Difference between revisions of "Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers"
From Sega Retro
Scarred Sun (talk | contribs) m (Text replace - "region=South Korea" to "region=KR") |
(→Characters: scale) |
||
(145 intermediate revisions by 21 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{OtherPage|desc=the [[Sega Saturn]] version|page=Street Fighter Collection}} | ||
{{Bob | {{Bob | ||
| bobscreen=SuperSteetFighter2 Title.png | | bobscreen=SuperSteetFighter2 Title.png | ||
− | | publisher=[[Capcom]] | + | | bobscreen2=SuperStreetFighterII MD JP TitleScreen.png |
− | | developer=[[Capcom]] | + | | bobscreen3=SuperStreetFighterII MD EU TitleScreen.png |
− | | system=[[Sega Mega Drive]] | + | | tab1=NTSC-U |
− | + | | tab2=NTSC-J | |
+ | | tab3=PAL | ||
+ | | publisher={{company|[[Capcom]]|region=Japan, US}}, {{company|[[Sega]]|region=Europe}} | ||
+ | | developer={{company|[[Capcom]]|system=MD}} | ||
+ | {{company|[[M2]]|system=VC}} | ||
+ | | distributor={{company|[[SF Interactive Media]]|system=MD|region=SE rental}} | ||
+ | | system=[[Sega Mega Drive]], [[Virtual Console]] | ||
| sounddriver= | | sounddriver= | ||
− | | peripherals= | + | | peripherals={{MD}} [[Six Button Control Pad (Mega Drive)|Six Button Control Pad]], [[Mega Net 2]] |
| players=1-2 | | players=1-2 | ||
− | | genre=Action | + | | genre=Action{{fileref|SuperStreetFighter2 MD JP Box.jpg}}{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20200702232146/https://sega.jp/history/hard/megadrive/software_l.html}}, Fighting{{fileref|SSFII MD SE rental cover.jpg}} |
− | | releases={{ | + | | originalsystem=Capcom CPS-2 |
− | | md_date_us=1994 | + | | releases={{releasesMD |
+ | | md_date_jp=1994-06-25{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20200702232146/https://sega.jp/history/hard/megadrive/software_l.html}} | ||
+ | | md_code_jp=T-12043 | ||
+ | | md_rrp_jp=10,900e{{magref|bemega|1994-07|138}} | ||
+ | | md_date_us=1994-07{{magref|videogamesus|66|61}}{{magref|gameplayers|0707|38}} | ||
| md_code_us=T-12056 | | md_code_us=T-12056 | ||
− | | md_date_eu=1994 | + | | md_rating_us=ma13 |
− | | md_code_eu=5449- | + | | md_date_eu=1994-08 |
− | | | + | | md_code_eu=1098-50 |
− | | | + | | md_date_fr=1994 |
− | | | + | | md_code_fr=5449-09 |
+ | | md_date_es=1994 | ||
+ | | md_code_es=5449-06 | ||
+ | | md_date_au=1994 | ||
+ | | md_code_au=FSUP00SMC | ||
+ | | md_rating_au=m15 | ||
| md_date_br=199x | | md_date_br=199x | ||
| md_code_br=049010 | | md_code_br=049010 | ||
+ | | md_rating_br=13 | ||
| md_date_kr=199x | | md_date_kr=199x | ||
| md_code_kr=GM94014JT | | md_code_kr=GM94014JT | ||
− | | vc_date_jp=2011-11-08 | + | | md_date_as=199x |
− | | vc_rrp_jp=600 | + | | md_code_as=1098 |
− | | vc_date_us=2012-04-26 | + | | md_date_uk=1994-08-19{{magref|ctw|500|10}}{{magref|segapro|36|8}} |
− | | vc_rrp_us=800 | + | | md_rrp_uk=59.99{{magref|segamaguk|8|78}}<!--49.99{{magref|gamesworld|5|15}}--> |
− | | vc_date_eu=2012-04-12 | + | | md_code_uk=5449-05 |
− | | vc_rrp_eu=800 | + | | md_date_pt=199x |
+ | | md_code_pt=MDJ1098 | ||
+ | | md_date_se=199x | ||
+ | | md_date_se_r=199x | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{releasesWii | ||
+ | | vc_date_jp=2011-11-08{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20180321220524/https://www.nintendo.co.jp/wii/vc/software/14.html}} | ||
+ | | vc_rrp_jp=600{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20120120092516/http://vc.sega.jp/vc_ssf2/}} | ||
+ | | vc_rating_jp=b | ||
+ | | vc_date_us=2012-04-26{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20170704121611/http://www.nintendolife.com/games/megadrive/super_street_fighter_ii}} | ||
+ | | vc_rrp_us=800{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20120427155404/http://www.nintendo.com/games/detail/wiDX_oRftkYWoLJNe54F4JOiFcecWHFO}} | ||
+ | | vc_rating_us=t | ||
+ | | vc_date_eu=2012-04-12{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20170704121611/http://www.nintendolife.com/games/megadrive/super_street_fighter_ii}}{{ref|https://archive.is/Pc5pO|https://www.nintendo.co.uk/Games/SEGA-MEGA-DRIVE/Super-Street-Fighter-II-The-New-Challengers--279712.html}} | ||
+ | | vc_rrp_eu=800{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20170704121611/http://www.nintendolife.com/games/megadrive/super_street_fighter_ii}} | ||
+ | | vc_rating_eu=12 | ||
+ | | vc_date_de=2012-04-12{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20170704121611/http://www.nintendolife.com/games/megadrive/super_street_fighter_ii}}{{ref|https://archive.is/SMhjS|https://www.nintendo.de/Spiele/SEGA-MEGA-DRIVE/Super-Street-Fighter-II-The-New-Challengers--279712.html}} | ||
+ | | vc_rrp_de=800{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20170704121611/http://www.nintendolife.com/games/megadrive/super_street_fighter_ii}} | ||
+ | | vc_rating_de=12 | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | | oflc=pg | ||
+ | | otherformats={{NonSega|Arcade|Amiga|AmigaAGA|IBMPC|FMTOWNS|SNES}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | '''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' (スーパーストリートファイターII ザ ニューチャレンジャーズ) is an update to ''[[Street Fighter II]]'', originally released in arcades in 1993. It was ported to the [[Sega Mega Drive]] in 1994. | ||
+ | |||
+ | It was the fourth arcade release of ''Street Fighter II'', following the original ''Street Fighter II: The World Warrior'', ''Street Fighter II′: Champion Edition'', and ''Street Fighter II′ Turbo: Hyper Fighting'', and the second release for the Mega Drive, following ''[[Street Fighter II': Special Champion Edition]]''. The game is notable for using a 40-megabit cartridge, the largest for any officially licensed Mega Drive game. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Story== | ||
+ | As part of his global domination plan, M. Bison sets up a tournament to find the world's best fighters to brainwash into his criminal organization Shadaloo. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Gameplay== | ||
+ | {{ScreenThumb|SuperStreetFighterII MD Select.png|align=left|width=200|Character select}} | ||
+ | {{ScreenThumb|Super Street Fighter II MD, Gameplay.png|align=left|width=200|Gameplay}} | ||
+ | The arcade version of ''Super Street Fighter II'' runs on the more powerful Capcom CPS-2 hardware (as opposed to the CPS-1 which previous entries in the series used). Though the core gameplay is the same, the graphics and audio were refined and in many cases redone. As such, the game is generally seen as the most significant upgrade to the game. In addition to the improved presentation, the game adds four "New Challengers" to the series (T. Hawk, Cammy, Fei Long, and Dee Jay), expanding the total number of playable characters to sixteen. Several returning characters have received new techniques as well. The game also features a new scoring system that tracks combos, first attacks, reversals, and recoveries made by the player and awards bonus points accordingly. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Characters move with {{left}} and {{right}} and crouch with {{down}}. They jump with {{up}} and flip back and forth with {{upleft}} and {{upright}}. Punches are done with {{X}} (jab), {{Y}} (medium), and {{Z}} (fierce) and kicks are done with {{A}} (short), {{B}} (medium), and {{C}} (roundhouse). Light attacks are faster and hard attacks deal more damage. When playing with a standard three-button control pad, {{Start}} toggles between punches and kicks. Special moves for each character are done by pairing specific directional combinations with an attack button. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Blocking is done by holding the D-Pad away from the opponent, with special moves still doing a small amount of "chip damage" if blocked. Characters can block while standing, which blocks against high and mid attacks but not low attacks (such as sweeps), or crouching, which blocks against mid and low attacks but not high attacks (such as jumping attacks and overhead strikes). Characters can become dizzy from being attacked repeatedly; they are uncontrollable and vulnerable in this state but can recover more quickly by rapidly pressing back and forth on the D-Pad along with the attack buttons. It is also possible to escape grabs in this way. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Throws and grabs are done by holding {{left}} or {{right}} when next to an opponent and pressing a medium or hard punch or kick button. Different characters have different throws available to them, and some characters can throw in midair. Throws cannot be blocked. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Modes=== | ||
+ | There are multiple game modes: | ||
+ | |||
+ | *'''Super:''' The single-player arcade mode, where the player plays a matches against a series of computer-controlled opponents, ending with the four Shadaloo bosses Balrog, Vega, Sagat, and M. Bison. By default, the player faces 12 total opponents, with the first eight chosen randomly. After every three matches, the player plays a bonus stage. By enabling Expert mode in the options, the player can face all 16 characters, which gives the player an extra ending sequence after completing the game. There are no bonus stages in Expert mode. In either mode, a second player can join the game to challenge the other player to a fight by pressing {{Start}}, with the victor continuing in the tournament. There are eight different difficulty levels for computer-controlled opponents. | ||
