Tina Armstrong

Tina Armstrong
Dead or Alive character

Tina Armstrong in Dead or Alive 5
First game Dead or Alive (1996)[1]
Created by Tomonobu Itagaki
Voiced by (English) Kate Higgins (DOAX2–present)
Voiced by (Japanese) Mami Koyama (DOA)
Yūko Nagashima (DOA2–present)
Portrayed by Jaime Pressly (film)
Fictional profile
Birthplace Texas (United States)
Nationality American
Fighting style Professional wrestling
Occupation Wrestler and model[2]
Rock star (DOA5)

Tina Armstrong (Japanese: ティナ・アームストロング Hepburn: Tina Āmusutorongu) is a player character in the Dead or Alive fighting game franchise by Team Ninja and Tecmo Koei. She was introduced in the original Dead or Alive in 1996 as an American professional wrestler who uses the Dead or Alive fighting tournaments as a springboard to fame and fortune.[3] In subsequent series appearances, she is indecisive about her career interests, much to the chagrin of her overprotective father, Bass Armstrong. Tina has appeared on official series merchandise in addition to the feature film DOA: Dead or Alive, and has received critical reception as one of the most iconic video-game blondes.

Appearances

In Dead or Alive games

Tina Armstrong is the only child of famous professional wrestler Bass Armstrong, who raised her alone after her mother's death. He wanted Tina to follow him into the wrestling industry, and trains her for such at a young age. Though she is already an expert grappler by her teenage years, she dreams of expanding her horizons beyond the wrestling scene. In the 1996 original Dead or Alive game, Tina joins the Dead or Alive fighting tournament as a vehicle for becoming discovered by Hollywood. Bass opposes this decision as he does not want her to quit wrestling, and enters the competition himself to prevent her achieving her goals. Tina reaches the final match against Kasumi, which she ends up forfeiting, but nonetheless collects the cash prize after Kasumi refuses it. In Dead or Alive 2 (1999), Tina aspires to become a supermodel, for which she bleaches her hair blonde and dresses in skimpy outfits.[4] She ends up having to fight her own father in the competition, and emerges victorious. She gets her wish and begins modeling on a television show.

In the timeline of Dead or Alive 3 (2001), Tina has decided that she wants to switch from modeling to acting, and in a retread of her DOA2 backstory, she competes in the third tournament in the name of self-promotion, and defeats Bass in combat a second time when he again unsuccessfully attempts to intervene in her interests. She goes on to star in an action film after the tournament concludes. She joins the fourth competition in Dead or Alive 4 (2005) now wanting to become a rock star, over which she and Bass quarrel before she officially defeats him for a third time. After the tourament's conclusion, she goes on to shoot a garish music video. She then departs to New Zack Island in Dead or Alive Xtreme 2 (2006) to finally escape the clutches of her overbearing father.

In Dead or Alive 5 (2012), Tina has quit competitive fighting since achieving success in the entertainment world, but she is lured out of retirement and recruited into the fifth tournament by Zack (owner of Zack Island in the Dead or Alive Xtreme games). Tina defeats him in battle and then takes out Virtua Fighter character Sarah Bryant as her reaction to Zack confusing her with Sarah. When Tina publicly announces her plans of returning to competition, Bass attempts to stop her once again, this time by posing as a tournament contestant named "Mr. Strong". After he eliminates her in the quarterfinals, he reveals his identity and Tina convinces him in turn to join her as a father-daughter tandem, but further reveals that she now wants to transition into politics.

Design

Tina is a young Caucasian woman in her early twenties,[3] with blonde hair and blue eyes. She is canonically listed as standing 5'9" tall and 123 pounds,[3] and in the English-language versions of the games, she speaks with a Southern accent. In the first game, Tina is initially a brunette and wears simple blue wrestling gear,[5] which is greatly minimized in the first two sequels to a black bra and matching leather panties accentuated only by cowboy boots or a short vest, while her hair color was permanently changed to blonde.[5] Her updated render for Dead or Alive 4 further enhances her cowgirl image with Western-style accessories such as a cowboy hat and fringed designer armbands, while her bra is changed from black to an American flag print.[5][6] With the increased quality of the character renders in Dead or Alive 5, Tina was given a more realistic appearance with smaller eyes and even more revealing outfits; Dead or Alive 5 Last Round pre-order bonuses from Amazon.com included a skimpy "Showstopper" costume for the character.[7][8] The game additionally included the costume of title character Mail from the 1992 Nihon Falcom title Popful Mail as a download.[9]

