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Genrouzan is one of Chipp Zanuff's Special Attacks, first appearing in Guilty Gear X to replace Sebone-ori, and has been a staple of his moveset ever since.

Overview[]

In most appearances, Chipp jumps diagonally forward and disappears into a small pile of falling leaves. If he's close enough to his opponent to grab them, he goes behind them, then slashes their neck with his blade, spinning them out as he leaps off. The XX games allow the move to be FRC'd to followup further when it connects.

Even then, this move counts as a grounded grab despite Chipp leaping into the air during it.

In the Accent Core games, the Genrouzan can be cancelled anytime into a Force Break followup with Dust called Genrouzan: Yoh (幻朧斬・陽, Genrōzan: Yō?, lit. Illusion Haze Slash: Yang). Chipp reappears from his invisible leap and acts with a diagonal-flying arm-blade slash with pink energy trailing it. This essentially calls out any jump attempts to avoid the default Genrouzan along with having an auto-jump install to have Chipp maintain aerial options (and the ability to go into a wall-cling off of the Genrouzan: Yoh), but has a heavy forced proration rating to compensate for its overall utility.

In the Guilty Gear Xrd series, Chipp can use Genrouzan while holding onto a wall by pressing Slash or Heavy Slash; the latter version is called Genyouzan (幻鷹斬, Genyōzan?, lit. Illusion Hawk Slash). The properties are mostly the same, with Genyouzan being represented by maple leaves rather than green leaves.

In Guilty Gear -Strive-, the attack starts as normal, but on contact, Chipp creates a shadow clone to help strike his opponent, then explodes them while facing away.

Details[]

To be added later...

Gallery[]

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