to fully benefit from the space control it provides.  Its range, disjoint property, and safety when combined with 236236P can make it a reasonable tool for keepout.  It can interact well against hops, but is even more prone to whiffing like CD.  It can be somewhat dangerous to whiff, but compared to CD, the lack of forward movement during the animation can make you a bit safer.  Keep in mind that you can't whiff cancel into super during recovery frames, so Aqua Spear is still somewhat vulnerable to aerial approaches - 236236P just makes it much safer.
*
* Far C can give great reward when used for keepout if you have a read on your opponent trying to run in for an approach.  The recovery on it can make it somewhat vulnerable to hops or different approach timings, and somewhat whiff punishable.  You can buffer into 6A midscreen for easy confirms, and go into 236A or 236C on block.  In the corner it will generally be preferable to buffer into 6B instead.  You can buffer 623C/214C and counterpoke with it.  You can also whiff cancel it into its target combo to control space for a bit longer with the 2nd hitbox.
*
* 2D doesn't have the best range, but it's very difficult to whiff punish.  Its whiff cancel property also makes it much safer and stronger against hops if you have meter for 236236P, which would normally be the ideal answer against 2D.  It gives a good oki situation on hit, making it a surprisingly reasonable option for keepout.  You can use 2362D36(P) as an input shortcut to prepare a whiff cancel into 236236P, and you can do another 236 after the shortcut in case you want to use super after 2D's recovery.
*
* Far A has surprisingly good range, and can stuff your opponent's attempts at approaching with hops/pokes.
*
*
* 2A can be used with the whiff cancel OS for a safe and low commitment tool.  Just keep in mind it isn't particularly oppressive and can still be beaten by hops, blowbacks, and different poke timings.
* j.236C can be used in conjunction with hops and jumps to build meter and keep your opponent out.  j.236C can also be tiger-knee'd, it functions a bit like a backdash that has less range and a longer animation, but with an active hitbox in front of it.  Be careful of giving up too much space with j.236C, and keep in mind the hitbox on it isn't particularly dominant.
*
* 2B can be buffered into Quick MAX in neutral, or simply used without QM to pre-emptively stuff opponents that try to run in.
*
* Far B has a lower hitbox than far A and can be used a little bit more effectively against hops when you're further away from your opponent.  It can also interact slightly better against crouching opponents, but far A will generally be preferable at its appropriate range.
*
* Far D is very vulnerable to whiff punishes.  However, if you have enough meter you can hit confirm it into Quick MAX combos.  It can then be used as a risky high range tool to stuff hops and punish grounded approaches heavily.
*
=== Whiff Punishes and Roll Punishes ===
* CD has decent range and good reward on hit.
* 236AC can be an alternative to CD that's safer on whiff and deals similar damage, although the tip hitbox is a soft knockdown, so overall your conversions likely won't be quite as good as CD.
* Far C has mostly unimpressive range, but great reward on hit and you can hit confirm it with Far C > 6A/6B, which helps if you aren't sure if your opponent had time to block or not.  Use this option when 2A won't reach.
* Far A is 6f and can be special cancelled into 214A or 623AC
* 2A is 5f, has functional range, and converts well.  Use this when you're not close enough for cl.C.
* If your opponent is point blank then throw, cl.A or cl.C are going to be your best bets depending on how much speed you need.
* Whenever you're buffering 236236 for fireball anti-airs, you can also keep an eye out for enemy whiffs and throw out 236236K for easy whiff punishes


==Pressure==
==Pressure==
=== Blockstrings ===
==== cl.C ====
-----
cl.C hits upper body and can lose interactions to moves with low profile or upper body invulnerability, keep this in mind.
Make sure to confirm into a good/optimal combo if you buffer into '''6A''' or '''6B > j.236C/AC''' and your cl.C hits.
You can space out cl.C to be safe from reversal throw.
cl.C > 6A is a true frametrap with a 1-2 frame gap.
cl.C > 6B is a true blockstring.
'''Meaty:'''
cl.C can be used in situations where you have at least enough time to run in for a spaced light confirm. 
If all you can normally get from a given okizeme situation is a spaced meaty 2A, then you won't be able to do a tight meaty with cl.C.  You may be able to use it for delayed pressure though.
If your opponent backdashes, cl.C > 6A/6B will not combo, and you'll more or less reset to neutral at about far A distance, or closer if you're in the corner.
'''Special Cancels:'''
Your most reasonable midscreen special cancel options after 6A are 214A, 236A, 236C and 236AC.
6A > 214A/236A/236AC are all true blockstrings.  6A > 236C is a frametrap with a 3 frame gap.
236A and 236C are both about equally safe, -5 on block with lots of pushback means you're basically unpunishable.
236AC is a bit less safe with less pushback and -7 on block.  However, it allows you to pre-emptively confirm off 6A frametraps into full conversions with decent damage.
214A is also -5 on block, but has much less pushback than your other options and it can easily leave you in situational punish/frametrap range.  Note that 6A moves you closer to your opponent and results in 214A spacing you closer than it does off other blockstrings.
6A will combo into 214A/236A/236AC on hit.  236A doesn't give you any pressure on midscreen knockdown, but 214A and 236AC do.
You can hit confirm 6A > 214A/236A into a super on hit.
In the corner your Aqua Spear pushback is much less effective, making them pretty much completely unsafe.  214A pushback and safety remains about the same, making it a much more reasonable option.
'''Roll Punishes:'''
Your opponent can roll backwards midscreen either during your meaty, or in between your cl.C and 6A for a safe neutral reset.
If your opponent rolls forward during your meaty or in between your cl.C and 6A, then you can punish with cl.C./far C into a full conversion.
In the corner you can cover both rolls meterless with cl.C/far C.
Your opponent is able to roll in between 6A > 236C, but will be unable to punish.  Midscreen back roll will result in a complete neutral reset - whereas forward roll, or back roll in the corner will result in dangerous situations where you're safe but up close with your opponent.
'''GC Roll:'''
Your opponent should be able to GC Roll Backwards when blocking cl.C midscreen and punish your whiffed 6A with a light.  In the corner they should GC Roll Backwards and go for a close heavy normal punish instead.
Midscreen, it is not possible to punish 6A > 214A with a GC Roll Backwards after the blocked 6A.  In the corner, punishing 6A > 214A with GC Roll is possible, although you might only get a throw - you can GC Roll Backwards for a throw punish, or GC Roll Forwards and try to get something more than a throw (usually a far reaching normal).
6A > 236A/C/AC can be punished by GC Roll Forwards into a full combo.  It can be situationally punished by GC Roll Backwards midscreen by fast burst optionsC.  In the corner, both GC Rolls get a full punish.


