Soul calibur 6 street fighter dmcv4/3/2024 ![]() Street Fighter: The MovieĮven though I’ve already done an article dedicated to this game a couple years back, there’s still a lot to unpack with Street Fighter: The Movie …The Game. But I’ve clearly gotten off-track, let’s talk about some games. If you could think of it, Capcom was more than willing to slap Ryu, Ken, Guile, Chun-Li and M. Even discounting obvious stuff like the two movies and the two animated series, you had weird things like a pinball machine, whack-a-mole, Tiger Electronics handhelds, various toy lines (including a take on Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots), a truly bizarre comic book from Malibu Comics, several manga in Japan, valentines and even a simulator ride. Of course, the games I will be discussing in this retrospective don’t even scratch the surface of the weird licensed material Capcom stuck their fingers into during Street Fighter II’s heyday. Games that Capcom outright acknowledged were farmed out to other developers with vastly different results, both mechanically and in their overall reception. ![]() ![]() Of course, you’d think I’d have gotten my fill with the first Street Fighter retrospective article – I covered Final Fight, Street Fighter 2010 and even Avenger, an arcade game that predated the original Street Fighter – but there were a couple of games that have still managed to pop into my mind. However, even when I was outlining this project from the get-go, I knew that I wanted to explore some of the more obscure titles in the Street Fighter franchise. ![]() ![]() With every game in the recent Street Fighter 30 th Anniversary Collection covered in this series of retrospectives, the obvious route for continuing it would be to go straight into the modern releases. ![]()
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