TL;DR
- Season 3 of Street Fighter 6 introduced significant changes to many of the game’s staple fighters.
- Ryu remains the strongest character in Street Fighter 6 and the clear choice when you need to steal a win.
- C.Viper is the latest inclusion, the second character to be added in Season 3, and is included in B-Tier.
- The character with the most viable buffs as of Season 3 in the B-Tier is Chun-Li.
With the turn of the new year, now is a good time to revisit the latest Street Fighter 6 tier list for 2026, which is going to give you a strong advantage in both casual and competitive play.
Many of the SF6 characters have moved up and down the tier list, suffering from nerfs or benefitting from buffs. Lily has been suffering throughout Season 3, while the likes of Mai and Ryu, in particular, remain near the top.
New characters are being added throughout the season. On August 5, Sagat joined the ranks after missing out on the first year of the game. After him, C.Viper was added on October 15, and with us being roughly halfway through Season 3, SF6’s character roster has had quite a roster shakeup.
Our SF6 tier list rankings are going to reevaluate the best fighters in the game, and give you a serious competitive advantage in picking your mains for this season.
How our Street Fighter 6 tier list was compiled
We’re going to be using the SABC tier system to define the best Street Fighter 6 characters for Season 3.
- S-Tier: The strongest fighters in the Street Fighter 6 meta. Maining and mastering these fighters will give you the greatest competitive edge, especially in ranked.
- A-Tier: These fighters are a strong choice when partaking in tournaments and ranked matches, but they are not without flaws.
- B-Tier: Less experienced players will struggle with these fighters, but with enough training these characters can still dominate others.
- C-Tier: Typically, only experts will carry these fighters to tournaments and ranked matches. Mastering these fighters is a labour of love.
Street Fighter 6 Season 3 tier list in 2026
S Tier
Ryu remains one of, if not the best character in Street Fighter 6, with a complete Shoto kit that makes his zoning, neutrals, and combos all exceptional. He is the best of his type of fighter in SF6 right now, and there isn’t really a weakness to exploit.
Mai has been somewhat of a sleeper agent into the top tier of the game, being somewhat misunderstood as a bit of a mid-tier at launch. Now, despite various Drive Gauge adjustments, largely working out as nerfs, Mai is still, undeniably, one of the best characters in Street Fighter 6, despite being a King of Fighters creation.
JP has ridiculously high damage, and is weirdly difficult to whiff punish. What makes him among the best and share the S-Tier with Mai and Ryu is how strong his Level 2 is, which is the best in the game. He also has extreme full-screen pressure and zoning, and his tricky mix-ups can force opponents to play his game, rather than to their strengths.
| Name | Why |
|---|---|
| Ryu | No change in the latest patch. Still top tier with great zoning and damage. |
| Mai | Despite Drive Gauge adjustments and slight nerfs, Mai is still very strong. |
| JP | Best Level 2, tough to whiff punish, and high damage |
A-Tier
A-Tiers aren’t typically as overtly strong as the S-Tiers, but are still considered above average. They either don’t excel as dramatically as S-Tiers or have a weakness to balance them out a bit. Ed is a bit of an exception, since he doesn’t really have a distinct weakness, and completely abuses the SF6 resource economy with his kit. He would be an addition to S-Tier, but a higher technical level demands a bit more out of players than the S-Tiers. He could be in a tier of his own, like an A+ Tier, or simply put at the top of A.
Still, other A-Tier SF6 fighters follow the mould mentioned before. Terry and, arguably, Sagat, are Shotos like Ryu, and while Terry has one of the best fireballs in SF6, these two don’t excel quite as much as Ryu does in every single category. They’re strong, probably more than strong enough to win tournaments at the highest level, but they aren’t Ryu.
Continuing with the Ryu comparison, there’s Akuma, who is very quick and does immense damage, but he comes with a built-in weakness. He takes more damage, or rather has less health, a staple of this character since his introduction to the series. This doesn’t really help him in SF6, however.
Sagat was the most recent DLC player to be added, and in the month or so since his addition, competitive players have had more than enough time to rank and file the Muay Thai champ into respective tier lists. Unfortunately, despite his emphatic entrance, Sagat has only really managed to steal a borderline spot in our A-Tier.