Gameplay

Saturn Power described Tina as a "nightmare opponent" due to her throw-oriented style.[10] Dreamcast Magazine cautioned not to "let her looks deceive you as she's one of the best fighters in the game."[4] Anthony Chau of IGN wrote in 2001 that her offense in Dead or Alive 3 "can pack quite a wallop. Of all the grapplers in the game, she has the most balanced attacks; she can dish out good punch and kick combinations or piledrive opponents with powerful authority." He added that with her variety of throws, "she's one of the most exciting fighters to play."[11] The staff of Official Xbox Magazine chose Tina as their top playable in Dead or Alive Ultimate, preferring "her violent wrestling moves" over the other characters' speed.[12]

GameSpot wrote in their Dead or Alive 4 strategy guide, "Tina's moveset is definitely that of a wrestler: lots of powerful mid and high punches, complemented by a dizzying array of throws", while players have to "be an expert at baiting" their opponent into attempting to counter their moves.[13] However, GameSpy said, "Tina has a lot of disadvantages, mostly lying in her lack of speed in close combat", and thus required "trickery and a great sense of reading [one's] opponent ... to succeed consistently."[14] She is able to perform additional special moves while fighting on a wrestling arena.[15] IGN said of Tina's fighting style in 2010, "The vast majority of her moves are drawn from real-life pro [wrestling moves], and though they might not actually prove that useful in a real fight, that's what video games are for, right?"[3]

Other appearances

Comparison between Tina in Dead or Alive Xtreme 2 and Jaime Pressly as Tina in DOA: Dead or Alive

Film

Tina was played by Jaime Pressly in the 2006 live-action film DOA: Dead or Alive. Her backstory from the games is unchanged in that she wants to escape her wrestling background against Bass' wishes, causing him to enter the tournament in which he loses to his daughter, the difference being that Tina is competing to prove her worth as a real fighter rather than seeking fame. She and the three other main female characters—Kasume, Ayane, and Helena—team up to defeat the shady tournament organizer Victor Donovan near the conclusion.

The film's U.S. release was repeatedly delayed and had only a three-week run in theaters,[16] for which Pressly expressed no regrets in a 2007 interview with Rotten Tomatoes.[17] She revealed that she had joined the production because of director Corey Yuen ("one of the number one action and martial arts directors in the world"), but the experience was hampered by language barriers between the cast and crew, and the script deviating from the game series' storyline. "A lot of bad stuff came up and happened, [and] it just didn’t turn out the way that it should have." The finished film was not screened for critics, and Pressly was only able to view it through an acquaintance of her My Name is Earl costar Jason Lee.[17]

Merchandise

Tina has appeared on various official series merchandise, including action figures from Bandai[18] and Epoch;[19] figurines produced by Kotobukiya with varying costumes;[20][21] a garage kit produced by Studio Saru Bunshitsu,[22] and a clear file folder manufactured by Famitsu that displayed Tina posing in a bikini.[23] Series developer Koei Tecmo released a host of licensed items, such as a 20"x28" suede tapestry,[24] an oppai ("breast") mousepad,[25] phone cards,[26] and a three-dimensional poster featuring the Dead or Alive 5 Plus cast.[27] In 2012, the company offered a downloadable "black bunny" swimsuit costume with pre-orders of Dead or Alive 5.[28] Tina was among the DOA5 characters whose digital cards were added to Sega's PlayStation Vita release Samurai & Dragons in 2013.[29]

Reception

Guaranteed to offend sexists everywhere, Dead or Alive's female characters are in a class of their own. Putting even the Last Bronx babes and Lara Croft to shame, the lovely Kasumi, Lei-Fang and Tina are a sight to behold. Easily capable of holding their own against the game's macho male fighters, these battling beauties are the proud owners of what can only be referred to as the biggest, bountiful breasts we've ever gawped at. And gawped we have.