==Mixups==
==Mixups==
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==Defense==
==Defense==


==Safejumps/Okizeme==
 
==Safejumps==
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Safe Jumps (Patch 2.10) Quick Reference Guide (* = Preferred Safe Jump)
! Ender || Setup
|-
| '''Back Throw''' || (slight delay) Hyper Hop > j.D (4F)
|-
| '''j.236A (from 6B)''' || Jump Forward > Jump Forward > j.D (4F) (whiffs on certain characters) || [[File:DoubleFulljump.webm|thumb|]]
|-
| * || 6B xx (kara cancel) j.236A > Jump Forward > j.D  (4F) (Universal) (Works on characters the above may whiff on such as Heidern) || [[File:J236A.webm|thumb|]]
|-
| || 6B xx (kara cancel) j.236D > Neutral Jump > j.236D > j.D (4F) || [[File:DoubleAirDash.webm|thumb|A Safe jump that setups left / right mix. ]]
|-
| '''214C (Ground Hit)''' || Forward Jump > Hop > j.D (4F)
|-
| '''214C/214 AC (Juggle)''' || Forward Hop > 6B xx j.236D (kara cancel) > j.C/j.B (4F) (Universal)
|-
| || Far C > Jump Forward j.D (4F) (Universal) (Doesn't work in corner)
|-
| || 2C > Forward Jump j.D (4F) (whiffs on certain characters)
|-
| || Jump Forward > Hop > j.D (4F) (Corner/Universal)
|-
| * || Hop Forward/Backwards > 6B xx (kara cancel) j.236D > j.C/j.B (4F) (Corner/Universal) || [[File:J236D_SafeJump.webm|thumb]]
|-
| '''236A or 236C  (Ground/Hit)''' || Hop > j.D (4F)
|-
| '''236236B/D (Ground Hit)''' || Jump Forward > j.D (4F)
|-
| '''236236B/D (Air/Juggle)''' || (slight delay on super cancel after 214C) > Jump Forward > j.D (4F)
|-
| '''236236BD''' || For this one you want to frame kill 52/60 frames exactly for a safe jump/safe hop (before the jump/hop)
|-
| || 2C > 2C > Hop > j.D (4F)
|-
| || Jump > f.B/f.A/2B > Hop > j.D (4F)
|-
| * || 623C > Neutral Jump > j.D (4F) (Corner) || [[File:Lvl2Super.webm|thumb|]]
|}


'''Note on Spaced Safejumps:''' Adjusting the arc of one of your hops/jumps should be enough to turn a spaced safejump into a regular safejump.
'''Note on Spaced Safejumps:''' Adjusting the arc of one of your hops/jumps should be enough to turn a spaced safejump into a regular safejump.
*For example, after 236236P midscreen you can do Super Jump Forward, Airdash Forward, instead of just doing a regular jump forward to make it a regular safejump instead of a spaced safejump.
*For example, after 236236P midscreen you can do Super Jump Forward, Airdash Forward, instead of just doing a regular jump forward to make it a regular safejump instead of a spaced safejump.
*For a corner example, after 214C in the corner, you can do Jump (instead of Super Jump) Back, Hyper Hop Forward if you don't want it to be a spaced safejump.
*For a corner example, after 214C in the corner, you can do Jump (instead of Super Jump) Back, Hyper Hop Forward if you don't want it to be a spaced safejump.
'''Note on Airdash Safejumps:''' Properly spacing yourself for empty jump low after a spaced safejump setup that uses airdash may require some manual timing to adjust where you land after your airdash.


'''Note on Manually Delayed Safejumps:''' Any manually timed safejump should be a 2f input against 4f reversals - which means a reasonably high level of precision.   
'''Note on Manually Delayed Safejumps:''' Any manually timed safejump should be a 2f input against 4f reversals - which means a reasonably high level of precision.   


*It may be preferable to treat these situations like meaty jump-ins that are vulnerable to reversals instead of safejumps until you get consistent with your timing.
*It may be preferable to treat these situations like meaty jump-ins that are vulnerable to reversals instead of safejumps until you get consistent with your timing.
'''Note on Airdash Safejumps:''' Properly spacing yourself for a safejump setup that uses airdash requires manual timing on the airdash to adjust your spacing properly.  You typically want to airdash at the peak of your jump to properly space your jump normal.  You may want to airdash earlier if you're trying to do a spaced setup - but keep in mind this can signal intention to your opponent.