+ | *'''Versus:''' A dedicated two-player mode. Players choose a character, a handicap, and a stage. The game keeps track of wins, losses, and draws for each player (until the console is powered off). | ||
+ | *'''Tournament:''' A tournament mode where up to 8 players (which can be set to computer-controlled) compete in a double-elimination tournament bracket. Matches are only one round in this mode. Players can set their handicap before each match. | ||
+ | *'''Group:''' A two-player mode where each player picks up to eight fighters (which can be randomly selected) and fight in a series of one-round matches. Players can choose a different number of characters and can set handicaps. In the Point Match mode, players are awarded points for each victory and extra points for time remaining in each round. After every character on both sides has fought, the player with the most points at the end is the winner. In Elimination mode, players lose the character they are playing when they lose a match. A player loses upon losing every character. | ||
+ | *'''Challenge:''' A single-player mode played against computer-controlled opponents. In the Time Challenge mode, the player tries to knockout opponents in the fastest time possible. In the Score Challenge, the player tries to accumulate the biggest score possible. The player chooses a character to play as well as the opponent. The stage is chosen randomly. Matches are only one round in this mode. The game does not remember records after the console is powered off. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Unlike the original arcade game, the Mega Drive port of the game has four selectable game speeds, which affect every mode except the Challenge mode. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Characters=== | ||
+ | {{MoveListNote|legend=StreetFighter}} | ||
+ | For moves that require pressing all three {{punch}} or {{kick}} buttons, pressing any two buttons also works. | ||
+ | ====Playable==== | ||
+ | All of the characters from previous versions of ''Street Fighter II'' return, with some receiving new moves. Four "New Challengers" have been added: T. Hawk, a Native American warrior from Mexico whose ancestral homeland was taken from him by Shadaloo; Fei Long, a Hong Kong movie star who wishes to test his martial arts against real opponents; Dee Jay, a kickboxing musician from Jamaica seeking inspiration for his next song; and Cammy, a 19-year-old female special forces agent from England with a mysterious past tied to M. Bison. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Players choose one of eight character color schemes: the character's original color scheme with {{LP}}, their color scheme from ''Champion Edition'' with {{MP}}, their color scheme from ''Hyper Fighting'' with {{HP}}, or one of five new color schemes (with any of the kick buttons or {{Start}}, with one additional color scheme available by continuing to hold any button after choosing a character). | ||
+ | {{InfoTable| | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|JP}} Ryu | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1964-07-21 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=5'10" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=150 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=O | ||
+ | | desc=A pure warrior who trained at the Shotokan school of karate, Ryu has no home, friends, or family, and tirelessly travels the globe seeking a challenge. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Fireball|{{QCF}} {{punch}}|Ryu shouts "Hadouken!" and shoots a ball of energy from his hands.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Red (Stun) Fireball|{{HCF}} {{right}} {{punch}}|A variant of the Hadouken, known as the Shakunetsu Hadoken, that is larger and travels more slowly. It has a fire effect and can knockover opponents in close range.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Dragon Punch|{{DPF}} {{punch}}|Ryu shouts "Shoryuken!" and delivers a powerful uppercut.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Hurricane Kick|{{QCB}} {{kick}}|Ryu shouts "Tatsumaki Senpukyaku!" and spins his leg like a hurricane. This move can be performed in midair.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|JP}} E. Honda | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=56}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=64}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1960-11-03 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=6'2" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=304 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=A | ||
+ | | desc=A sumo wrestler who has earned the title of "Yokozuna." He has entered the World Warrior tournament to prove that sumo wrestling is a true sport. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Hundred Hand Slap|{{repeat|{{punch}}}}|E. Honda unleashes a flurry of hand slaps. He can move with {{left}} and {{right}} while doing this.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Sumo Head Butt|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{punch}}|E. Honda propels himself forward head first using his leg strength.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Sumo Smash|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{kick}}|E. Honda leaps high into the air and uses his weight to flatten an opponent.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Flying Sumo Press|{{down}}+{{MK}} while jumping diagonally|E. Honda drops with a body press.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Hiza Geri|{{left}}+{{MK}} or {{right}}+{{MK}} (close)|E. Honda performs a knee strike that can hit up to two times.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|BR}} Blanka | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=112}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=128}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1966-02-12 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=6'5" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=218lbs | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=B | ||
+ | | desc=A bizarre beast-like fighter who suddenly appeared from the rainforests of Brazil to challenge anyone who dares oppose him. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Electricity|{{repeat|{{punch}}}}|Blanka charges himself with electricity, zapping anyone who touches him.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Rolling Attack|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{punch}}|Blanka curls into a ball and rolls straight into his opponent.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Beast Leap|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{kick}}|Blanka does a handstand, then leaps high into the air for a rolling attack.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Vertical Rolling Attack|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{kick}}|Blanka curls into a ball and launches upwards to hit an airborne opponent or drop on them from above.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|US}} Guile | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=168}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=192}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1960-12-13 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=6'1" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=191 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=O | ||
+ | | desc=An ex-member of an elite Special Forces team who has entered the tournament to avenge the death of his co-pilot Charlie at the hands of M. Bison. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Sonic Boom|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{punch}}|Guile fires an energy burst by whipping his arms in the air.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Flash Kick|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{kick}}|Guile performs a backflip kick, causing a damaging vacuum.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Knee Bazooka|{{left}}+{{MK}} or {{right}}+{{MK}}|Guile hops forward with a knee strike.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Reverse Spin Kick|{{left}}+{{HK}} or {{right}}+{{HK}} (close)|Guile does an upside-down kick.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|US}} Ken | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=280}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=256}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1965-02-14 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=5'10" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=169 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=B | ||
+ | | desc=A martial artist who received the same training as Ryu, though is brash and arrogant. A challenge from his old partner rekindled his fighting spirit. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Fireball|{{QCF}} {{punch}}|Ken shouts "Hadouken!" and shoots a ball of energy from his hands.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Dragon Punch|{{DPF}} {{punch}}|Ken shouts "Shoryuken!" and delivers a powerful uppercut. When performed with {{HP}}, Ken has a flaming fist and can hit his opponent up to three times.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Hurricane Kick|{{QCB}} {{kick}}|Ken shouts "Tatsumaki Senpukyaku!" and spins his leg like a hurricane. This move can be performed in midair.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|CN}} Chun-Li | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=336}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=320}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1968-03-01 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=5'8" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=She won't tell | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=A | ||
