![nina williams death by degrees outfit nina williams death by degrees outfit](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-poq9VXH7VVE/VTw9IUcIEcI/AAAAAAAACX8/20r0my9MCUM/s1600/Playstation-Nina-Death-by-Dregrees-3D-Model.jpg)
Still, while she isn’t as scarred from her battle s (its ok bby we can’t all be Kazuya) as Tekken’s other resident badass, she is still depicted as badass as Kazuya is. One of my favorite ideas about Nina from the Tekken 2 comics that the PS2-era wiped out was the idea that Nina was just positively covered in scars under those outfits: She remains steadfastly amoral and chooses to embrace violence. Nina’s morality is the most interesting thing about her to me. They are not nice people.They are violent. Just as Ryu and Chun-Li are unquestionably paragons of virtue, Nina and Kazuya are somewhat more…well, vile. In just about every fighting game, the main character is inevitably a good person or at least someone with a good cause. Nina is unquestionably the female lead of Tekken, and, like Kazuya, does so by breaking away from fighting game protagonist rules that Street Fighter created. But she is a Teken character I have a large amount of respect for. Nina’s not a character I ever really play as - I far prefer her sister. I repeat, Nina Williams has her own god damn game - no other character in Tekken can claim that (not after Death by Degrees failed so hard anyway). She was one of Tekken 1’s two starting ladies, and certainly the more well-loved - while Michelle went on to be DLC in TT2 almost 20 years later, well, Nina’s been in every single god damn game, and even has her own spin-off game. If you want to talk about women in Tekken, you want to talk about Nina Williams.