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Sifu has just released its Fall update today across PC, PlayStation, and Nintendo platforms. This new update brings fans the ability to become the director of their own Kung-Fu movie with the addition of the replay editor, new cheats, modifiers, outfits, and much more.
You will be able to record your best moves with Sifu’s new replay editor, a complete set of recording tools that allows fans the ability to create cinematic replays from within the game. Place the camera wherever you want, change its parameters, set up camera movements, add effects, slow down or speed up the action, and create your very own Kung Fu movie shots. These shots can then be used on any external editing software and pieced together to create a full-on cinematic masterpiece.
Also debuting in today’s Sifu update are four new cheats and three new modifiers allowing for new play styles, including Free Throw, which allows you to unconditionally throw your foes, age-decreasing perks with the Vampire modifier, and a sweet new Touch of Death ability that immediately knocks enemies out if an attack lands correctly. Additionally, they have added some long-awaited quality-of-life changes such as the option to carry your unlocked skills over from a previous save to a new one, as well as the ability to set your own camera distance during takedowns and bring the dynamic takedown camera close-ups back.
This new update also incorporates new outfits with you now being able to roundhouse kick your way through the action with three unlockable outfits including a slick-looking Wing Chun outfit, available in dark and light versions. The tough-as-nails “Stunt Double” outfit is available only to Deluxe owners.
Sifu launched on February 8th of this year from developer and publisher Sloclap and is available today on PlayStation, Switch, and on PC through the Epic Games Store for $39.99. Sifu unfolds a story of revenge and redemption set against a backdrop of a fictional Chinese city where players uncover an ancient mystery via a series of difficult confrontations that test their skills to the limit. To overcome seemingly insurmountable odds, fighters need to rely on a mastery of Kung Fu and a magical pendant that revives them after death. The cost of magic is dear, however, and drastically ages a fighter with each revival: time is the price paid for revenge.
Sifu is available for $39.99 USD for the standard edition and $49.99 USD for the Deluxe Edition. If you haven’t played it yet, will you be picking it up?