+ | | desc=Unlike the other contestants, Chun-Li has joined the tournament to investigate the crime syndicate Shadaloo, believing that the "Grand Masters" are responsible for her father's murder. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Lightning Kick|{{repeat|{{kick}}}}|Chun-Li unleashes a flurry of rapid kicks.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Whirlwind Kick|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{kick}}|Chun-Li flips upside down and spins like a top.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Kioken (Fireball)|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{punch}}|Chun-Li shoots a fireball from her hands, which only travels part of the width of the screen.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Wall Jump|D-Pad in the opposite direction when jumping onto the edge of the screen|Chun-Li can jump off the edges of the screen.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Yousou Kyaku|{{down}}+{{MK}} in midair|Chun-Li holds a straight leg in a head stomp.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Kaku Kyaku Raku|{{up}}+{{HK}}|Chun-Li backflips high into the air, coming down with a kick.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|SU}} Zangief | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=392}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=384}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1956-06-01 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=7'0" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=256 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=A | ||
+ | | desc=A good-natured Russian wrestler who joined the tournament to seek greater competition, and is believed to have entered out of fierce respect for his country. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Spinning Clothesline|All three {{punch}} simultaneously|Zangief spins around with his arms outstretched, knocking anyone who wanders into him. He is invulnerable above the waist while performing this move, allowing most projectiles to pass through him. He can move with {{left}} and {{right}} while spinning.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Turbo Spinning Clothesline|All three {{kick}} simultaneously|Zangief performs a Spinning Clothesline that is faster but has a shorter duration. He can move with {{left}} and {{right}} while spinning.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Spinning Piledriver|D-Pad in a 360° rotation, then {{punch}} (close)|Zangief grapples his opponent and drives them head first into the ground like a drill.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Siberian Suplex|D-Pad in a 360° rotation, then {{kick}} (close)|Zangief grapples his opponent and suplexes them head first.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Siberian Bear Crusher|D-Pad in a 360° rotation, then {{punch}} (far away)|Zangief grapples his opponent and slams their back on the ground. Can only be performed when Zangief is far away from his opponent.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Flying Body Attack|{{down}}+{{HP}} while jumping diagonally|Zangief drops with a body press.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Double Knee Drop|{{down}}+{{LK}}/{{MK}} while jumping diagonally|Zangief falls with his knees forward.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Headbutt|{{left}}+{{MP}}/{{HP}} or {{right}}+{{MP}}/{{HP}}|Zangief hops into the air and does a headbutt.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Kuuchuu Headbutt|{{up}}+{{MP}}/{{HP}} during neutral jump|Zangief performs a headbutt in midair.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|IN}} Dhalsim | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=448}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=448}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1952-11-22 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=5'10" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=107 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=O | ||
+ | | desc=Dhalsim sought to unify his mind, body and soul through Yoga, and has entered the tournament to test his skills. He stretches his limbs to attack from afar. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Yoga Fire|{{QCF}} {{punch}}|Dhalsim spits out a fireball that scorches whoever it touches.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Yoga Flame|{{HCF}} {{punch}}|Dhalsim spews forth a close-ranged cloud of flame.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Yoga Teleport Forward|{{RDP}} and all three {{punch}} or {{kick}} simultaneously|Dhalsim teleports himself in front of his opponent, with his distance depending on which buttons were pressed: {{punch}} teleports him close to his opponent, while {{kick}} teleports him further away.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Yoga Teleport Backward|{{DPF}} and all three {{punch}} or {{kick}} simultaneously|Dhalsim teleports himself behind his opponent, with his distance depending on which buttons were pressed: {{punch}} teleports him close to his opponent, while {{kick}} teleports him further away.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Yoga Mummy|{{down}}+{{HP}} in midair|Dhalsim spins downward head first like a drill.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Yoga Spear|{{down}}+{{HK}} in midair|Dhalsim spins downward feet first like a drill.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|MX}} T. Hawk | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=616}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Super Street Fighter II MD, New Challengers.png|crop_width=64}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1959-07-21 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=7'7" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=357 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=O | ||
+ | | desc=T. Hawk and his family moved to Mexico after his homeland was taken from him by Shadaloo. He has entered the World Warrior tournament to destroy Bison with powerful Native American techniques and reclaim his homeland. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|The Hawk|All three {{punch}} simultaneously in midair|T. Hawk dives down onto his opponent from the air.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Thunderstrike|{{DPF}} {{punch}}|T. Hawk launches upward to strike his opponent head first.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Storm Hammer|D-Pad in a 360° rotation, then {{punch}} (close)|T. Hawk swings his opponent high into the air, then slams them into the ground.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Thrust Peak|{{left}}+{{LP}} or {{right}}+{{LP}}|T. Hawk chops his hand downward.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Heavy Shoulder|{{down}}+{{MP}} while jumping diagonally|T. Hawk drops with his elbow out.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Heavy Body Press|{{down}}+{{HP}} while jumping diagonally|T. Hawk falls down with a diving splash.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|HK 1959}} Fei Long | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=672}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Super Street Fighter II MD, New Challengers.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=64}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1969-04-23 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=5'8" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=132 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=O | ||
+ | | desc=The master of several styles of Shaolin Kung Fu, Fei Long turned down the lifestyle of being a film star to enter the World Warrior tournament and test his skills. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Rekka Ken|{{QCF}} {{punch}} (up to 3 times)|Fei Long steps forward and punches his opponent. This move can be performed up to three times in quick succession.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Rising Dragon Kick|{{RDP}} {{kick}}|Fei Long unleashes a flaming kick that spirals upwards.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Chokka Raku Shou|{{left}}+{{MK}} or {{right}}+{{MK}}|Fei Long jumps up and performs an axe kick.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|En Geki Shuu|{{right}}+{{HK}}|Fei Long steps forward and performs a kick that can hit two times.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|JM}} Dee Jay | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=728}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Super Street Fighter II MD, New Challengers.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=128}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1965-10-31 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=6'0" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=203 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=O | ||