-''214C''
-''214C''


* Midscreen you can do Neutral Jump, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump -  however, this setup is not spaced against King of Dinosaurs
* Midscreen you can do Neutral Jump, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump -  however, this setup is not spaced against King of Dinosaurs after a juggle combo ending in 214C.  This setup should function just as well after combos or whiff punishes in neutral.
*
*
* Against King of Dinosaurs, you can do Jump Forward, Hop Forward instead for a spaced safejump - however, this setup is not properly spaced against Heidern or Antonov (if you try to do empty jump 2B xx 2A, 2A will whiff)
* Against King of Dinosaurs, you can do Jump Forward, Neutral Hop instead for a spaced safejump after juggle combos ending in 214C midscreen - however, this setup is not properly spaced against Heidern or Antonov, if you try to do empty jump 2B xx 2A, 2A will whiff.
*
*
* In the corner, you can do Super Jump Back, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump
* In the corner, you can do Super Jump Back, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump
*
* 214C even has a meter build 5f spaced safejump midscreen (623A, Hyper Hop) - however, this setup is not spaced against King of Dinosaurs


'''Note on 214AC Safejumps:''' 214AC as a combo ender is normally sub-optimal in Shun'ei's combo routes, so while these safejumps are still tangentially useful, learning 214C/236236P/236236KK safejumps first will be far more beneficial
'''Note on 214AC Safejumps:''' 214AC as a combo ender is normally sub-optimal in Shun'ei's combo routes, so while these safejumps are still tangentially useful, learning 214C/236236P/236236KK safejumps first will be far more beneficial
Line 49: Line 247:
-''236236P''
-''236236P''


* Off a reversal 236236P that lands close, you can Neutral Jump, Airdash for a spaced safejump setup - however, this setup doesn't work against Heidern (2B xx 2A whiffs)
* Off a 236236P that lands close, you can Neutral Jump, Airdash for a spaced safejump setup - however, this setup doesn't work against Heidern (2B xx 2A whiffs)
*
*
* Against Heidern, you can do Hyper Hop Forward, Hop Forward instead for a spaced safejump (this setup is often too close to be spaced against other characters)
* Against Heidern, you can do Hyper Hop Forward, Hop Forward instead for a spaced safejump (this setup is often too close to be spaced against other characters)
*
*
* Off a spaced reversal 236236P, you can Jump Forward, Airdash for a spaced safejump
* Off a spaced 236236P, you can Jump Forward, Airdash for a spaced safejump midscreen
*
*
* If you juggle into 236236P from 623AC, 623C, 214C, then you can do Jump Forward, Airdash Forward for a spaced safejump
* If you juggle into 236236P from 623AC, 623C, 214C, then you can do Jump Forward, Airdash Forward for a spaced safejump midscreen
*
*
* You can do the above setup if you juggle into 236236P from 623C, 214A, but it won't be spaced
* You can do the above setup if you juggle into 236236P from 623C, 214A, but it won't be spaced
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* You can also use the easier auto-timed regular safejump setup (Forward Jump x2) - however, this setup doesn't work against characters with slower wakeup timings
* You can also use the easier auto-timed regular safejump setup (Forward Jump x2) - however, this setup doesn't work against characters with slower wakeup timings
*
*
* It's important to note you'll typically be using 6B xx 236A after blockstrings midscreen and the variable spacing can result in spaced setups becoming regular safejumps or whiffing entirely.
* '''It's important to note you'll typically be using 6B xx 236A after blockstrings midscreen''' and the variable spacing can result in spaced setups becoming regular safejumps or whiffing entirely.  Hyper Hop Forward, 5A, Hop Forward seems to be the easiest/most consistent setup but usually won't be a spaced safejump after blockstrings.
   
   
-''2D/214A/236A/236C''  
-''2D/214A/236A/236C''  
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* 2D and 214A allow you to run up and get meaty spaced light confirms midscreen
* 2D and 214A allow you to run up and get meaty spaced light confirms midscreen
*
*
* In the corner, you can hop right after 2D or 236C to get a safejump on recovery roll, and then walk back for spaced meaty pressure on non-recovery roll wakeup
* In the corner, you can hop right after 2D or 236C to get a safejump on recovery roll, and then walk back for spaced meaty pressure on non-recovery roll wakeup.
*
*
* You can do the same with 214A or 236A, but your j.CD needs to be very slightly delayed - if done instantly with perfect timing, you'll whiff
* You can do the same with 214A or 236A, but your j.CD needs to be very slightly delayed - if done instantly with perfect timing, you'll whiff
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*Forward throw can give you a manually timed safejump if you run and do a well-timed hyperhop j.CD
*Forward throw can give you a manually timed safejump if you run and do a well-timed hyperhop j.CD
*
*
*After forward throw in the corner, you can framekill with 2A to make timing your safejump a little easier, however, you still need some amount of manual delay before or after the 2A, otherwise your safejump will whiff instead of hitting meaty
*After forward throw in the corner, you can framekill with 2B to make timing your safejump a little easier, however, you still need 1-3 frames of manual delay before the 2B or the hop, otherwise your safejump will whiff instead of hitting meaty
*
*
*You can safejump after a back throw with a slightly delayed hyper hop j.CD
*You can safejump after a back throw with a slightly delayed hyper hop j.CD
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-''623A''
-''623A''


*You can technically safejump recovery roll after 623A in the corner with a slightly delayed hop j.CD, but landing a cl.C air reset after the 623A in the corner should generally be better overall
*You can technically safejump recovery roll after 623A knockdown if you slightly delay - but properly delaying especially in the conventional situation of anti-airing with 623A can be a difficult task. You can simply take the standard point blank soft knockdown oki if you prefer instead
 
== Normal Throw Bait Moves ==
 
'''Throw Bait Moves:''' Moves that push characters out of normal throw range on hit into a reset and on whiff on top of a down opponent. This allows the character to stay within close range. Some normal throw baits will not work on KOD and Dolores.
 
