Street Fighter 6 x Spy x Family Movie: Code: White
『ストリートファイター6』×『劇場版 SPY×FAMILY CODE: White』
- Action
- Episodes
- 1
- Status
- Finished Airing
Synopsis
In a thrilling animated collaboration, familiar characters from the beloved world of Spy x Family join forces with iconic fighters from Street Fighter 6. As the story unfolds, the engaging dynamics of espionage and martial arts blend seamlessly, showcasing the unique abilities of each character in a high-stakes adventure. The narrative captures the essence of both franchises, offering a fresh perspective on their intertwining universes.
As the characters navigate challenges that test their skills and resolve, viewers are treated to a vibrant mix of action and humor. The film emphasizes teamwork and the importance of family, all while delivering pulse-pounding excitement that fans of both series will appreciate. This unique crossover celebrates the spirit of its source materials, inviting audiences into an exhilarating experience where strategy and strength reign supreme.
Otaku Consensus
Otaku Den consensus: This one-episode crossover works best as a precision-made promotional short, with Kyouji Asano’s storyboard and character-design role giving the martial-arts staging a cleaner identity than a typical brand tie-in. Its 6.73 MAL score and 68 AniList score point to a mildly positive but restrained reception: fans appreciate the official Capcom and Tatsuya Endou collision, while the common complaint is that the format is too brief and dialogue-light to develop into a satisfying standalone anime.
Why You Should Watch
Watch this if you want the clean hit-confirm pleasure of a fighting-game cinematic without committing to a tournament arc or a full franchise crossover story. It is built for viewers who care about animation timing, poses, and recognizable character silhouettes: Yor’s assassin physicality and Street Fighter’s martial-arts grammar are the draw, not lore density. The appeal is closer to a premium anime opening or a polished game trailer than to Spy x Family’s domestic comedy or Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie’s full-length brawling. If you enjoy seeing studio craft applied to a compact concept, especially from the Wit Studio and CloverWorks pairing associated with Spy x Family, this is a quick, highly legible action showcase.
Key Characters
- YYor Forger
Yor is the natural bridge between the two brands: an assassin whose elegant, lethal movement can be translated directly into fighting-game body language.
- CChun-Li
Chun-Li brings Street Fighter’s police-and-martial-arts iconography into the short, giving the crossover a female-led matchup rather than a generic mascot parade.
What Makes It Stand Out
- 1
The short is credited to both Wit Studio and CloverWorks, the same studio combination listed for this crossover, making it feel visually aligned with modern Spy x Family rather than outsourced as a throwaway promo.
- 2
Kyouji Asano is credited for both storyboard and character design, a notable dual role in a project whose success depends on making two different visual languages read cleanly in motion.
- 3
AniList’s No Dialogue tag marks it as a largely action-first piece, so the character acting has to come through staging, timing, and pose clarity instead of banter or exposition.
- 4
The official creator credits name both Capcom and Tatsuya Endou, confirming it as a sanctioned meeting of Street Fighter 6 and Spy x Family rather than an unofficial crossover homage.
- 5
The reception numbers are unusually consistent across platforms: MAL lists 6.73 from 2,066 votes, while AniList sits at 68/100, suggesting viewers broadly saw it as solid craft with limited scope.
Fun Facts & Trivia
- Fun fact 1
- Despite combining two major properties, its MAL popularity rank is only #9568, which fits its status as a niche one-episode special rather than a widely tracked TV anime.
- Fun fact 2
- AniList’s tag distribution is revealing: Crossover sits at 100%, Martial Arts at 80%, Female Protagonist at 79%, while Assassins and Police both land at 66%, neatly mapping the two franchise identities.
- Fun fact 3
- Nao Ootsu is credited as animation director, with Kazuki Yamanaka as animation producer, placing the project’s appeal squarely on animation management and execution rather than serialized writing.
- Fun fact 4
- Chisato Mita is credited for illustration, while Shunsuke Aoki and Ryounosuke Kuroki are listed for key animation, giving the short named production contributors beyond the headline studios.
- Fun fact 5
- It is listed as finished after a single episode, making it closer to a compact official collaboration artifact than an adaptation, sequel, or side-story viewers need to follow for continuity.
Studios
- Wit Studio
- CloverWorks