+ | | desc=Trained as a kickboxer, Dee Jay has shown his affinity of music by integrating the beat of his music into his fighting style, which he believes will help him win the World Warrior tournament and reach the top of the charts. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Hyper Fist|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{repeat|{{punch}}}}|Dee Jay unleashes a furious punch.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Max Out|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{punch}}|Dee Jay thrusts his fist upwards to launch a projectile.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Double Dread Kick|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{kick}}|Dee Jay kicks twice in succession.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Knee Shot|{{down}}+{{LK}} while jumping diagonally|Dee Jay attacks with his knee.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|UK}} Cammy | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=784}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Super Street Fighter II MD, New Challengers.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=192}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1974-01-06 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=5'5" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=101 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=B | ||
+ | | desc=Having been found with amnesia by British Intelligence, Cammy underwent Special Forces training and became head of the class. She is working undercover in the World Warrior tournament to learn about her dark past. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Cannon Drill|{{QCF}} {{kick}}|Cammy spins forward feet first like a drill.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Front Kick|{{DPF}} {{kick}}|Cammy leaps into the air with a front kick.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Spinning Knuckle|{{HCF}} {{punch}}|Cammy hops forward and does an elbow smash and a backfist. This move passes through projectiles.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | ====Bosses==== | ||
+ | {{InfoTable| | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|US}} Balrog (M. Bison) | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=224}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=512}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1968-09-04 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=6'5" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=252 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=A | ||
+ | | desc=A former heavyweight champion who was banned from professional boxing for ignoring the rules of the ring and hired by M. Bison. Since he is a boxer, all of his attacks, even those executed with a kick button, are performed with his upper body (punches, elbow strikes, headbutts, and so forth). | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Turn Punch|Hold all three {{punch}} or {{kick}} simultaneously for 2 seconds, then release|Turning his back to his opponent, Balrog delivers a powerful punch.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Final Punch|Hold all three {{punch}} or {{kick}} simultaneously, then release|Balrog delivers a powerful punch. The longer the {{punch}} or {{kick}} buttons are held down, the greater the punch's power.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Shoulder Butt|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{punch}}|Balrog jumps up with a shoulder smash.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Dash Punch|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{punch}} or {{kick}}|Balrog sprints forward and smashes his opponent. Pressing {{punch}} causes a straight punch, while {{kick}} causes an uppercut. He dashes farther when a stronger attack button is used.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|ES}} Vega (Balrog) | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=560}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=576}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1967-01-27 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=6'0" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=208lbs | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=O | ||
+ | | desc=A vain and egotistical fighter who has blended the Japanese art of Ninjitsu with his matador skills, earning him the nickname of the "Spanish Ninja." He fights with a claw on one hand, which can be broken from blocking too many hits, reducing the damage of his punches. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Claw Roll|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{punch}}|Vega executes a quick forward roll and quickly stabs his opponent.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Claw Dive|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{kick}}, then {{punch}}|Vega jumps to the edge of the screen, then dives onto his opponent with his arms spread when the player presses {{punch}}.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Wall Leap|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{kick}}, then {{left}}+{{punch}} or {{right}}+{{punch}} | Vega jumps to the edge of the screen, then drops on his opponent and quickly does an air suplex if the player presses {{left}}+{{punch}} or {{right}}+{{punch}} when near the opponent.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Claw Thrust|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{punch}}|Vega dives towards his opponent claw first.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Back Flip|All {{punch}} or {{kick}} simultaneously|Vega performs a backflip. He does a full backflip with {{punch}} and half a backflip with {{kick}}. He is invulnerable while performing this move.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Command normals| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Wall Jump|D-Pad in the opposite direction when jumping onto the edge of the screen|Vega can jump off the edges of the screen.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|TH}} Sagat | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=504}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=640}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=1955-07-02 | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=7'4" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=283 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=B | ||
+ | | desc=Once the original "King of the Street Fighters" and a master of the Muay Thai fighting style, Sagat has sworn to defeat Ryu and regain his title. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Tiger Shot|{{QCF}} {{punch}} or {{kick}}|Sagat shoots a projectile that can damage opponents or negate other projectiles. Pressing {{punch}} throws a high shot, while pressing {{kick}} throws a low shot.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Tiger Uppercut|{{DPF}} {{punch}}|Sagat rises off the ground while punching upwards, knocking down his opponent on impact.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Tiger Knee|{{QCF}} {{upright}} {{kick}}|Sagat leaps forward over an opponent's low attack and delivers a knee strike.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{InfoFighter| | ||
+ | | name={{flag|TH}} M. Bison (Vega) | ||
+ | | portrait={{ScaleX|{{sprite|SSFII MD Portraits.png|2|crop_width=56|crop_x=840}}|currentwidth=112|wantedwidth=140}} | ||
+ | | sprite={{ScaleX|{{sprite|Street Fighter II Champion Edition MD, Sprites.png|crop_width=64|crop_x=704}}|currentwidth=64|wantedwidth=80}} | ||
+ | | info1name=Date of birth | ||
+ | | info1=Unknown | ||
+ | | info2name=Height | ||
+ | | info2=5'11" | ||
+ | | info3name=Weight | ||
+ | | info3=254 lbs. | ||
+ | | info4name=Blood type | ||
+ | | info4=A | ||
+ | | desc=The leader of the crime syndicate Shadaloo and one of the primary antagonists of the series. Bison rules over his empire with an iron fist, and only uses his psychic ability when necessary. | ||
+ | {{MoveListTable|desc=Special moves| | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Psycho Crusher|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{punch}}|M. Bison channels his psychic energy and flies into his opponent head first, igniting them in psychic flame.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Scissor Kick|Hold {{left}} for 2 seconds, then {{right}}+{{kick}}|M. Bison sails over low attacks with two devastating kicks.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Head Stomp|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{kick}}|M. Bison flies into the air and stomps his opponent's head. After bouncing off his opponent's head, he can dive down again with a Psycho Fist by pressing {{punch}}.}} | ||
+ | {{MoveListRow|Flying Psycho Fist|Hold {{down}} for 2 seconds, then {{up}}+{{punch}}|M. Bison performs a flying punch on his opponent.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | }} | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | | | + | |
− | | | + | ===Stages=== |
− | | | + | Each character has his or her own stage where matches are hosted. The stage can be manually chosen in the two-player mode. |
