Biography
Story
Vox Reaper is a new fighter introduced in Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves. He is a street assassin sent to eliminate Kain R. Heinlein, but the mission fails. Instead of killing him, Kain’s bodyguard Grant sees Vox’s potential and takes him in as his student.
After Grant’s death, Vox becomes Kain’s new bodyguard and carries on his master’s will. He is not just another hired killer in South Town; he is a fighter rebuilt through defeat, training, and loyalty to the man who gave him a second chance. That still makes him extremely dangerous, obviously. South Town’s hiring standards remain insane.
In City of the Wolves, Vox enters the bloodstained streets of South Town with Grant’s teachings and Kain’s ambitions behind him. His story positions him as Grant’s successor, but with his own sharper, more modern edge.
Appearance
Vox is a well-built man with dark skin, hazel eyes, and a shaved head. He has a bandage across his nose and red face tattoos that resemble Grant’s horn-like markings.
He wears a dark blue biker jacket with a tall red collar, tight black jeans, a black belt with a silver buckle, red-and-black boxing boots, gold rings, a gold necklace, and a torn red sash over his left leg. His design makes the Grant connection obvious without turning him into a copy.
Gameplay
Vox Reaper is a rushdown brawler who wants to force his way in and keep the opponent under pressure. He uses advancing specials, long-reaching normals, plus frames, hard knockdowns, and a strike-throw game built around frame traps, spacing traps, and a command grab.
His strengths are pressure and damage. Vox can bully opponents with plus-on-block specials, strong kick normals, good corner damage, and painful confirms when he catches someone trying to move. He also has a solid DP, which gives him a real answer when he has to defend.
His weakness is mobility. Vox is not especially fast unless he commits to his approach tools, so patient opponents can check him before he gets started. He also has one of the smaller move sets in the game, meaning he has fewer ways to vary his offense once opponents understand the matchup.