* Close B
 
* Close C
 
* Close D
 
* Crouch C


==Countering Shun'ei==
==Countering Shun'ei==
==Active Hitbox Range==
[[File:Shunei Active Close Hitbox Range.png|500px]]
[[File:Shunei Active Far Hitbox Range.png|500px]]
[[File:Shunei Active Crouch Hitbox Range.png|500px]]


==External Resources==
==External Resources==
{{#ev:youtube|t01ItkwVjHU|||'''Shun'ei Safe Jumps by B Cole'''|frame}}





Latest revision as of 13:34, 14 October 2024

The King of Fighters XV

OverviewStrategyDataCombosReplays

General Gameplan

Meter Usage

Overall, meter improves Shun'ei's anti-airs, whiff punishes, ability to deal with projectiles, and defensive options. Having 1 bar of meter available shores up a lot of Shun'ei's weaknesses, improving his neutral and his defense significantly.

  • 214AC can be used occasionally as a burst approach tool. It can also punish certain grounded projectiles on reaction.
  • 236236P is an excellent tool for buffering anti-airs out of whiff cancels or recovery.
  • 236236K is an excellent tool for buffering whiff punishes out of whiff cancels or recovery.
  • 236236BD is great for punishing projectiles on reaction at mid-range.
  • GC Blowback, GC Roll, and Shatter Strike are all very helpful for Shun'ei due to his naturally poor defense.
  • Shatter Strike improves Shun'ei's anti-air game significantly.
  • 236AC can be used to clash with EX-level projectiles, can punish regular projectiles if you're close enough, and can also be used for whiff punishes.
  • 623AC is a risky hard read option in mid-ranged neutral, and has some surprising utility when defending against blockstrings or sliding through "high" projectiles (i.e. Robert/Athena/Ash).
  • j.236AC is plus on block in the corner when used after 6B and can be used to set up further frametraps and extended blockstrings.
  • j.236BD can be used to reset your pressure after 6B in blockstrings, just keep in mind it's a punishable gimmick against prepared opponents.
  • 214236CD is a great anti-air that can punish opponents trying to exploit Shun'ei's weakness to crossups.

Neutral

Approaches

  • j.CD is your main approach tool. Its range isn't amazing, but it does have a decent hitbox for air-to-ground interactions. Its startup is a bit slow as well, but overall it's still a functional tool for approaching and controlling space. You can counterhit confirm j.CD into 214C pretty much anywhere on the screen, and sometimes even stronger conversions like 623AC, or j.236C/AC in the corner. j.CD's hitbox interacts a bit worse with jump normals coming from above, so be wary of your opponents landing on top of your j.CD approach with their own jump normal.
  • j.D can be used in situations where you need a bit more range when approaching/landing. At these farther spacings, you can try to frametrap after j.D with far.C or CD. j.B can be a good alternative against low profiles or crouchers, due to having more active frames.
  • CD defines your ground approach game. It converts on trade, it's mostly safe on block when buffered into 214A, it can convert on aerial counterhit into 214A, it crushes lows, and it's very easy to dump meter into a conversion if you open an opponent up with it. Be very alert for aerial approaches which might punish CD's recovery, and be cautious of opponents that use their movement to try and bait a whiff for a hard punish. The prospective threat of CD can really allow you to control space, intimidate your opponent into not throwing out as many grounded pokes, and overall gives you some much needed dominance in the grounded neutral. You may want to buffer 236236 after 214A if you see your opponent in the air when you throw CD out, that way you can 236236P out of recovery to try and punish opponents that jump on top of your CD with late timing.
  • Aqua Spear is similar to CD, interacting well against pokes that don't have enough range to trade against it. The reward on hit isn't as high as CD, but the lack of forward movement and whiff cancel property can make it a safer and more stable option. Don't forget to use the 2369 input technique to guarantee you don't get DP after running. You can buffer another 236 after the Aqua Spear to try and confirm into 236236K on reaction after any incidental whiff punishes.
  • Far C can lead to some okay stagger pressure on block, with a variety of cancel routes available including safe on block specials like 214A or 236A/C. Overall, while it has passable range and startup, it still isn't a particularly impressive approach tool.
  • 214A can interact favorably against hops, and is fine to use against opponents that are sitting still and blocking. However, it often loses to keepout buttons and is disastrous on whiff.
  • 214AC is a bit like 214A with more range, but leads to more reward on hit in exchange for slower startup. You can also use 214C - but 214C is firmly unsafe on block.
  • 2D's weak range makes it an underwhelming approach tool. It will even lose interactions to certain far As or other hop check normals due to how stubby it is and how much you have to run in to get in range for it.
  • Running up for a throw or a light confirm is mostly functional for Shun.
  • 2A can actually be a relatively safe approach tool that can lead into frametrap/stagger pressure with 6B/6A/236A/236C cancels, and can confirm into 214A on hit. There's actually an OS that can be used for this - do 2A with a slightly delayed cancel into 6A/6B/214A/236A. The window for special/command normal cancels out of 2A is smaller than the cancel window for chains, so if you delay your 6A/6B/214A/236A input the right amount you'll get 5A/5B instead on whiff, and throwing out 5A/5B in neutral is much safer than whiffing 6A/6B/214A and less committal than Aqua Spear. You can also use this OS for keepout.
  • Forward Airdash can be used to approach from unexpected angles, but your hops/jumps more or less give away your possible trajectory - a prepared opponent can try to pre-emptively catch your airdash approach, or move to a more favorable position. Use precaution when approaching with airdash, but feel free to use it frequently against opponents that aren't good at stuffing it out.
  • Down Forward Airdash can be used to approach in a similar fashion, best used when the airdash will get you into range for a light confirm or a throw - a bit more dangerous and 'gimmicky' than forward airdash, since your opponent gets a full grounded combo if they manage to react and punish.
  • Down Airdash can be used to adjust the spacing of your hops/jumps, but its most practical use is probably to bait and punish anti-airs when jumping in. Again, this sort of strategy can be much less effective against an opponent that's aware of the bait.
  • 6B can be kara-cancelled into air specials, allowing for very tight and useful airdashes from the ground. You can also kara-cancel into j.236P, which allows for unique movement and approaches with blue claw. You can Tiger Knee j.236C for a keepaway tool. Lastly, you can Tiger Knee EX Airdash Forward for incredibly fast approaches in neutral. Tiger Knee-ing regular airdashes is difficult because you need to delay your airdash input both after your pre-jump frames AND a little bit longer so you can reach minimum height - EX Airdashes do not have a minimum height restriction which makes them a bit easier to Tiger Knee.