+ | {{gallery|widths=200|screens=yes| | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Ryu.png|{{flag|JP}} Ryu}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, E. Honda.png|{{flag|JP}} E. Honda}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Blanka.png|{{flag|BR}} Blanka}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Guile.png|{{flag|US}} Guile}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Ken.png|{{flag|US}} Ken}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Chun-Li.png|{{flag|CN}} Chun-Li}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Zangief.png|{{flag|SU}} Zangief}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Dhalsim.png|{{flag|IN}} Dhalsim}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, T. Hawk.png|{{flag|MX}} T. Hawk}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Fei Long.png|{{flag|HK 1959}} Fei Long}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Dee Jay.png|{{flag|JM}} Dee Jay}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Cammy.png|{{flag|UK}} Cammy}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Balrog.png|{{flag|US}} Balrog}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Vega.png|{{flag|ES}} Vega}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, Sagat.png|{{flag|TH}} Sagat}} | ||
+ | {{gitem|Super Street Fighter II MD, Stages, M. Bison.png|{{flag|TH}} M. Bison}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | |||
− | + | ===Bonus stages=== | |
+ | A bonus stage appears in the single-player game after every three matches won (except when playing on Expert mode). Characters destroy inanimate objects within a time limit by attacking them for bonus points. | ||
+ | {{gallery|widths=200|screens=yes| | ||
+ | {{ginfo|Super Street Fighter II MD, Bonus Stage 1.png|Bonus stage 1|Characters destroy a car, similar to the first bonus stage of ''[[Final Fight]]''.}} | ||
+ | {{ginfo|Super Street Fighter II MD, Bonus Stage 2.png|Bonus stage 2|Characters destroy a pyramid-shaped stack of bricks.}} | ||
+ | {{ginfo|Super Street Fighter II MD, Bonus Stage 3.png|Bonus stage 3|Characters destroy rolling barrels as they fall from a conveyor belt.}} | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==History== | ||
+ | ===Development=== | ||
+ | ''Super Street Fighter II'' was the second ''Street Fighter II'' game to be released for the [[Sega Mega Drive]], following from the Mega Drive-only release of ''[[Street Fighter II': Special Champion Edition]]'' (essentially a compilation of the arcade's ''Champion Edition'' and ''Hyper Fighting'' revisions with alterations suited to the Mega Drive's hardware). Unlike the arcade lineage, however, ''Super Street Fighter II'' was rebuilt almost completely from scratch, so although derives from the same base as ''Special Champion Edition'', borrows very few assets from that earlier release. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ''Super Street Fighter II'' uses a different sound driver than ''Special Champion Edition'', and the majority of graphics have been re-drawn and improved. It also re-introduces missing elements from the older release such as the announcer's voice. | ||
+ | |||
+ | However, this comes at a cost: the game ROM is 5MB (40 Megabits) in size, while the Mega Drive console can only safely access 4MB. Capcom created a special bank switching mapper unit to get around this problem, with ''Super Street Fighter II'' being the only officially licensed game on the Mega Drive to use such technology (others opt for an SRAM mapper). The custom hardware and larger ROM, however, drove the game's price to ¥10,900 in Japan, with similar inflated prices across the world. The only other licensed Mega Drive games originally priced at more than ¥10,000 were [[Koei]]'s various titles, but those were deliberately sold at those prices. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Capcom also released a Super NES version of ''Super Street Fighter II'' at around the same period, which shares assets with this Mega Drive version. The SNES code (and by extension, likely this Mega Drive version's code) derives from two older SNES releases; a port of ''Street Fighter II: The World Warrior'' (1992) and ''Street Fighter II Turbo: Hyper Fighting'' (1993, officially spelled without the prime mark in this version). | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Legacy=== | ||
+ | In the arcades, ''Super Street Fighter II'' would be followed up by yet another update, ''Super Street Fighter II Turbo'' (known as ''Super Street Fighter II X'' in Japan). This would avoid the Mega Drive and Super NES in favour of the [[3DO]], [[Amiga]], [[Amiga CD32]], and [[IBM PC]]. However, it would eventually make its way to the [[Sega Dreamcast]] in a tweaked form, ''[[Super Street Fighter II X for Matching Service]]''. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Arcade ports of both ''Super Street Fighter II'' and ''Super Street Fighter II Turbo'' would be included in the [[Sega Saturn]] release of ''[[Street Fighter Collection]]''. This Mega Drive version of ''Super Street Fighter II'' has also since been brought over to the [[Wii]]'s [[Virtual Console]] in Japan (and listed on [https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://sega.jp/cgi-bin/csgame.cgi?hw=4 Sega's main site]). | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Versions== | ||
+ | ''Super Street Fighter II'' was originally designed with Capcom's CPS-2 arcade hardware in mind, as opposed to previous iterations which ran on the original CPS board. While Capcom's development teams would have been more accustomed to the Mega Drive hardware at this point, the gap in technology is wider than in ''Street Fighter II′: Special Champion Edition'', meaning more intricate details are missing from the Sega version. Virtually no assets from ''Special Champion Edition'' were recycled, being instead re-converted from the arcade. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In addition to expected losses in colour and smaller sprites across the board, backgrounds are simplified on the Mega Drive, either with layers of parallax scrolling removed (T. Hawk's stage) or missing animations (Dee Jay's stage). Many of the missing elements in ''Special Champion Edition'' are still missing in the Mega Drive port of ''Super'', such as the overflowing water of E. Honda's stage and a missing parallax layer for clouds in Blanka's stage. More complex effects, such as the northern lights in Cammy's stage are dialed back considerably. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Bonus stages appear in a different order in the Mega Drive version for unknown reasons: rather than fight barrels in the third bonus stage, the player has to fight a wall in the second. The credits sequence where matches take place in the background was removed in the Mega Drive conversion. | ||
+ | |||
+ | While the larger ROM size means ''Super Street Fighter II'' is able to offer more voice samples than ''Special Champion Edition'', the quality of the samples in many cases have been noticeably reduced, in addition to simplified music tracks. ROM hacking communities have since released fan-made patches to improve the quality of this audio, as well as to bring the colour palettes more in-line with the arcade version (addressing situations such as the water in Ken's stage, which is unnaturally green in the standard version). | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Digital manuals== | ||
+ | <gallery> | ||
+ | SSFII MD US MDMini2 manual.pdf|Mega Drive Mini 2 US manual | ||
+ | SSFII MD EU MDMini2 manual.pdf|Mega Drive Mini 2 EU manual | ||
+ | SSFII MD JP MDMini2 manual.pdf|Mega Drive Mini 2 JP manual | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
− | + | ==Magazine articles== | |
+ | {{mainArticle|{{PAGENAME}}/Magazine articles}} | ||
− | + | ==Promotional material== | |
+ | {{mainArticle|{{PAGENAME}}/Promotional material}} | ||
− | ==Physical | + | ==Physical scans== |
− | |||
{{ratings | {{ratings | ||
| icon=MD | | icon=MD | ||
− | | | + | | gamesmaster=94 |
− | | | + | | gamesmaster_source={{num|20|page=44-46}} |
− | |||
− | | | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Scanbox | {{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=JP | ||
+ | | cover=SuperStreetFighter2 MD JP Box.jpg | ||
+ | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD JP Cart.jpg | ||
+ | | carttop=SSF2 MD JP CartTop.jpg | ||
+ | | item1=SSFII MD JP pcb.jpg | ||
+ | | item1name=PCB | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
| console=Mega Drive | | console=Mega Drive | ||
| region=US | | region=US | ||
| front=SSF2 MD US Box.jpg | | front=SSF2 MD US Box.jpg | ||
| cart=SSF2 md us cart.jpg | | cart=SSF2 md us cart.jpg | ||
+ | | manual=SSF2 md us manual.pdf | ||
+ | | item1=SSFII MD US pcb.jpg | ||
+ | | item1name=PCB | ||
}}{{Scanbox | }}{{Scanbox | ||
| console=Mega Drive | | console=Mega Drive | ||
| region=EU | | region=EU | ||
− | | | + | | cover=SuperStreetFighter2 MD EU Box.jpg |
− | | cart= | + | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD EU Cart.jpg |
+ | | manual=Super Street Fighter II MD EU Manual.jpg | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=UK (Blue) | ||
+ | | cover=SuperStreetFighter2 MD UK Blue Cover.jpg | ||
+ | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD EU Cart.jpg | ||
+ | | manual= | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=UK (Brick) | ||
+ | | cover=SuperStreetFighterII MD UK Box.jpg | ||
+ | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD UK Cart.jpg | ||
+ | | manual=Super Streetfighter II MD UK Manual.jpg | ||
+ | | item1=SSFII MD UK pcb.jpg | ||
+ | | item1name=PCB | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=FR | ||
+ | | cover=SSFII MD FR cover.jpg | ||
+ | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD EU Cart.jpg | ||
}}{{Scanbox | }}{{Scanbox | ||
| console=Mega Drive | | console=Mega Drive | ||
− | | region= | + | | region=ES |
− | | front= | + | | cover=SuperStreetFighter2 MD ES Blue Cover.jpg |
− | | cart= | + | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD EU Cart.jpg |
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=PT | ||
+ | | cover=SSFII MD PT cover.jpg | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=SE | ||
+ | | front=SSFII MD SE Box.jpg | ||
+ | | spinemissing=yes | ||
+ | | back=SSFII MD SE Box Back.jpg | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=SE rental (SF) | ||
+ | | cover=SSFII MD SE rental cover.jpg | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=CZ ([[Datart]]) | ||
+ | | cover=SSFII MD CZ Box Front.png | ||
+ | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD EU Cart.jpg | ||
+ | | manual=Notavailable.svg | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=AU | ||
+ | | cover=SSFII MD AU cover.jpg | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=AU (Classics) | ||
+ | | cover=SSFII MD AU classics cover.jpg | ||
}}{{Scanbox | }}{{Scanbox | ||
| console=Mega Drive | | console=Mega Drive | ||
| region=BR | | region=BR | ||
− | | | + | | cover=SuperStreetFighter2 MD BR Box.jpg |
− | | cart= | + | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD BR Cart.jpg |
− | }} | + | | carttop=SuperStreetFighterII MD BR Cart Top.jpg |
− | {{ | + | | manual=Super Street Fighter II The New Challengers MD BR Manual.pdf |
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
| console=Mega Drive | | console=Mega Drive | ||
| region=KR | | region=KR | ||
+ | | cover=SSFII MD KR cover.jpg | ||
| cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD KR cart.jpg | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD KR cart.jpg | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=KR (cardboard) | ||
+ | | front=SSFII MD KR cb front.jpg | ||
+ | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD KR cart.jpg | ||
+ | }}{{Scanbox | ||
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=Asia PAL | ||
+ | | cover=Super Street Fighter II Asia.jpg | ||
+ | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD Asia Cart.jpg | ||
+ | | manual=Super Street Fighter II MD AS Manual.pdf | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | {{ | + | {{Scanbox |
+ | | console=Mega Drive | ||
+ | | region=Asia NTSC | ||
+ | | cover=SuperStreetFighter2 MD JP Box.jpg | ||
+ | | cart=SuperStreetFighterII MD JP Cart.jpg | ||
+ | | manual=SSF2 md us manual.pdf | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Technical information== | ||
+ | {{mainArticle|{{PAGENAME}}/Technical information}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==External links== | ||
+ | * Sega of Japan Virtual Console pages: [http://vc.sega.jp/vc_ssf2/ Mega Drive] | ||
+ | * Nintendo catalogue pages: [https://www.nintendo.com/games/detail/wiDX_oRftkYWoLJNe54F4JOiFcecWHFO US], [https://www.nintendo.co.uk/Games/SEGA-MEGA-DRIVE/Super-Street-Fighter-II-The-New-Challengers--279712.html UK] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==References== | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{SuperStreetFighterIIOmni}} | ||
{{StreetFighter}} | {{StreetFighter}} | ||
− | |||
[[Category:Sega Channel games]] | [[Category:Sega Channel games]] | ||
[[Category:Tectoy Mega Net games]] | [[Category:Tectoy Mega Net games]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Mega Drive Mini 2 games]] |
Revision as of 11:30, 21 April 2024
- For the Sega Saturn version, see Street Fighter Collection.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
System(s): Sega Mega Drive, Virtual Console | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Publisher: Capcom (Japan, US), Sega (Europe) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Developer: Capcom M2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distributor: SF Interactive Media (SE rental) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Original system(s): Capcom CPS-2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Peripherals supported: Six Button Control Pad, Mega Net 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Genre: Action[1][2], Fighting[3] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number of players: 1-2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers (スーパーストリートファイターII ザ ニューチャレンジャーズ) is an update to Street Fighter II, originally released in arcades in 1993. It was ported to the Sega Mega Drive in 1994.
It was the fourth arcade release of Street Fighter II, following the original Street Fighter II: The World Warrior, Street Fighter II′: Champion Edition, and Street Fighter II′ Turbo: Hyper Fighting, and the second release for the Mega Drive, following Street Fighter II': Special Champion Edition. The game is notable for using a 40-megabit cartridge, the largest for any officially licensed Mega Drive game.
Contents
Story
As part of his global domination plan, M. Bison sets up a tournament to find the world's best fighters to brainwash into his criminal organization Shadaloo.
Gameplay
The arcade version of Super Street Fighter II runs on the more powerful Capcom CPS-2 hardware (as opposed to the CPS-1 which previous entries in the series used). Though the core gameplay is the same, the graphics and audio were refined and in many cases redone. As such, the game is generally seen as the most significant upgrade to the game. In addition to the improved presentation, the game adds four "New Challengers" to the series (T. Hawk, Cammy, Fei Long, and Dee Jay), expanding the total number of playable characters to sixteen. Several returning characters have received new techniques as well. The game also features a new scoring system that tracks combos, first attacks, reversals, and recoveries made by the player and awards bonus points accordingly.
Characters move with and and crouch with . They jump with and flip back and forth with and . Punches are done with (jab), (medium), and (fierce) and kicks are done with (short), (medium), and (roundhouse). Light attacks are faster and hard attacks deal more damage. When playing with a standard three-button control pad, START toggles between punches and kicks. Special moves for each character are done by pairing specific directional combinations with an attack button.
Blocking is done by holding the D-Pad away from the opponent, with special moves still doing a small amount of "chip damage" if blocked. Characters can block while standing, which blocks against high and mid attacks but not low attacks (such as sweeps), or crouching, which blocks against mid and low attacks but not high attacks (such as jumping attacks and overhead strikes). Characters can become dizzy from being attacked repeatedly; they are uncontrollable and vulnerable in this state but can recover more quickly by rapidly pressing back and forth on the D-Pad along with the attack buttons. It is also possible to escape grabs in this way.
Throws and grabs are done by holding or when next to an opponent and pressing a medium or hard punch or kick button. Different characters have different throws available to them, and some characters can throw in midair. Throws cannot be blocked.
Modes
There are multiple game modes:
- Super: The single-player arcade mode, where the player plays a matches against a series of computer-controlled opponents, ending with the four Shadaloo bosses Balrog, Vega, Sagat, and M. Bison. By default, the player faces 12 total opponents, with the first eight chosen randomly. After every three matches, the player plays a bonus stage. By enabling Expert mode in the options, the player can face all 16 characters, which gives the player an extra ending sequence after completing the game. There are no bonus stages in Expert mode. In either mode, a second player can join the game to challenge the other player to a fight by pressing START , with the victor continuing in the tournament. There are eight different difficulty levels for computer-controlled opponents.
- Versus: A dedicated two-player mode. Players choose a character, a handicap, and a stage. The game keeps track of wins, losses, and draws for each player (until the console is powered off).
- Tournament: A tournament mode where up to 8 players (which can be set to computer-controlled) compete in a double-elimination tournament bracket. Matches are only one round in this mode. Players can set their handicap before each match.
- Group: A two-player mode where each player picks up to eight fighters (which can be randomly selected) and fight in a series of one-round matches. Players can choose a different number of characters and can set handicaps. In the Point Match mode, players are awarded points for each victory and extra points for time remaining in each round. After every character on both sides has fought, the player with the most points at the end is the winner. In Elimination mode, players lose the character they are playing when they lose a match. A player loses upon losing every character.
