Fatal Fury: King of Fighters

Fatal Fury: King of Fighters

Neo-Geo cover art
Developer(s) SNK (Neo Geo)
Takara (SNES, Mega Drive/Genesis)
Publisher(s) SNK
Magical Company (Sharp X68000)
Director(s) Takashi Nishiyama
Designer(s) Takashi Tsukamoto
Seigo Ito
Series Fatal Fury
Platform(s) Arcade, Neo Geo, Neo-Geo CD, Mega Drive/Genesis, Sharp X68000, Super Famicom/SNES, PlayStation 2, Virtual Console
Release date(s)

Arcade

  • JP November 25, 1991
  • NA 1991

Neo Geo

  • WW December 20, 1991

Neo-Geo CD

  • WW September 9, 1994

Sharp X68000

  • JP July 23, 1993

Super Famicom/SNES

  • JP November 27, 1992
  • NA April 1993
  • EU 1993

Mega Drive/Genesis

  • JP April 23, 1993
  • WW 1993

Wii Virtual Console

  • JP September 21, 2007
  • NA October 8, 2007
  • PAL October 5, 2007
Genre(s) Fighting
Mode(s) Single Play, Tag Team, Versus
Cabinet Upright
Arcade system Neo Geo

Fatal Fury: King of Fighters (餓狼伝説 ~宿命の闘い~ Garō Densetsu Shukumei no Tatakai, "Legend of the Hungry Wolf: The Battle of Destiny") is a 1991 head-to-head fighting game released by SNK for the Neo Geo arcade and home platforms. Fatal Fury was SNK's first fighting game for the Neo Geo system and served as the inaugural game in their Fatal Fury series, as well as the first game to depict the fictional "King of Fighters" tournament (which became the basis for the later The King of Fighters games). Many of SNK's mainstay characters, including the Bogard brothers Terry and Andy, friend Joe Higashi, and their nemesis Geese Howard, made their debut in this game.

Development

The game was designed by Takashi Nishiyama, the creator of the original Street Fighter (1987). Fatal Fury, which Nishiyama envisioned as a spiritual successor to Street Fighter, was developed around the same time as Street Fighter II (1991). While Street Fighter II placed more emphasis on combos, Fatal Fury placed more emphasis on the timing of special moves as well as storytelling.[1]

Gameplay

The gameplay follows the typical formula of most fighting games: the player competes against their opponent in best two-out-of-three matches. The play controls consists of an eight directional joystick and three attack buttons: punch, kick and throw. Each of the playable character has special techniques that are performed by inputting specific commands and combination with the joystick and buttons. The input methods for special moves are shown to the player during the course of the game (after every bonus round), as opposed to being given in an instruction card in the game's cabinet.

The most novel aspect of Fatal Fury were the addition of two-line battles. Many stages featured two rows, a background row and a foreground row. Players can change between rowsat enemy time other than the Single-Player mode, where in almost all fights, you have to wait for the CPU opponent to change rows before you can. You are not required however to do so.

When a second player joins during the middle of a one player fight, instead of postponing the current battle for a match between the two players, the game will make both players team-up against the current CPU opponent in a two-on-one match before their battle takes place.

After every second match in the single player tournament, the player will participate in a bonus round mini-game involving an arm wrestling match against a machine. The player must tap the A button rapidly to win these mini-games.

Plot

The plot of Fatal Fury centers around a martial arts tournament known as the "King of Fighters" tournament, held in the fictional American city of South Town and sponsored by local crime boss Geese Howard. Ten years prior to the events of the game, Geese murdered a rival martial artist named Jeff Bogard who was on his trail. Now, Jeff's sons, Terry and Andy, along with their friend Joe Higashi, enter the tournament to get their revenge on Geese.

Story

Terry, Andy and Joe enter the King of Fighters tournament, 10 years after their father's death at the hands of Geese, in order to gain revenge on him. When Terry defeated the champions Raiden and Billy Kane, he becomes the KOF champion. During the celebration, two body guards suddenly grab him, and take him to Geese Tower. There, Terry confronts Geese Howard, and fights him. Victorious over Geese, Terry kicks Geese through a glass window, supposedly causing him to die from a 20+ story fall from the building.

Characters

At the beginning of the game, the player is asked to select between Terry, Andy and Joe. The player is then asked to select from one of four fighters as their first opponent, which are Duck King, Richard Meyer, Michael Max, and Tung Fu Rue. After defeating their first opponent, the player faces the other three opponents in a specific order. The order of the opponents is: Richard, Michael, Duck, Tung, with the cycle beginning at whichever opponent the player has selected. The last three opponents before Geese are fought in the following order: Hwa Jai, Raiden and Billy Kane.

Console versions

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
CVGNeo Geo: 94%[2]
Genesis: 85%[3]
GameFanGenesis: 348 / 400[4]
GameProNeo Geo: 5 / 5[5]
MaximumNeo Geo: [6]

In a retrospective review, Maximum commented that the game failed to offer any real competition for Street Fighter II in either playability or character selection. They concluded, "The only main point in this game's favour is that two of the characters may team together to take on a computer opponent in a three-player frenzy, and the game also tries to offer something else new with a two-tier playing arena, but the slow action and the disgracefully difficult fireball motions make special moves something of a rare occurrence."[6]

References

  1. Leone, Matt. "The Man Who Created Street Fighter". 1UP.com. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  2. http://archive.org/stream/computer-video-games-magazine-124/CVG124_Mar_1992#page/n63/mode/1up
  3. Computer and Video Games, issue 138, pages 62-63
  4. GameFan, volume 1, issue 5 (April 1993), pages 14 & 24-25
  5. GamePro, issue 34 (August 1992), page 66
  6. 1 2 "Fatal Fury: First in the Fatal Series". Maximum: The Video Game Magazine (Emap International Limited) (4): 42. March 1996.

External links

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