Anti-Airing

  • Anti-air close jump-ins with 623A. The upper body invuln and soft knockdown oki on hit make standing at the range where you can anti-air jumps on reaction a reasonable tactic.
  • Anti-air jumps from farther away on reaction with 2C, far D, or j.A. You get air reset pressure off 2C, allowing you to dash up and get a meaty 2A at least - if you hit your opponent with 2C when they are particularly high in the air, right above you, or slightly behind you then you may end up having enough time to run up and go for a spaced light confirm. j.A air-to-airs allow you to run up for a grounded mixup of your choosing, and a well spaced air-to-air might even allow you to get a meaty hop on their air reset.
  • A good place to start is by anti-airing most jumps on reaction with 623A, and anti-air farther jumps with far D. You can incorporate 2C and j.A once you have a better feel for anti-airing at different ranges.
  • j.A gives good pressure on hit and can be fast enough for anti-airs on reaction, but this strategy is vulnerable to opponents that throw out their jump normal earlier in their jump arc. You can try to punish their landing with 2B into a light confirm if they throw out their jump normal too early. However, Shun'ei doesn't have the greatest range on his light confirms, and 2B doesn't special cancel. 2D may be a preferable choice due to the slight range advantage over 2B. It may be preferable to avoid playing a game of "guess the jump normal timing" altogether and just roll out of any hop/jump approaches if you aren't at the right spacing for anti-air 623A/far D.
  • Hop/jump back j.A buffered into j.236B can be a solid and rewarding way to deal with crossups. Normally fade-away air-to-airs don't reward you with oki after an air reset, but diagonal airdash allows you to keep the pressure on. If the enemy's model is right above you when you air-to-air them, you can end up sliding under them with your diagonal airdash resulting in a free crossup for some ambiguous left/right mix.
  • Aqua Spear and CD can be decent choices for pressuring landings from further away.
  • If you have meter to spend, Gaianic Burst (236236P) has a sizeable hitbox, invuln, and comes out on frame 7, making it a powerful and relatively consistent anti-air...it even converts on trade! You can either buffer 236236 in neutral and look for jumps to anti-air OR buffer a 236236 input after your pokes - 2D/Aqua Spear can both be whiff cancelled into 236236P, and hiding a buffer behind the recovery of your moves makes your ability to play grounded footsies a fair bit safer.
  • Shatter Strike is a great, consistent option for anti-airing jumps on reaction in neutral and offers excellent reward. Just keep in mind that it can move you forward underneath the opponent's jump, so you want to avoid using this against steep jump-in angles, and it helps to time the input right around the peak of your enemy's jump or a little bit after for better consistency.
  • Phantom Singulation (214236CD) is 1 frame faster than 236236P while also hitting behind Shun'ei, making it a reliable tool for dealing with crossups.
  • Running under steep/crossup jump-ins and punishing the opponent's landing frame with 2D can be doable, but Shun doesn't do this too much better than other characters. The range and low profile on his 2D are both just sort of average and he only gets a little bit of a low profile when running.
  • Overall, it should generally be best to look for 623A anti-airs as much as possible to start with. Shun'ei's other anti-airs are all more situational. Rolling out of scary hop/jump approaches is a valid and reasonable habit, but be careful of doing it too late against characters with good roll punish tools. Keep an eye out for opportunities to hop in on your opponent's landing if they're too far for 2C anti-air or 2D landing punish.