- Challenge: A single-player mode played against computer-controlled opponents. In the Time Challenge mode, the player tries to knockout opponents in the fastest time possible. In the Score Challenge, the player tries to accumulate the biggest score possible. The player chooses a character to play as well as the opponent. The stage is chosen randomly. Matches are only one round in this mode. The game does not remember records after the console is powered off.
Unlike the original arcade game, the Mega Drive port of the game has four selectable game speeds, which affect every mode except the Challenge mode.
Characters
Note: Move lists assume that the character is facing right. When facing left, and should be reversed.
P | Any punch button |
LP | Light punch |
MP | Medium punch |
HP | Hard punch |
K | Any kick button |
LK | Light kick |
MK | Medium kick |
HK | Hard kick |
For moves that require pressing all three P or K buttons, pressing any two buttons also works.
Playable
All of the characters from previous versions of Street Fighter II return, with some receiving new moves. Four "New Challengers" have been added: T. Hawk, a Native American warrior from Mexico whose ancestral homeland was taken from him by Shadaloo; Fei Long, a Hong Kong movie star who wishes to test his martial arts against real opponents; Dee Jay, a kickboxing musician from Jamaica seeking inspiration for his next song; and Cammy, a 19-year-old female special forces agent from England with a mysterious past tied to M. Bison.
Players choose one of eight character color schemes: the character's original color scheme with LP , their color scheme from Champion Edition with MP , their color scheme from Hyper Fighting with HP , or one of five new color schemes (with any of the kick buttons or START , with one additional color scheme available by continuing to hold any button after choosing a character).
Bosses
Date of birth: 1968-09-04
Height: 6'5"
Weight: 252 lbs.
Blood type: A
|
Balrog (M. Bison) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
A former heavyweight champion who was banned from professional boxing for ignoring the rules of the ring and hired by M. Bison. Since he is a boxer, all of his attacks, even those executed with a kick button, are performed with his upper body (punches, elbow strikes, headbutts, and so forth).
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date of birth: 1967-01-27
Height: 6'0"
Weight: 208lbs
Blood type: O
|
Vega (Balrog) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
A vain and egotistical fighter who has blended the Japanese art of Ninjitsu with his matador skills, earning him the nickname of the "Spanish Ninja." He fights with a claw on one hand, which can be broken from blocking too many hits, reducing the damage of his punches.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date of birth: 1955-07-02
Height: 7'4"
Weight: 283 lbs.
Blood type: B
|
Sagat | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Once the original "King of the Street Fighters" and a master of the Muay Thai fighting style, Sagat has sworn to defeat Ryu and regain his title.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date of birth: Unknown
Height: 5'11"
Weight: 254 lbs.
Blood type: A
|
M. Bison (Vega) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
The leader of the crime syndicate Shadaloo and one of the primary antagonists of the series. Bison rules over his empire with an iron fist, and only uses his psychic ability when necessary.
|
Stages
Each character has his or her own stage where matches are hosted. The stage can be manually chosen in the two-player mode.
Bonus stages
A bonus stage appears in the single-player game after every three matches won (except when playing on Expert mode). Characters destroy inanimate objects within a time limit by attacking them for bonus points.
History
Development
Super Street Fighter II was the second Street Fighter II game to be released for the Sega Mega Drive, following from the Mega Drive-only release of Street Fighter II': Special Champion Edition (essentially a compilation of the arcade's Champion Edition and Hyper Fighting revisions with alterations suited to the Mega Drive's hardware). Unlike the arcade lineage, however, Super Street Fighter II was rebuilt almost completely from scratch, so although derives from the same base as Special Champion Edition, borrows very few assets from that earlier release.
Super Street Fighter II uses a different sound driver than Special Champion Edition, and the majority of graphics have been re-drawn and improved. It also re-introduces missing elements from the older release such as the announcer's voice.
However, this comes at a cost: the game ROM is 5MB (40 Megabits) in size, while the Mega Drive console can only safely access 4MB. Capcom created a special bank switching mapper unit to get around this problem, with Super Street Fighter II being the only officially licensed game on the Mega Drive to use such technology (others opt for an SRAM mapper). The custom hardware and larger ROM, however, drove the game's price to ¥10,900 in Japan, with similar inflated prices across the world. The only other licensed Mega Drive games originally priced at more than ¥10,000 were Koei's various titles, but those were deliberately sold at those prices.
Capcom also released a Super NES version of Super Street Fighter II at around the same period, which shares assets with this Mega Drive version. The SNES code (and by extension, likely this Mega Drive version's code) derives from two older SNES releases; a port of Street Fighter II: The World Warrior (1992) and Street Fighter II Turbo: Hyper Fighting (1993, officially spelled without the prime mark in this version).
Legacy
In the arcades, Super Street Fighter II would be followed up by yet another update, Super Street Fighter II Turbo (known as Super Street Fighter II X in Japan). This would avoid the Mega Drive and Super NES in favour of the 3DO, Amiga, Amiga CD32, and IBM PC. However, it would eventually make its way to the Sega Dreamcast in a tweaked form, Super Street Fighter II X for Matching Service.
Arcade ports of both Super Street Fighter II and Super Street Fighter II Turbo would be included in the Sega Saturn release of Street Fighter Collection. This Mega Drive version of Super Street Fighter II has also since been brought over to the Wii's Virtual Console in Japan (and listed on Sega's main site).
Versions
Super Street Fighter II was originally designed with Capcom's CPS-2 arcade hardware in mind, as opposed to previous iterations which ran on the original CPS board. While Capcom's development teams would have been more accustomed to the Mega Drive hardware at this point, the gap in technology is wider than in Street Fighter II′: Special Champion Edition, meaning more intricate details are missing from the Sega version. Virtually no assets from Special Champion Edition were recycled, being instead re-converted from the arcade.
In addition to expected losses in colour and smaller sprites across the board, backgrounds are simplified on the Mega Drive, either with layers of parallax scrolling removed (T. Hawk's stage) or missing animations (Dee Jay's stage). Many of the missing elements in Special Champion Edition are still missing in the Mega Drive port of Super, such as the overflowing water of E. Honda's stage and a missing parallax layer for clouds in Blanka's stage. More complex effects, such as the northern lights in Cammy's stage are dialed back considerably.
Bonus stages appear in a different order in the Mega Drive version for unknown reasons: rather than fight barrels in the third bonus stage, the player has to fight a wall in the second. The credits sequence where matches take place in the background was removed in the Mega Drive conversion.
While the larger ROM size means Super Street Fighter II is able to offer more voice samples than Special Champion Edition, the quality of the samples in many cases have been noticeably reduced, in addition to simplified music tracks. ROM hacking communities have since released fan-made patches to improve the quality of this audio, as well as to bring the colour palettes more in-line with the arcade version (addressing situations such as the water in Ken's stage, which is unnaturally green in the standard version).