—Matt Yeo, Sega Saturn Magazine, 1997[30]

Like the series' other female characters, Tina is most often noted in gaming media for her sex appeal. She was ranked the number-one "girl on the Dreamcast" by Dreamcast Magazine in 2000, who described her as "undeniably the most gorgeous."[31] The same year, Spanish magazine Revista Oficial Dreamcast held a poll in which readers selected their favorite Dreamcast heroine; Tina received the most votes, topping the likes of Claire Redfield, Lara Croft, and Chun-Li.[32] In G4's 2005 "Video Game Vixens" awards, she won in the "Dirtiest Dancer" and "Video Game Vixen of the Year" categories.[33] Brazilian magazine SuperGamePower listed her among the 20 "muses" of video games in 2001.[34] Rob Wright of Tom's Games included her in his 2007 selection of the fifty "greatest female characters" in video games.[35] PLAY ranked Tina as the third-"hottest" blonde in games in 2010,[36] and jokingly deemed her breasts "the undisputed #1 and #2 of all Dead or Alive's features."[37] UGO Networks included her among the "hottest girls in games" in 2011. "This female wrestler hits harder than any of the other DoA characters while still managing to show off the maximum amount of skin."[38] The site additionally rated Tina eleventh in their ranking of the twenty-five "foxiest fighting females to be ever pixelated" that same year.[39] Rich Shivener of Joystick Division chose both Tina and Kasumi's chests as the seventh-"most incredible" in video games.[40] She was listed fourth on Brazilian site Portal PlayGame's 2014 selection of their top 100 female video game characters.[41] Despite this, however, she failed to make the top 9 in the wallpaper contest to determine who will get into Dead or Alive Xtreme 3.[42][43][44]

Official Xbox Magazine opined that the series' females "have always been slightly controversial, with high-minded types lamenting the gratuitous use of bouncing bosoms", but the gameplay of Dead or Alive 3 "must have made all gamers, feminists included, realise that Tina, Kasumi et al are actually rather fit."[45] However, Matthew O'Mara of National Post singled out Tina as embodying the "casual sexism" of the series: "Why does Tina’s animation make her breasts flop about while most of the other characters remain stationary? Why does she have more outfits than any other character? Why do video game developers keep doing this?"[46] Zachary Miller of Nintendo World Report nonetheless praised Tina's alternate idle animation as the "most impressive realism in terms of movement" in the history of video game breast physics.[47] He observed that Tina and Kasumi in the 2011 Nintendo 3DS release Dead or Alive: Dimensions "are the only ladies with bikini costumes and they both display the usual DoA jiggle more than the other ladies."[48] Tina's "strong arms and legs" in DOA2 impressed actress and model Leila Arcieri,[49] while fellow actress-model Jaime Bergman claimed the character reminded her of herself.[49]

Other publications have noted Tina for her characterization as well as her beauty. GamesRadar's Henry Gilbert rated her the fourth-best video-game wrestler in 2014. "Tina can pull off just about every devastating grapple ever invented—all while wearing a string bikini, no less—but she dreams of using her talents for something more."[50] IGN said in 2004, "She's got a bit of tomboy and American sass ... she's got power to go along with beauty and puts the real ladies of the WWE to shame."[51] Tina was ranked third on GameDaily's 2008 list of the top wrestling characters in video games.[52] Sega Saturn Magazine described her as a "hot all-American babe with buns of steel".[53] Complex chose Tina ("hot even amongst pixelated swimsuit models") as their favorite video-game grappler over Street Fighter's Rainbow Mika in their 2011 "Battle of the Beauties" feature,[54] and rated her victory quote from Dead or Alive 4 ("Weak! You're going to have to do better than that") among their hundred "most humiliating" video-game victory quotes in 2012.[55]

Electronic Gaming Monthly praised the "hot chicks [and] spirited casting" in a preview of DOA: Dead or Alive, noting "My Name is Earl's white-trash hottie Jaime Pressly as Tina!" even as they expected the film as a whole to be "crap".[56] Tina was ranked as the third "hottest woman in video game movies" by Complex in 2012.[57] Bill Gibron of PopMatters described the "capable" Pressly in the film as "full of piss and vinegar as a desperate-to-prove-herself grappler."[58] Rafe Telsch of Cinema Blend said, "Like it or not, Pressly is the poster child of the movie, above her other attractive co-stars."[59]