Keepout

  • j.D, j.B, j.CD, and j.A are all valid options when trying to keep your opponent out with jumps/hops - j.D has good horizontal range and a hitbox angled for air-to-ground interactions, j.CD has a bit less range but can trade more favorably, and j.A has a hitbox good for air-to-air interactions. j.B can be good for 'fade-away' backward hops/jumps and is a good alternative to j.D due to its fast startup and longer active duration.
  • CD converts on trade and can be buffered into 214A or 236A/C safely, but watch out for Guard Cancel Rolls. It can interact decently against hops, but you'll whiff if they're at the peak of their hop when your hitbox comes out. It's a reasonable tool to keepout with, but it's very easily whiff punished. Use it with precaution.
  • Aqua Spear has a nice disjointed hitbox, but also extends your hurtbox. It can trade very easily, and requires precise spacing to fully benefit from the space control it provides. Its range, disjoint property, and safety when combined with 236236P can make it a reasonable tool for keepout. It can interact well against hops, but is even more prone to whiffing like CD. It can be somewhat dangerous to whiff, but compared to CD, the lack of forward movement during the animation can make you a bit safer. Keep in mind that you can't whiff cancel into super during recovery frames, so Aqua Spear is still somewhat vulnerable to aerial approaches - 236236P just makes it much safer.
  • Far C can give great reward when used for keepout if you have a read on your opponent trying to run in for an approach. The recovery on it can make it somewhat vulnerable to hops or different approach timings, and somewhat whiff punishable. You can buffer into 6A midscreen for easy confirms, and go into 236A or 236C on block. In the corner it will generally be preferable to buffer into 6B instead. You can buffer 623C/214C and counterpoke with it. You can also whiff cancel it into its target combo to control space for a bit longer with the 2nd hitbox.
  • 2D doesn't have the best range, but it's very difficult to whiff punish. Its whiff cancel property also makes it much safer and stronger against hops if you have meter for 236236P, which would normally be the ideal answer against 2D. It gives a good oki situation on hit, making it a surprisingly reasonable option for keepout. You can use 2362D36(P) as an input shortcut to prepare a whiff cancel into 236236P, and you can do another 236 after the shortcut in case you want to use super after 2D's recovery.
  • Far A has surprisingly good range, and can stuff your opponent's attempts at approaching with hops/pokes.
  • 2A can be used with the whiff cancel OS for a safe and low commitment tool. Just keep in mind it isn't particularly oppressive and can still be beaten by hops, blowbacks, and different poke timings.
  • j.236C can be used in conjunction with hops and jumps to build meter and keep your opponent out. j.236C can also be tiger-knee'd, it functions a bit like a backdash that has less range and a longer animation, but with an active hitbox in front of it. Be careful of giving up too much space with j.236C, and keep in mind the hitbox on it isn't particularly dominant.
  • 2B can be buffered into Quick MAX in neutral, or simply used without QM to pre-emptively stuff opponents that try to run in.
  • Far B has a lower hitbox than far A and can be used a little bit more effectively against hops when you're further away from your opponent. It can also interact slightly better against crouching opponents, but far A will generally be preferable at its appropriate range.
  • Far D is very vulnerable to whiff punishes. However, if you have enough meter you can hit confirm it into Quick MAX combos. It can then be used as a risky high range tool to stuff hops and punish grounded approaches heavily.

Whiff Punishes and Roll Punishes

  • CD has decent range and good reward on hit.
  • 236AC can be an alternative to CD that's safer on whiff and deals similar damage, although the tip hitbox is a soft knockdown, so overall your conversions likely won't be quite as good as CD.
  • Far C has mostly unimpressive range, but great reward on hit and you can hit confirm it with Far C > 6A/6B, which helps if you aren't sure if your opponent had time to block or not. Use this option when 2A won't reach.
  • Far A is 6f and can be special cancelled into 214A or 623AC
  • 2A is 5f, has functional range, and converts well. Use this when you're not close enough for cl.C.
  • If your opponent is point blank then throw, cl.A or cl.C are going to be your best bets depending on how much speed you need.
  • Whenever you're buffering 236236 for fireball anti-airs, you can also keep an eye out for enemy whiffs and throw out 236236K for easy whiff punishes

Pressure

Blockstrings

cl.C


cl.C hits upper body and can lose interactions to moves with low profile or upper body invulnerability, keep this in mind.

Make sure to confirm into a good/optimal combo if you buffer into 6A or 6B > j.236C/AC and your cl.C hits.

You can space out cl.C to be safe from reversal throw.

cl.C > 6A is a true frametrap with a 1-2 frame gap.

cl.C > 6B is a true blockstring.

Meaty:

cl.C can be used in situations where you have at least enough time to run in for a spaced light confirm.

If all you can normally get from a given okizeme situation is a spaced meaty 2A, then you won't be able to do a tight meaty with cl.C. You may be able to use it for delayed pressure though.

If your opponent backdashes, cl.C > 6A/6B will not combo, and you'll more or less reset to neutral at about far A distance, or closer if you're in the corner.

Special Cancels:

Your most reasonable midscreen special cancel options after 6A are 214A, 236A, 236C and 236AC.

6A > 214A/236A/236AC are all true blockstrings. 6A > 236C is a frametrap with a 3 frame gap.

236A and 236C are both about equally safe, -5 on block with lots of pushback means you're basically unpunishable.

236AC is a bit less safe with less pushback and -7 on block. However, it allows you to pre-emptively confirm off 6A frametraps into full conversions with decent damage.

214A is also -5 on block, but has much less pushback than your other options and it can easily leave you in situational punish/frametrap range. Note that 6A moves you closer to your opponent and results in 214A spacing you closer than it does off other blockstrings.

