Daigo UmeharaKen VS LGA | Vanao (Blanka) - Street Fighter 6 - 4K UHD
💥PLEASE LIKE & SUBSCRIBE !
🔵 In this video Daigo Umehara, One of the 5 Gods of Fighting game from Japan, Plays a first to 2 (FT2) against LGA | Vanao (Blanka). This is a Ranked Match.
This short showcased why he is Called the Beast, The GOAT of fighting Games.
ALSO WATCH THESE VIDEOS:
- MenaRD (Blanka) vs Big bird (Marisa) - FT10...GRAND FINALS EVO WORTHY: https://youtu.be/wxX12b-es40
- RBK - BIG BIRD (MARISA) VS AKAINU (GUILE) - GRAND FINAL: https://youtu.be/DnNk-mLlbx8
- RED BULL KUMITE - KAKERU (JP) VS BIG BIRD (MARISA) - QUARTER FINAL: https://youtu.be/pzytjhwz73M
- Street Fighter 6 - NuckleDu (Guile)Vs Punk (Chun Li) - SF6 - 4K:
https://youtu.be/-IkZv4nqBYU
________________________________________________________________________
Player Background (Biography)
----- Daigo Umehara ------
Daigo Umehara (born May 19, 1981) is a Japanese Fighting Games player currently representing Team Beast and Red Bull eSports.
Daigo Umehara's career spans over two decades, with dozens of legendary performances in the biggest tournaments in the world, accumulating 6 EVO championships. He was not only the first Japanese pro gamer, but also one of esports’ first global stars. His career and the iconic moments he took part in are cherished around the world, and today Daigo has several books, a manga series, and a statuette in his honor. Also known as "The Beast" in the west and "Umehara" in Japan, he is widely considered to be one of the greatest fighting game players of all time.
Childhood and Early Career
Daigo began going to the arcades and playing fighting games as an elementary school student at around 10 years of age. Even though he felt shy, Daigo eventually started challenging other players in Street Fighter II for an opportunity to play. This was when he discovered that he preferred competing with other players.
At the age of 17, Daigo participated in Capcom's official Street Fighter Alpha 3 national tournament and advanced to the finals, which took place on October 11, 1998. After winning the tournament by defeating Nuki 3-1, Daigo went on to face Alex Valle, the winner of the U.S. national tournament, which was held in San Francisco, California on November 8. This was Daigo's first trip to the U.S. and his first overseas tournament victory. Both events aired as a 50-minute TV report in Japan, skyrocketing his popularity in the country.
EVO Moment 37
Despite having never faced off Justin Wong and Daigo met each other in losers finals of EVO 2004's Street Fighter III: 3rd Strike tournament.
In the final game, Daigo's Ken was down to his last pixel of health, and at that point any special attack would knock his character out if connected, since special attacks deal a slight amount of chip damage even when blocked. Justin Wong attempted to hit Daigo with Chun-Li's multi-hit Super Art 3, forcing Daigo to perfectly parry 15 attacks with near perfect precision. Daigo followed his "impossible" feat with a full jump-in punish to win the match. Even though Daigo lost the grand finals to KO, the clip of him parrying Justin Wong's multi hit attack became hugely influential, being regarded by many as the most significant moment in fighting game history.
Street Fighter IV
With the release of Street Fighter IV in Japanese arcades, Daigo Umehara returned to competing in fighting games after a long break. Because of this, gaming magazine Arcadia included a DVD featuring "Umehara Concept Matches" in it's 2009 issue, containing exhibition matches between him and other Japanese top players such as Kazunoko, Itabashi Zangief, Fuudo, Nemo, and Mago. Daigo also made an appearance as the "god of the world of fighting games" on the TV show "Gamer's Koshien".
________________________________________________________________________
Daigo Umehara
Mildom: https://www.mildom.com/profile/10467370
Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/daigothebeastv
Youtube:
/ @daigothebeastv
Twitter: https://twitter.com/daigothebeastJP
Twitter(English): https://twitter.com/daigothebeast
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/daigothebeast/
#daigo #StreetFIghter #FGC #fightinggamecommunity
Other Videos By GAMING DIMENSION
Other Statistics
Street Fighter 6 Statistics For GAMING DIMENSION
GAMING DIMENSION presently has 18,509 views for Street Fighter 6 across 234 videos, accounting for over 1 day of watchable video on his channel. This is 29.59% of the total watchable video for Street Fighter 6 on GAMING DIMENSION's YouTube channel.