References

  1. "Tina Armstrong - IGN". Uk.ign.com. 2006-11-20. Retrieved 2013-06-26.
  2. "Videogame Babe of the Day: Tina - IGN". Uk.ign.com. Retrieved 2013-06-26.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "The Babes of DOA - IGN". uk.ign.com. 2010-03-26. Retrieved 2013-06-26.
  4. 1 2 "Alive & Heaving". Dreamcast Magazine issue 5, page 39.
  5. 1 2 3 "Videogame franchises founded on boobs". GamesRadar. 2014-06-17. Retrieved 2014-06-21.
  6. Martínez, David (July 26, 2013). "Top chicas Dead or Alive". Hobbyconsolas.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2014-06-30.
  7. "Dead or Alive 5: Last Round: Release-Datum für PS4 und Xbox One + Vorbesteller-Boni enthüllt" (in German). Gameplorer.de. October 24, 2014.
  8. Futter, Mike (October 23, 2014). "Dead Or Alive 5: Last Round Coming February With Free Trials In Tow". Game Informer.
  9. "Dead or Alive 5: Last Round Video Shows Off Its Falcom Collaboration Costumes". Siliconera. 2015-09-14. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  10. "Wanted Dead or Alive". Saturn Power, p. 26. January 1998. Retrieved February 11, 2015.
  11. Chau, Anthony (November 16, 2001). "DOA 3 Fighter Of The Day: Tina". uk.ign.com. Retrieved June 8, 2014.
  12. ": Official XBOX Magazine - Issue 040 (2005-03)(Future Publishing)(GB)". Archive.org. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
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  19. "Dead or Alive - Tina Armstrong - Dead or Alive Ultimate 3 Part 1 (Epoch)". MyFigureCollection. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  20. "Dead or Alive Xtreme 2 - Tina Armstrong - 1/6 (Kotobukiya)". MyFigureCollection. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
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  22. "Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball - Tina Armstrong - 1/6 (Studio Saru Bunshitsu)". MyFigureCollection. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  23. "Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball - Tina Armstrong - Clear File (Famitsu)". MyFigureCollection. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  24. "Dead or Alive 5 - Tina Armstrong - Tapestry (Koei Tecmo Games)". MyFigureCollection. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  25. "Dead or Alive 5 - Tina Armstrong - Oppai Mousepad (Koei Tecmo Games)". MyFigureCollection. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  26. "Dead or Alive - Kasumi - Lei Fang - Tina Armstrong - Telephone Card (Tecmo)". MyFigureCollection. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  27. "Dead or Alive 5 Plus 3D Poster". MyFigureCollection. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  28. Sahdeev, Ishaan (July 31, 2012). "Christie, Tina And Ayane Show Off Dead or Alive 5 Bikini Pre-Order Costumes". Siliconera. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  29. "Dead Or Alive 5 Characters Are Crossing Into a Sega Game". Siliconera. August 7, 2013. Retrieved June 19, 2014.
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  37. "Dead Or Alive 5 – Top 10 things you can expect to see". Play-mag.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
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  39. Sitterson, Aubrey (January 14, 2011). "Tina Armstrong". UGO.com. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved September 29, 2011.
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  41. "TOP 100—As Personagens mais gatas dos games". GameHall. 2014. Archived from the original on January 23, 2015. Retrieved February 11, 2015.
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  48. Zachary Miller (February 24, 2012). "Fave Five... Chesty Heroines on Nintendo Systems - Feature". Nintendo World Report. Retrieved 2014-06-19.
  49. 1 2 Mega Fun (April 2000), page 19.
  50. Gilbert, Henry (November 3, 2014). "Top 7… awesome wrestlers who could only exist in games". GamesRadar. Retrieved October 18, 2015.
  51. Goldstein, Hilary (September 21, 2004). "Girls of DOAU: Tina". IGN.
  52. "Top 25 Wrestling Characters of All Time". GameDaily. Archived from the original on October 27, 2008. Retrieved July 26, 2013.
  53. Yeo, Matt (December 1997). "Simply the Breast!". Sega Saturn Magazine #26. Retrieved February 11, 2015.
  54. Knight, Rich (November 19, 2011). "Battle of the Beauties: Gaming's Hottest Female Characters Face Off". Complex.com.
  55. Anyanwu, Obi (November 14, 2012). "The 100 Most Humiliating Video Game Victory Quotes". Complex. Retrieved July 26, 2013.
  56. Electronic Gaming Monthly 209 (November 2006), page 74.
  57. Rubin, Peter (2011-02-16). "3. Jaime Pressly as Tina Armstrong - The 15 Hottest Women In Video Game Movies". Complex. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  58. Gibron, Bill (September 23, 2007). "DOA: Dead or Alive (2006)". PopMatters. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  59. Telsch, Rafe (August 28, 2007). "DOA Features Jaime Pressly in a Bikini". Cinema Blend. Retrieved February 10, 2016.

External links

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