6A will combo into 214A/236A/236AC on hit. 236A doesn't give you any pressure on midscreen knockdown, but 214A and 236AC do.

You can hit confirm 6A > 214A/236A into a super on hit.

In the corner your Aqua Spear pushback is much less effective, making them pretty much completely unsafe. 214A pushback and safety remains about the same, making it a much more reasonable option.

Roll Punishes:

Your opponent can roll backwards midscreen either during your meaty, or in between your cl.C and 6A for a safe neutral reset.

If your opponent rolls forward during your meaty or in between your cl.C and 6A, then you can punish with cl.C./far C into a full conversion.

In the corner you can cover both rolls meterless with cl.C/far C.

Your opponent is able to roll in between 6A > 236C, but will be unable to punish. Midscreen back roll will result in a complete neutral reset - whereas forward roll, or back roll in the corner will result in dangerous situations where you're safe but up close with your opponent.

GC Roll:

Your opponent should be able to GC Roll Backwards when blocking cl.C midscreen and punish your whiffed 6A with a light. In the corner they should GC Roll Backwards and go for a close heavy normal punish instead.

Midscreen, it is not possible to punish 6A > 214A with a GC Roll Backwards after the blocked 6A. In the corner, punishing 6A > 214A with GC Roll is possible, although you might only get a throw - you can GC Roll Backwards for a throw punish, or GC Roll Forwards and try to get something more than a throw (usually a far reaching normal).

6A > 236A/C/AC can be punished by GC Roll Forwards into a full combo. It can be situationally punished by GC Roll Backwards midscreen by fast burst optionsC. In the corner, both GC Rolls get a full punish.

Mixups

Defense

Safejumps

Safe Jumps (Patch 2.10) Quick Reference Guide (* = Preferred Safe Jump)
Ender Setup
Back Throw (slight delay) Hyper Hop > j.D (4F)
j.236A (from 6B) Jump Forward > Jump Forward > j.D (4F) (whiffs on certain characters)
* 6B xx (kara cancel) j.236A > Jump Forward > j.D (4F) (Universal) (Works on characters the above may whiff on such as Heidern)
6B xx (kara cancel) j.236D > Neutral Jump > j.236D > j.D (4F)
A Safe jump that setups left / right mix.
214C (Ground Hit) Forward Jump > Hop > j.D (4F)
214C/214 AC (Juggle) Forward Hop > 6B xx j.236D (kara cancel) > j.C/j.B (4F) (Universal)
Far C > Jump Forward j.D (4F) (Universal) (Doesn't work in corner)
2C > Forward Jump j.D (4F) (whiffs on certain characters)
Jump Forward > Hop > j.D (4F) (Corner/Universal)
* Hop Forward/Backwards > 6B xx (kara cancel) j.236D > j.C/j.B (4F) (Corner/Universal)
236A or 236C (Ground/Hit) Hop > j.D (4F)
236236B/D (Ground Hit) Jump Forward > j.D (4F)
236236B/D (Air/Juggle) (slight delay on super cancel after 214C) > Jump Forward > j.D (4F)
236236BD For this one you want to frame kill 52/60 frames exactly for a safe jump/safe hop (before the jump/hop)
2C > 2C > Hop > j.D (4F)
Jump > f.B/f.A/2B > Hop > j.D (4F)
* 623C > Neutral Jump > j.D (4F) (Corner)

Note on Spaced Safejumps: Adjusting the arc of one of your hops/jumps should be enough to turn a spaced safejump into a regular safejump.

  • For example, after 236236P midscreen you can do Super Jump Forward, Airdash Forward, instead of just doing a regular jump forward to make it a regular safejump instead of a spaced safejump.
  • For a corner example, after 214C in the corner, you can do Jump (instead of Super Jump) Back, Hyper Hop Forward if you don't want it to be a spaced safejump.

Note on Manually Delayed Safejumps: Any manually timed safejump should be a 2f input against 4f reversals - which means a reasonably high level of precision.

  • It may be preferable to treat these situations like meaty jump-ins that are vulnerable to reversals instead of safejumps until you get consistent with your timing.

Note on Airdash Safejumps: Properly spacing yourself for a safejump setup that uses airdash requires manual timing on the airdash to adjust your spacing properly. You typically want to airdash at the peak of your jump to properly space your jump normal. You may want to airdash earlier if you're trying to do a spaced setup - but keep in mind this can signal intention to your opponent.

-214C

  • Midscreen you can do Neutral Jump, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump - however, this setup is not spaced against King of Dinosaurs after a juggle combo ending in 214C. This setup should function just as well after combos or whiff punishes in neutral.
  • Against King of Dinosaurs, you can do Jump Forward, Neutral Hop instead for a spaced safejump after juggle combos ending in 214C midscreen - however, this setup is not properly spaced against Heidern or Antonov, if you try to do empty jump 2B xx 2A, 2A will whiff.
  • In the corner, you can do Super Jump Back, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump

Note on 214AC Safejumps: 214AC as a combo ender is normally sub-optimal in Shun'ei's combo routes, so while these safejumps are still tangentially useful, learning 214C/236236P/236236KK safejumps first will be far more beneficial

