Compare Sifu Pre-Order Bonus - Deluxe Cosmetic Pack (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Released on 2/8/2022. Available on Nintendo Switch. Genres: Indie, Hack & Slash.

Pure cosmetic fluff for one of Switch's best brawlers, the outfits look sharp and the photo mode filters are fun, but nothing here touches Sifu's actual combat magic.

My honest first thought when I saw this listed separately was: why does one of the tightest hand-to-hand brawlers in recent memory need a cosmetic upsell? Sifu on Nintendo Switch is already a bruising, rewarding piece of work built by Sloclap, a revenge story told almost entirely through fists, parries, and an aging mechanic that ties every death to your character literally growing older. The Deluxe Cosmetic Pack adds a small collection of outfits inspired by classic martial arts cinema, plus a Photo Mode Cinematic Pack with exclusive filters and character poses. That is the whole of it. The outfits themselves are undeniably stylish. If you have already sunk deep hours into Sifu's five-level structure, mastered the dodge-and-parry rhythm, unlocked combo upgrades at Shrines, and reached that flowing state where counters become instinct, wearing something a bit more cinematic while doing it is a harmless pleasure. The photo mode additions are similarly niche but not without charm, Sifu's environmental set-pieces, the hallway fights, the neon-lit rooms, the pulled-out side-view perspective shifts, genuinely do photograph well. There is real artistry in the base game's presentation to capture. Here is the sober part, though. The DLC adds no new levels, no new enemies, no new abilities, no new bosses. The challenges used to unlock the outfits in-game are tied to normal gameplay progression, and crucially, none of this content is linked to achievements. If you are a completionist working through Sifu on Switch, the community consensus is clear: the base game's achievement list stands entirely on its own without touching this pack. The cosmetics are gated behind challenges you complete by playing Sifu as intended, which means the pack mostly front-loads access to things you would eventually earn the hard way anyway. The Switch version context matters here too. Running at 30fps with occasional frame dips during crowded enemy encounters and, on original Switch hardware, loading times that reviewers found genuinely punishing, this is not the smoothest place to experience Sifu. It is still the same combat, still the same satisfying crack of a well-timed strike, still the same brutal learning curve that asks you to read attack patterns and tighten your timing until it all clicks. But that experience is what you are paying for when you buy the base game. The Deluxe Cosmetic Pack is an optional aesthetic layer on top of something already complete without it. If you love Sifu deeply and want to dress the part during photo mode sessions, this is a small add-on that fits that use case. If you are still deciding whether to pick up the base game on Switch, focus that question first, the cosmetics will still be there later. Kai, Scout Team

Sifu Pre-Order Bonus - Deluxe Cosmetic Pack (DLC)
IndieHack & Slash

Sifu Pre-Order Bonus - Deluxe Cosmetic Pack (DLC)

Feb 8, 2022Unknown
GamerScout Says

Pure cosmetic fluff for one of Switch's best brawlers, the outfits look sharp and the photo mode filters are fun, but nothing here touches Sifu's actual combat magic.

Nintendo Switch
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About Sifu Pre-Order Bonus - Deluxe Cosmetic Pack (DLC)

My honest first thought when I saw this listed separately was: why does one of the tightest hand-to-hand brawlers in recent memory need a cosmetic upsell? Sifu on Nintendo Switch is already a bruising, rewarding piece of work built by Sloclap, a revenge story told almost entirely through fists, parries, and an aging mechanic that ties every death to your character literally growing older. The Deluxe Cosmetic Pack adds a small collection of outfits inspired by classic martial arts cinema, plus a Photo Mode Cinematic Pack with exclusive filters and character poses. That is the whole of it. The outfits themselves are undeniably stylish. If you have already sunk deep hours into Sifu's five-level structure, mastered the dodge-and-parry rhythm, unlocked combo upgrades at Shrines, and reached that flowing state where counters become instinct, wearing something a bit more cinematic while doing it is a harmless pleasure. The photo mode additions are similarly niche but not without charm, Sifu's environmental set-pieces, the hallway fights, the neon-lit rooms, the pulled-out side-view perspective shifts, genuinely do photograph well. There is real artistry in the base game's presentation to capture. Here is the sober part, though. The DLC adds no new levels, no new enemies, no new abilities, no new bosses. The challenges used to unlock the outfits in-game are tied to normal gameplay progression, and crucially, none of this content is linked to achievements. If you are a completionist working through Sifu on Switch, the community consensus is clear: the base game's achievement list stands entirely on its own without touching this pack. The cosmetics are gated behind challenges you complete by playing Sifu as intended, which means the pack mostly front-loads access to things you would eventually earn the hard way anyway. The Switch version context matters here too. Running at 30fps with occasional frame dips during crowded enemy encounters and, on original Switch hardware, loading times that reviewers found genuinely punishing, this is not the smoothest place to experience Sifu. It is still the same combat, still the same satisfying crack of a well-timed strike, still the same brutal learning curve that asks you to read attack patterns and tighten your timing until it all clicks. But that experience is what you are paying for when you buy the base game. The Deluxe Cosmetic Pack is an optional aesthetic layer on top of something already complete without it. If you love Sifu deeply and want to dress the part during photo mode sessions, this is a small add-on that fits that use case. If you are still deciding whether to pick up the base game on Switch, focus that question first, the cosmetics will still be there later. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

nintendoCosmetic DLCPhoto ModeOutfit UnlockChallenge-GatedSingle-Player Only

System Requirements

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Game Info

Developer
Unknown
Publisher
Unknown
Release Date
Feb 8, 2022

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