Biography
Story
Chun-Li is one of Street Fighter’s most famous characters and a guest fighter in Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves. She is a Chinese martial artist and law-enforcement agent known for her speed, powerful kicks, and long fight against major criminal organizations. In her own series, her story began with her search for justice after M. Bison and Shadaloo were connected to her father’s disappearance.
In City of the Wolves, Chun-Li arrives in South Town by request to investigate the return of an infamous criminal syndicate. SNK presents her as a battle-hardened Metro City agent, bringing her World Warrior experience into a city already filled with crime bosses, assassins, martial artists, and people making excellent life choices by entering street tournaments.
Her crossover role also mirrors the wider SNK and Capcom exchange around City of the Wolves and Street Fighter 6. Terry Bogard and Mai Shiranui joined Street Fighter 6, while Ken Masters and Chun-Li came to Fatal Fury as guest DLC characters.
Appearance
Chun-Li is a fit Chinese woman with black hair and brown eyes. In Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves, she keeps her signature ox-horn hairstyle, spiked bracelets, and blue Chinese dress, but her outfit is redesigned with white panels, gold trim, wave patterns, and a sharper SNK-style look. Her classic blue qipao is also part of her identity, making her instantly recognizable even in South Town’s rougher visual style.
Gameplay
Chun-Li is a well-rounded neutral character focused on footsies, mid-range control, and strong normal attacks. She can poke safely, confirm from clean hits, threaten with charge specials, and turn small mistakes into heavy damage. Like in Street Fighter III: Third Strike, her strength comes less from raw rushdown and more from controlling space with excellent buttons.
Her classic tools return in City of the Wolves, including Kikoken, Hundred Lightning Kicks, Spinning Bird Kick, and Tensho Kicks. She is strong when the player understands spacing, charge timing, and when to commit, but she asks for more precision than a simpler all-rounder.