The fighter is built around his imposing range; huge normals, multiple projectiles, a strong knee move, and effective defensive strategies. However, despite his strength, his move pool is particularly linear, making him quite predictable against fast and sharp opponents.
| Fighter | Why |
|---|---|
| Ed | Abuses the SF6 resource economy. |
| Akuma | Hits really hard, but takes a lot too. |
| Terry | One of the best fireballs in SF6. |
| Sagat | Strong all-rounder, with good normals and anti-airs. |
| M.Bison | Excellent normals and pressure, high damage combos, and dangerous ant-airs. |
| Rashid | Great all-rounder with a powerful level 2. |
| Juri | Really difficult to whiff punish, with a strong Drive Rush and fireball game. |
| Guile | Has a dominant fireball game, being the game’s premier zoner. |
| Kimberly | Great rushdown character who can apply a lot of pressure. |
| Blanka | Solid yet awkward kit with a great level 2. |
| Chun-Li | One of the best fireball Drive Rushes, but is technically demanding. |
B-Tier
In SF6 Season 3, arguably the most well-balanced characters sit in our B-Tier, which is where the newest edition, C.Viper, sits. These characters have strong identities and tend to excel based on their character type, but either have distinct weaknesses or are just not ridiculously strong, like Mai, Ryu, and JP. C.Viper has some slow neutral tools and is very meter dependent, but her knockdown pressure, mix-ups, and high damage make her a great rushdown.
Cammy is similar in that she excels as a rushdown character. She has a great neutral game, with exceptional pressure, but with nerfs some while ago, she now has to respect fireballs and projectiles. Cammy is now easier to zone out, making some match-ups tough, but she can still react to it with the right gameplan.
Then, there are some characters that have their weakness baked into their button timings. For instance, Elena has good buttons and is quick, but her whiff punish windows are sizable, in a balanced way, if you miss your attacks.
| Fighter | Why |
|---|---|
| C.Viper | Great damage, knockdown pressure, and mix-ups. |
| A.K.I | Can produce very high damage, but EX reversal. |
| Cammy | Excels in the neutral game with very high pressure, but fireballs can be a problem now. |
| Dee Jay | Very powerful fireball game, but is reliant on his Level 2. |
| Ken | Solid kit, with all the tools he needs, but lacks great damage output. |
| Zangief | Level 3 is extremely strong, but his kit is relatively easy to whiff punish. |
| Manon | Very good in neutrals, and tends to work well against Shotos. |
| Dhalsim | Strong when defending, but weak when in the corner. |
| Elena | Good buttons and quick, but is balanced with clear whiff punish windows. |
| Jaime | Really strong dive kick, but his best moves are locked behind getting drunk. |
| Luke | High damage, but not as high as when SF6 launched, with gaps when he applies pressure. |
C-Tier
Marisa hasn’t been given too much love in SF6, being slow, lacking pressure, and not having particularly effective defensive tools. She does have high damage, which is better than nothing, but her weaknesses can be easily exploited above a certain level.
E.Honda suffers similarly. He doesn’t have the same level of weaknesses, but the problem with E.Honda is that his playstyle is very one-dimensional. With the game being halfway through its third season, E.Honda’s kit can be easily countered, especially because he’s also very slow.
Lily just suffers from a kit that doesn’t really function well. She’s reliant on collecting Windclad stock, but it’s difficult to get this in the first place. Lily requires too much effort for, quite frankly, mediocre reward. She might need a rework in the future to be viable.
| Name | Why |
|---|---|
| Marisa | Consistently unplayable. |
| Lily | Too reliant on collecting Windclad stock, which is too unreliable. |
| E.Honda | Tends to be very one-dimensional. |
Conclusion
At the midway point of Season 3, Ryu, JP, and Mai are the cream of the crop, with Marisa, E.Honda, and Lily being stuck at the bottom. Still, you don’t need to play the best Street Fighter 6 character to win. If you’re more inclined toward rushdown characters, Cammy and new addition, C.Viper, would be better options than a Shoto like Ryu.
With Alex next on the Season 3 release schedule, and Ingrid coming after that, there are bound to be more shifts in the SF6 meta in the new year. Street Fighter 6 is in a reasonably strong spot at the start of 2026, and Capcom still has plenty more of the Street Fighter cast it can add in future seasons.
FAQs
Who is the strongest character in Street Fighter 6?
The strongest fighter in Street Fighter 6 is Ryu. There seems to be little question about this, especially thanks to the Season 3 patch, which heavily buffed his projectiles, including his Denjin Charge, which passively buffs projectiles too.
Who is top tier in Street Fighter 6?
The top-tier fighters in SF6 are Ryu, JP, and Mai, with Ed being an honourable mention, as of January 2026.
Is Street Fighter 6 available on Switch 2?
Street Fighter 6 is now available on the Nintendo Switch 2, and this port has been made tournament legal, too.