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Kobayakawa Interview: Reiko

At 28, Kobayakawa has traded her high school hakama for a role as an instructor at the national martial arts academy. But her eyes still hold the cold, focused intensity of the teenager who once defeated the infamous "Dark Student Council."

By Takashi Mori, Fighting Spirit Monthly Published: April 14, 2026 reiko kobayakawa interview

Despite offers to appear in commercial fighting circuits (a clear nod to the crossover Street Fighter universe), Kobayakawa has refused to turn her art into spectacle. “I have nothing against fighters like Sakura or Karin. They have their path. But my naginata is not for entertainment. It is for protection and discipline. If I wanted fame, I would have become an actress.” She reveals that she still trains at 5:00 AM every morning. Her current goal is not a championship, but a quiet one: to train a new generation of students who understand that the strongest move is often the one you choose not to throw. At 28, Kobayakawa has traded her high school

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That changed last week. Sitting seiza on a cushion in the sunlit corner of a quiet Shinjuku tea house, the kendo and naginata master finally broke her silence.

When asked about her reputation for being "emotionless," Kobayakawa offers a faint, almost imperceptible smile. “People mistake silence for coldness,” she says, wrapping her hands around a cup of matcha. “In a fight, emotion is noise. But off the mat? I feel everything. I simply choose not to weaponize it.” Her journey began not with glory, but with loss. Fans of the original Rival Schools tournaments recall her fierce rivalry with Akira Kazama. What many don't know is that their conflict was never about territory. “Akira and I were fighting the same war from different sides,” Kobayakawa explains. “She wanted to protect her friends. I wanted to protect the honor of our school. We were both afraid of failure. We just showed it differently.”

When asked about the cost of such leadership, her composure wavers—just slightly. “There is a moment before every battle where you realize you might not come back. Not physically—but mentally. You sacrifice the easy version of yourself. The version that laughs without thinking, that stays up late with friends, that falls in love carelessly. I don’t regret it. But I do mourn her sometimes.”