Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix

"Gem Fighter" redirects here. For the MMORPG fighting game, see Rumble Fighter.
Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix

Sales flyer of Super Gem Fighter: Mini Mix. The PlayStation version was released in North America and the PAL region under the original Japanese title Pocket Fighter.
Developer(s) Capcom
Publisher(s) Capcom
Platform(s) Arcade, WonderSwan, Sega Saturn, PlayStation, PlayStation 2 (Street Fighter Alpha Anthology)
Release date(s)

Arcade

  • JP September 4, 1997
  • INT 1997

Saturn

  • JP July 9, 1998

WonderSwan

  • JP April 6, 2000

PlayStation

  • JP June 11, 1998
  • NA July 1, 1998
  • EU November 1998

PlayStation 2

(a part of Street Fighter Alpha Anthology)

  • JP May 25, 2006
  • NA June 13, 2006
  • EU July 7, 2006
Genre(s) Fighting
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer
Cabinet Standard
Arcade system CPS-2
Display Raster, 384 x 224 pixels (Horizontal), 4096 colors

Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix, released in Japan as Pocket Fighter (Japanese: ポケットファイター), is a fighting video game released by Capcom in 1997 for the CPS II arcade system. It was ported to the PlayStation (which retained the Pocket Fighter title for its American and European release), Sega Saturn, and WonderSwan, as well as PlayStation 2 as part of the Street Fighter Alpha Anthology.

The game uses the same super deformed character designs previously used in Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo, a puzzle game by Capcom featuring their fighting game characters. The roster includes characters from Street Fighter Alpha, Darkstalkers, Street Fighter III, and the CPS III arcade game Red Earth. It also features many cameos from various Capcom games scattered in the background of the stages, such as Balrog, Demitri, etc.

Gameplay

In addition to the standard fighting, there are various gems the player can collect during matches to power up their character (based on Red Earth), as well as elemental orbs which can be thrown to the opponent in a variety of angles (visually based on elemental hits in Darkstalkers), which may affect the opponent (turn into stone, freeze, etc.) Each character starts each match with one of these (Tessa, for example, always starts with the ice orb).

There are two bars and three sub-bars in the interface. The two main bars are the life bar and the super bar, the first indicates the character's health and the second their ability to perform "Mighty Combos". The Mighty Combo gauge itself can be filled up to 9 stocks. Each Mighty Combo has a level assigned to it, which determines how many "Mighty Combo" gauges it will need.

The three sub-bars at the bottom corners of the screen displays the level of three of the character's special moves. Each character has at least three special moves, as shown in the sub-bars, and each of these corresponds to a color. Some characters have one or two additional Special Moves that aren't affected by sub-bars. Each time an attack connects to an opponent, gems pop out of him or her, and which can then be taken to power up the corresponding special moves.

There are four buttons: Punch, Kick, Special, and Taunt. The Special button performs a chargeable move that cannot be blocked and upon impact drops gems in the opponent's possession. More gems will be dropped depending on how much the Special attack is charged. Holding Down, Forward or no direction at all when using the Special button will cause a specific gem color to drop from the enemy. Holding Back along with the Special button allows for a defense that is specific against the unblockable Special attacks. Other kinds of attacks do no damage when blocked, and unlike most 2D fighting games, this includes special moves and Mighty Combos.

Gem Fighter also features "Flash Combos", or "Costume Combos", where the player can perform a combo by pressing the Kick or Punch button after striking their opponent with the Punch button for a total of four hits. Flash Combos will usually cause a character to change into various costumes during the sequence (except for Ryu), and perform a powerful attack in the end - this final hit is usually the hardest in the sequence to connect with. These costumes range from uniforms (such as traffic cops or schoolgirls), to swimsuits, and even cosplays of other Capcom characters. For example, Chun-Li may turn into her version of Jill Valentine from Resident Evil, while Felicia may turn into her version of Mega Man or other Darkstalkers characters not playable in the game.

The commands are also very easy compared to the Street Fighter series, thanks to Special button. By doing a motion (for example: qcf or hcf) and pressing Special Button will make a fighter perform their Mighty Combo.

Playable characters

Street Fighter characters

Darkstalkers characters

Red Earth characters

"Secret" characters

Reception

In 2011, Complex ranked it as the 42nd best fighting game of all time.[1]

References

  1. Peter Rubin, The 50 Best Fighting Games of All Time, Complex.com, March 15, 2011.

External links

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