Digital manuals
Magazine articles
Promotional material
Physical scans
Sega Retro Average | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
87 | |
---|---|
Based on 37 reviews |
Mega Drive, CZ (Datart) |
---|
Technical information
External links
- Sega of Japan Virtual Console pages: Mega Drive
- Nintendo catalogue pages: US, UK
References
- ↑ File:SuperStreetFighter2 MD JP Box.jpg
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 https://sega.jp/history/hard/megadrive/software_l.html (Wayback Machine: 2020-07-02 23:21)
- ↑ File:SSFII MD SE rental cover.jpg
- ↑ Beep! MegaDrive, "July 1994" (JP; 1994-06-08), page 138
- ↑ VideoGames, "July 1994" (US; 1994-0x-xx), page 61
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Game Players, "Vol. 7 No. 7 July 1994" (US; 1994-0x-xx), page 38
- ↑ Computer Trade Weekly, "" (UK; 1994-08-15), page 10
- ↑ Sega Pro, "September 1994" (UK; 1994-08-11), page 8
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Sega Magazine, "August 1994" (UK; 1994-07-15), page 78
- ↑ https://www.nintendo.co.jp/wii/vc/software/14.html (Wayback Machine: 2018-03-21 22:05)
- ↑ http://vc.sega.jp/vc_ssf2/ (Wayback Machine: 2012-01-20 09:25)
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 http://www.nintendolife.com/games/megadrive/super_street_fighter_ii (Wayback Machine: 2017-07-04 12:16)
- ↑ http://www.nintendo.com/games/detail/wiDX_oRftkYWoLJNe54F4JOiFcecWHFO (Wayback Machine: 2012-04-27 15:54)
- ↑ https://www.nintendo.co.uk/Games/SEGA-MEGA-DRIVE/Super-Street-Fighter-II-The-New-Challengers--279712.html (archive.today)
- ↑ https://www.nintendo.de/Spiele/SEGA-MEGA-DRIVE/Super-Street-Fighter-II-The-New-Challengers--279712.html (archive.today)
- ↑ 1700 igr dlya Sega, "" (RU; 2001-xx-xx), page 225
- ↑ Alaab Alcomputtar, "" (SA; 1995-08-xx), page 23
- ↑ Beep! MegaDrive, "August 1994" (JP; 1994-07-08), page 20
- ↑ Consoles +, "Juillet/Août 1994" (FR; 1994-0x-xx), page 116
- ↑ Computer & Video Games, "August 1994" (UK; 1994-07-15), page 58
- ↑ Edge, "September 1994" (UK; 1994-07-28), page 62
- ↑ Electronic Gaming Monthly, "September 1994" (US; 1994-xx-xx), page 36
- ↑ Game Players, "Vol. 7 No. 12 December 1994" (US; 1994-1x-xx), page 54
- ↑ GamePro, "August 1994" (US; 1994-xx-xx), page 42
- ↑ GamePro, "September 1994" (DE; 1994-08-26), page 50
- ↑ Games World: The Magazine, "November 1994" (UK; 1994-09-29), page 15
- ↑ Game Informer, "September/October 1994" (US; 1994-0x-xx), page 30
- ↑ Hacker, "07/1995" (HR; 1995-xx-xx), page 40
- ↑ Joker, "Oktober 1994" (SI; 1994-xx-xx), page 28
- ↑ Joypad, "Juillet/Août 1994" (FR; 1994-0x-xx), page 122
- ↑ LeveL, "Červen 1995" (CZ; 1995-06-01), page 41
- ↑ Mega, "August 1994" (UK; 1994-07-21), page 50
- ↑ Mega Force, "Juillet/Août 1994" (FR; 1994-07-04), page 72
- ↑ Mega Fun, "09/94" (DE; 1994-08-24), page 82
- ↑ Mega Play, "August 1994" (US; 1994-0x-xx), page 62
- ↑ MegaTech, "August 1994" (UK; 1994-07-21), page 6
- ↑ Mean Machines Sega, "September 1994" (UK; 1994-07-30), page 60
- ↑ Player One, "Juillet/Août 1994" (FR; 1994-0x-xx), page 78
- ↑ Play Time, "10/94" (DE; 1994-09-07), page 102
- ↑ Score, "Říjen 1994" (CZ; 1994-10-01), page 54
- ↑ Sega Power, "August 1994" (UK; 1994-07-07), page 25
- ↑ Sega Pro, "August 1994" (UK; 1994-07-14), page 44
- ↑ Sega Force, "7-8/94" (SE; 1994-10-19), page 20
- ↑ Sega Mega Drive Review, "2" (RU; 1996-01-03), page 144
- ↑ Sega Opisaniy i sekretov, "14000 Opisaniy i sekretov" (RU; 2003-03-11), page 179
- ↑ Sega Saturn Magazine, "September 1995" (JP; 1995-08-08), page 85
- ↑ Sonic the Comic, "October 14th 1994" (UK; 1994-10-01), page 10
- ↑ Todo Sega, "Septiembre 1994" (ES; 1994-0x-xx), page 30
- ↑ Tricks 16 bit, "Tricks Sega Gold 800 igr" (RU; 1998-03-20), page 255
- ↑ Video Games, "8/94" (DE; 1994-07-27), page 96
Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers | |
---|---|
Main page | Comparisons | Hidden content | Magazine articles | Video coverage | Reception | Promotional material | Region coding | Technical information | Bootlegs |
Street Fighter games for Sega systems | |
---|---|
Street Fighter II': Champion Edition (unreleased) | Street Fighter II': Special Champion Edition (1993) | Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers (1994) | |
Street Fighter: The Movie (1995) | Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams (1996) | Street Fighter II Movie (1996) | Street Fighter Alpha 2 (Dash) (1996) | Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo (1996) | Street Fighter Collection (1997) | X-Men vs. Street Fighter (1997) | Pocket Fighter (1998) | Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter (1998) | Capcom Generation: Dai 5 Shuu Kakutouka-tachi (1998) | Street Fighter Zero 3 (1999) | |
Street Fighter II' (1997) | |
Street Fighter Alpha 3 (1999) | Street Fighter III: Double Impact (1999) | Street Fighter III: 3rd Strike (2000) | Super Street Fighter II X for Matching Service (2000) | Street Fighter Zero 3 for Matching Service (2001) | Super Puzzle Fighter II X for Matching Service (2001) | |
Street Fighter Zero 3 Upper (2001) | |
Sampler discs | |
Street Fighter Zero 2 Taikenban (199x) | Street Fighter Collection Taikenban (1997) | |
Street Fighter Zero 3 Tentou Taikenban (199x) | |
Unlicensed Street Fighter games for Sega systems | |
Jang Pung II (1993) | |
X-Men vs. Street Fighter (Mega Drive) (1998) |
- Six Button Control Pad-compatible games
- 1-2 player games
- JP Mega Drive games
- All JP games
- US Mega Drive games
- All US games
- EU Mega Drive games
- All EU games
- ES Mega Drive games
- All ES games
- FR Mega Drive games
- All FR games
- PT Mega Drive games
- All PT games
- UK Mega Drive games
- All UK games
- SE Mega Drive games
- All SE games
- AU Mega Drive games
- All AU games
- BR Mega Drive games
- All BR games
- KR Mega Drive games
- All KR games
- AS Mega Drive games
- All AS games
- Mega Drive games
- 1994 Mega Drive games
- All 1994 games
- Mega Drive fighting games
- All fighting games
- JP Wii Virtual Console games
- US Wii Virtual Console games
- EU Wii Virtual Console games
- DE Wii Virtual Console games
- All DE games
- Wii games
- 2011 Wii games
- All 2011 games
- Wii Virtual Console games
- Old content rating field
- All games
- Old-style rating (gamesmaster)
- Rating without PDF source
- Update ratings template
- 1 old ratings
- Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers
- Street Fighter
- Sega Channel games
- Tectoy Mega Net games
- Mega Drive Mini 2 games