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Game » consists of 2 releases. Released 1996
Fight for NY continues the story from Def Jam Vendetta while adding in new characters, venues, and gameplay elements.
The long-running King of Fighters series is brought to 3D for the first time, featuring a mix of new and classic characters as they battle in a tournament in modern-day Southtown.
The 12th main installment of the tag-team martial arts series brings a new storyline (with a new central protagonist) and a brand new gameplay system (with freeform tag-teaming similar to the Marvel vs Capcom series). It is the last game in the series to originate on Neo Geo hardware.
The fourth and final installment of the Bloody Roar series adds a variety of new gameplay mechanics (such as the revamped Beast Gauge) and game modes (including a "Career Mode" where players can enhance their characters).
Mortal Kombat: Tournament Edition is the second GBA "port" of Deadly Alliance.
Bloody Roar Extreme is the Xbox port of Bloody Roar 3. It had the same special features as Bloody Roar Primal Fury for Gamecube.
In Def Jam: Vendetta you fight your way through the underground street fighting world to earn money and respect.
The second King of Fighters game for the Game Boy Advance, adding characters never before seen in the series.
The fifth installment in the violent fighting game franchise and the first "revival" of the series, introducing multiple fighting styles for each character.
Capcom vs. SNK is a fighting game published for the systems SEGA Dreamcast and PSone. It's an update of Capcom Vs SNK.
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.
Bloody Roar: Primal Fury is a fighting game released by Eighting in 2002. It is an updated version of the PS2 game Bloody Roar 3. Players can control a number of characters which have the ability to morph into powerful animals, such as tigers and wolves.
Tekken Advance takes the fighters well known from the arcade and console series and attempts to pack them into a portable system.
Mortal Kombat Advance is a remake of Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. It is notable for its negative reception containing countless bugs that weren't present in the original.
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 eighth installment of the King of Fighters series (and the first after SNK's bankruptcy), radically changing the traditional 3-on-3 team system to allow any combination of fighters and Strikers.
Capcom's final entry with their collaboration with SNK, adding a variety of new fighters and a six-button layout while completely revamping both the "Ratio" team building system and the "Groove" gameplay style system.
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).
The fourth main installment in the Tekken series, bringing the game engine to the PS2 era and experimenting with a variety of new gameplay mechanics (such as closed arenas, where players can use walls and other obstacles for consecutive combos).
Super Street Fighter II: Turbo Revival is a port of Super Street Fighter II: Turbo released for the Game Boy Advance.
The third installment of the Bloody Roar series brings the transformable Zoanthropes to sixth-generation console hardware.
Remake of the original International Karate, this game features 12 fighters along with new environments and a system link multiplayer mode.
Capcom's initial entry into their crossover fighting game series with rival SNK, pitting fighters from the Street Fighter and King of Fighters series together in an all-out team-based brawl.
Power Stone 2 is a classic 3D fighting arena video game developed by Capcom for the Sega Dreamcast. It is a sequel of the Power Stone released in 1999.
The seventh installment of SNK's King of Fighters series and the last game they developed before their bankruptcy. It features an expansion of the "Striker" system, including numerous Striker-only characters for additional options.
The third and final installment of the Street Fighter EX series adds tag-team fighting, similar to Marvel vs. Capcom, and a new fighter with customizable movesets.
One of the most legendary crossover fighting game series is thrown into high gear with a whopping 56-character roster and new three-on-three tag-team gameplay.
An improved version of Dead or Alive 2, released in 2000 for the arcades, PS2, and Japanese Dreamcast. It included several upgrades over the original 1999 arcade and Dreamcast versions.
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