-214AC

  • Midscreen you can do Super Jump Forward, Neutral Hop after 214AC for a spaced safejump - however, this setup is not spaced against Meitenkun, Dolores, King of Dinosaurs, Leona, or Rock
  • Against Meitenkun or King of Dinosaurs, you can do 2A, Back Jump, Airdash Forward instead for a spaced safejump setup - however, this setup does not work properly on Dolores, Leona, or Rock (2B xx 2A will whiff)
  • In the corner, you can do Super Jump Back, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump
  • 214AC Juggles with more air time give a regular safejump instead (2A, Jump Forward, Airdash Forward) - Examples: Counterhit j.CD, 214AC OR 623AC, 623C, 214AC
  • In the corner, neutral jump instead when using the above setup

-236236P

  • Off a 236236P that lands close, you can Neutral Jump, Airdash for a spaced safejump setup - however, this setup doesn't work against Heidern (2B xx 2A whiffs)
  • Against Heidern, you can do Hyper Hop Forward, Hop Forward instead for a spaced safejump (this setup is often too close to be spaced against other characters)
  • Off a spaced 236236P, you can Jump Forward, Airdash for a spaced safejump midscreen
  • If you juggle into 236236P from 623AC, 623C, 214C, then you can do Jump Forward, Airdash Forward for a spaced safejump midscreen
  • You can do the above setup if you juggle into 236236P from 623C, 214A, but it won't be spaced

-236236KK

  • If you juggle into 236236KK midscreen off of 623AC, 623C, 214C, you can Super Jump Forward, 5B, Hop Forward for a spaced safejump
  • If you juggle into 236236KK in the corner off of 623AC, 623C, 214C, you can Super Jump Back, 5B, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump
  • If you juggle into 236236KK midscreen off of 623C, 214A, you can 214A, 2A, Hop Forward for a spaced safejump
  • If you juggle into 236236KK in the corner off of 623C, 214A, you can Super Jump Back, 5B, Hyper Hop Forward for a spaced safejump
  • If done absolutely perfectly the above setup will whiff on characters with slower wakeups, but you can simply delay the super cancel to make the setup hit meaty

-6B xx 236A

  • Midscreen, you can 5B, Neutral Jump, Airdash Forward for a spaced safejump - however, this setup is not spaced against King of Dinosaurs
  • Against King of Dinosaurs, you can try Neutral Hop, 5A, Super Jump Forward instead - this isn't traditional safejump timing, but it should be good enough to be safe against King of Dinosaurs' defensive tools
  • If 6B xx 236A hits from farther away, you'll need to Hyper Hop Forward, 5A, Hop Forward for a spaced safejump setup - however, this setup is also not spaced against King of Dinosaurs
  • Against King of Dinosaurs, you can try Jump Forward, 5A, Hop Forward - like the other King of Dinosaurs setup, this is not traditional safejump timing
  • You can also use the easier auto-timed regular safejump setup (Forward Jump x2) - however, this setup doesn't work against characters with slower wakeup timings
  • It's important to note you'll typically be using 6B xx 236A after blockstrings midscreen and the variable spacing can result in spaced setups becoming regular safejumps or whiffing entirely. Hyper Hop Forward, 5A, Hop Forward seems to be the easiest/most consistent setup but usually won't be a spaced safejump after blockstrings.

-2D/214A/236A/236C

  • 2D and 214A allow you to run up and get meaty spaced light confirms midscreen
  • In the corner, you can hop right after 2D or 236C to get a safejump on recovery roll, and then walk back for spaced meaty pressure on non-recovery roll wakeup.
  • You can do the same with 214A or 236A, but your j.CD needs to be very slightly delayed - if done instantly with perfect timing, you'll whiff

-Throws

  • Forward throw can give you a manually timed safejump if you run and do a well-timed hyperhop j.CD
  • After forward throw in the corner, you can framekill with 2B to make timing your safejump a little easier, however, you still need 1-3 frames of manual delay before the 2B or the hop, otherwise your safejump will whiff instead of hitting meaty
  • You can safejump after a back throw with a slightly delayed hyper hop j.CD

-236236K

  • Grounded hit gives a safejump setup with jump forward
  • Air juggles with 236236K result in a different knockdown timing, you can generally delay a part of your juggle sequence (like the cancel into 236236K) or your jump forward to make the above setup work
  • Against the following characters, you do not have to delay any part of the safejump setup, and it will still function normally:

Meitenkun, Benimaru, Isla, Chizuru, Elizabeth, Kula, Angel, Chris, Whip, Ramon, Leona, Ralf, Clark, Andy, Joe, Ryo, King, Athena, Mai, Yuri, Blue Mary, B. Jenet, Billy

  • Depending on the knockdown situation, you can walk forward/delay before your jump forward midscreen to get a crossup j.D for a left/right mixup

-236236PP

  • Midscreen you can run up and get a meaty jump-in
  • In the corner you can do a delayed jump j.CD for a safejump

-214236CD

  • After 214236CD, you can do a slightly delayed jump forward j.CD for a safejump

-623A

  • You can technically safejump recovery roll after 623A knockdown if you slightly delay - but properly delaying especially in the conventional situation of anti-airing with 623A can be a difficult task. You can simply take the standard point blank soft knockdown oki if you prefer instead

Normal Throw Bait Moves

Throw Bait Moves: Moves that push characters out of normal throw range on hit into a reset and on whiff on top of a down opponent. This allows the character to stay within close range. Some normal throw baits will not work on KOD and Dolores.

  • Close B
  • Close C
  • Close D
  • Crouch C

Countering Shun'ei

Active Hitbox Range



External Resources

Shun'ei Safe Jumps by B Cole


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