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      • The game is based on the 1994 live-action Street Fighter film, itself based on the Street Fighter series of fighting games, and uses digitized images of the film's cast. The game was developed by Chicago-based Incredible Technologies and distributed to the arcades by Capcom.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Street_Fighter:_The_Movie_(arcade_game)
  1. Street Fighter: The Movie [a] is a 2D head-to-head fighting game developed by Capcom, released for the PlayStation and Sega Saturn in 1995, with the game serving as a North American launch title for the PlayStation. [1]

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  3. Mar 1, 2021 · Incredible Technologies’ Street Fighter: The Movie hit arcades in 1995, and is one of the rare Street Fighter titles Capcom hasnt re-released over the years, a fact that Street Fighter 30th...

    • Matt Leone
    • Trivia
    • Cast
    • Credits
    • External Links
    Both versions of the game uses the same graphics style like the early Mortal Kombatgames.
    The game was a launch title for the PlayStation in North America.
    This game is notable for being the first Street Fightergame to include the EX Specials, although they could be used infinitely once the bar was full and until the player used a Super Combo, a mecha...
    It is also the first Street Fighter game to include a "proper" Story Mode (which follows the plot of the film), followed by Street Fighter V.

    Arcade Version

    Guile: Jean-Claude Van Damme M. Bison: Raul Julia, Darko Tuscan Chun-Li: Ming-Na Wen Cammy: Kylie Minogue Ryu: Byron Mann Sagat: Wes Studi Ken: Damian Chapa Vega: Jay Tavare Balrog: Grand L. Bush Honda: Peter Tuiasosopo Zangief: Andrew Bryniarski Sawada: Kenya Sawada Akuma: Ernie Reyes, Sr. Blade:Alan Noon

    Console Version

    Colonel Guile: Jean-Claude Van Damme Viktor Sagat: Wes Studi Chun Li Zang: Ming-Na Wen Captain Sawada: Kenya Sawada Zangief: Andrew Bryniarski Ryu Hoshi: Byron Mann Vega: Jay Tavare Carlos Blanka: Kim Repia E. Honda: Peter Tuiasosopo Cammy: Kylie Minogue Dee Jay: Miguel A. Nunez, Jr. Balrog: Grand L. Bush Ken Masters:Damian Chapa

    Arcade Version

    1. Capcom Executive Producers: Kenzo Tsujimoto, Takahito Yasuki, Yoshiki Okamoto, Tetsuya Iijima, Rene Lopez 1. Incredible Technologies Executive Producer: Elaine A. Ditton Project Manager: Leif Pran Marwede Head Programmer: Jane D. Siegrist Art Direction: Ralph Melgosa Art Coordinator: Jane D. Siegrist Game Design: Leif Pran Marwede, Alan Noon Programming: Jane D. Siegrist, Leif Pran Marwede, Richard A. Ditton Additional Programming: Tino Kalafatis, Mike Hanson, Steve Jaskowiak Sounds: Kyle...

    Console Version

    Direction: Yoshinori Kawano Creation: Satoshi Murata, Masato Kuga, Junya Watanabe Sound Design: Toshio Kajino, Michio Sakurai, Nariyuki Nobuyama Music Compose: Yuki Satomura, Yoshinori Ono Graphics: Masaru Ijuin, Hisanori Ohtsuki, Kouetsu Matsuda, Kiyoko Sakata, Jun Takahashi Application: Shuichiro Chiboshi, Shogo Wakata, Hiroki Bandoh, Norio Saito, Shigeki Niino, Yuji Hagiyama, Ryuta Takahashi System: Hisashi Kuramoto, Katsuhiro Nishida, Koji Yoshida Authoring: Hideki Tada Character Design:...

    Street Fighter wikia article(arcade version)
    Street Fighter wikia article(home console version)
    • 3 min
  4. While a home video game also titled Street Fighter: The Movie was released for the PlayStation and Sega Saturn, it is not a port but a separately produced game based on the same premise.

    • Street Fighter III. This arcade cabinet was a major flop when it arrived in 1997. The hardware for it was pricey. Like a Die Hard sequel, they decided to make it a Street Fighter game only after plenty of work had already been done on it.
    • Street Fighter Alpha. After Capcom ran Street Fighter II into the ground, it was time to move forward. Or, uh, move backwards. Street Fighter Alpha was an in-betweenquel that bridged Ryu tearing Sagat’s chest open (SF1) and M. Bison’s World Warrior tournament (SF2).
    • Street Fighter 6. This installment is difficult to rank because it’s so new. Unlike its predecessor and the Tekken crossover, this one landed the second it touched down.
    • Street Fighter II. We can’t say enough about how groundbreaking and important Street Fighter II was to fighting games. While it did not invent the genre, it shot it straight into the stratosphere upon release.
  5. Mar 23, 2002 · Street Fighter: The Movie is a 2D versus fighting game based on the movie of the same name, which in turn is based on the well known Capcom series, Street Fighter. Gameplay is similar to Street Fighter II and Super Street Fighter II Turbo.

  6. Capcom tried to follow up its Street Fighter home computer version with the beat-em-up game Final Fight, and Tiertex (who were behind one of the Street Fighter ports) developed a blatant cash-in...

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