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Mortal Kombat: Unchained is a port of Mortal Kombat: Deception for the PSP.
The seventh installment in the violent fighting game franchise, featuring the most complete Mortal Kombat roster to date.
The second in the "Budokai Tenkaichi" trilogy of Dragon Ball fighting games, adding dozens of new characters and transformations (for a total roster of 120).
A spin-off from the original console game for the PSP that includes new characters, venues, and gameplay elements. It is not a direct port.
The fifth main installment of Sega-AM2's signature fighting game series, using PC-based arcade hardware to deliver the most advanced graphical capabilities of video games in the mid-to-late 2000's.
Torisbash is an extremely violent, complicated, turn-based fighting game created by Swedish software engineer and Judo fighter Hampus "Hampa" Söderström.
The tale of Soul Calibur continues in the series's fourth entry, adding a variety of new game modes and features (including an in-depth character creation system).
An alternate fighting game take on the Dragon Ball manga and anime series, Budokai Tenkaichi utilizes a third-person perspective and unified movelists while adding a very large playable character roster.
Jump Super Stars is a 2D fighting game for the Nintendo DS. It features many characters from popular Shonen Jump series. It was only released in Japan and will not be released elsewhere because of cross-licensing issues.
The third game in the original Budokai trilogy of fighting games set in the Dragon Ball universe. Along with numerous gameplay changes, it features characters and settings from both Dragon Ball GT and some of the series' animated films.
Sega Ages 2500 Vol. 16: Virtua Fighter 2 is essentially a remake of Virtua Fighter 2 for the Sega Saturn.
The sixth installment in the violent fighting game franchise, introducing a manual "Combo Breaker" system and online multiplayer while adding a more in-depth Konquest Mode.
Yu Yu Hakusho: Dark Tournament was released for the PlayStation 2. The game is based on the Dark Tournament arc of the anime.
Fight for NY continues the story from Def Jam Vendetta while adding in new characters, venues, and gameplay elements.
The second game in the Budokai sub-series of fighting games based on the Dragon Ball manga and animated series adds a new single-player campaign (similar to board games) and the rest of the Dragon Ball Z story arc.
This game is essentially Virtua Fighter 4 Evo redone in the primitive graphics from the original Virtua Fighter. Bundled with VF4 for PS2.
Robot Arena 2 is a sequel to the somewhat successor to Robot Arena.
The first in a long-line of 2.5D fighting games based on the Dragon Ball Z manga and anime series comes, and the first adaptation of the series to be released onto sixth-generation consoles.
Following in the basic formula of the original, Super Monkey Ball 2 brings more mini-games and new puzzles to the Super Monkey Ball franchise.
The first major revision of Sega-AM2's fourth entry in their signature 3D fighting game series. Along with two new combatants, it updates all fighters' movelists, stages, and soundtracks.
The third main entry in the Soul series, Soulcalibur II is best known for its release on all three major consoles at the time, each of them featuring their own exclusive guest character.
The second in the Super Smash Bros. series brings the four-player brawling action to the GameCube, significantly expanding the roster and single-player content while refining gameplay.
The fourth main installment of the Virtua Fighter series continues its trend of using the most powerful hardware at the time for groundbreaking visuals, while introducing online connectivity for Japanese arcades (allowing players to track their stats and customize their fighters' appearances).
This is the fourth installment of the "Battle Arena Toshinden" franchise. It was released in 1999.
The sequel to Namco's earlier fighting game Soul Edge, continuing the story of the cursed blade "Soul Edge" (now corrupting the noble knight Siegfried into the dreaded knight Nightmare).
SNK's first 3D fighting game brings the blade-clashing Samurai Shodown series to the third dimension.
The sixth installment of SNK's Fatal Fury series, bringing back the multi-line fighting system of earlier Fatal Fury games while removing the "ring out" mechanic of the original Real Bout and adding four characters from Fatal Fury Special.
The fifth installment of SNK's Fatal Fury franchise, completely changing the button layout while introducing the Power Gauge and featuring unique ring-out stages.
The third installment of the 3D weapon-based fighting game series, Battle Arena Toshinden 3 doubles the game's roster while introducing new gameplay changes (such as combo chains and enclosed arenas). It is also the last in the series to be released in North America.
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