Street Fighter
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Series of fighting games. |
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Developer(s) | Capcom |
Publisher(s) | Capcom |
Platform(s) | Most notable: Arcade, Sega Mega Drive, Super Nintendo, Sega Saturn, PlayStation, Dreamcast, PlayStation 2, Xbox |
Release date | Japanese releases: August 30, 1987 (Street Fighter) June 10, 1992 (Street Fighter II) September 10, 1993 (Super Street Fighter II) June 5, 1995 (Street Fighter Alpha) November 1996 (Street Fighter EX) 1997 (Street Fighter III) July 2008 (Street Fighter IV) |
Genre(s) | Fighting |
Mode(s) | Up to 2 players simultaneously |
Input methods | 8-way Joystick, 6 Buttons |
Street Fighter (ストリートファイター Sutorīto Faitā?), or commonly abbreviated as SF, is a popular series of fighting games in which the players pit combatants from around the world, each with his or her own special moves, against one another. Capcom released the first game in the series in August 1987.[1]
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[edit] History and development
[edit] Street Fighter (1987)
Street Fighter made its debut in the arcades in 1987. It was designed by Takashi Nishiyama and Hiroshi Matsumoto. The player took control of lone martial artist Ryu, who competed in a worldwide martial arts tournament, spanning five countries and ten opponents. A second player could join in at any time and take control of Ryu's rival, Ken.
The player could perform three types of punch and kick attacks (which varied in speed and strength) and three special attacks: the Wave Fist, Rising Dragon Punch and Hurricane Kick. These were performed by executing special motions with the controls.
Street Fighter was ported to many popular home computer systems of the time. In 1988, it was released on the NEC Avenue TurboGrafx-CD console under the new name Fighting Street.
Street Fighter was later included in Capcom Classics Collection: Remixed for PlayStation Portable and Capcom Classics Collection Vol. 2 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox.
[edit] Final Fight
The side-scrolling beat 'em up Final Fight was originally promoted with the working title Street Fighter '89. While the game's title was changed due to its drastically different gameplay, Final Fight (unlike 2010) does take place in the same fictional universe as the Street Fighter games. Characters from Final Fight would go on to appear in later Street Fighter games.
[edit] Street Fighter II series (1991-1993)
Street Fighter II: The World Warrior, released in 1991, was the first true sequel to the original Street Fighter. It was one of the earliest arcade games for Capcom's CPS hardware[2] and was designed by Akira Nishitani (Nin-Nin) and Akiman (Akira Yasuda), who were previously responsible for Final Fight and Forgotten Worlds. The release of the game had an unexpected impact on gaming and was the beginning of a massive phenomenon.
Street Fighter II was the first one-on-one fighting game to give players a choice from a variety of player characters, an option which created hitherto unknown levels of depth and replay value for an arcade game.[2] Each player character had a fighting style with approximately 30 or more moves (including previously nonexistent grappling moves such as throws) as well as two or three special attacks per character.
In the single-player mode, the player's chosen character is pitted sequentially against the seven other main characters before confronting the final four 'boss' opponents, who were CPU-controlled characters not selectable by the player.
As in the original, a second player could join in at any point during single player mode and compete against the other player in competitive matches, with the multiple available characters allowing for more varied matches.
Street Fighter II proved to be popular due to all these factors, eclipsing its predecessor in popularity, eventually turning Street Fighter into a multimedia franchise.[3] Numerous home ports of Street Fighter II followed the original arcade game. Demand for the game was so high that pirates created an unsanctioned, copyright-infringing Famicom/NES version, which saw a very limited release in Asian markets. Computer versions were released for 16-bit PCs, first by a number of copyright-infringing fans who strove to develop a PC version of the game, and later by Capcom, working with an external programming house.
The first official update to the series was Street Fighter II: Champion Edition (pronounced Street Fighter II Dash in Japan, as noted by the prime symbol on the logo), which allowed players to play as the four previously non-playable bosses and also allowed two players to choose the same character (with one character drawn in an alternate color pattern).[4] The game also featured slightly improved graphics (including differently colored backgrounds) and refined gameplay.[2] A second upgrade, titled Street Fighter II' Turbo: Hyper Fighting (or Street Fighter II Dash Turbo), was produced in response to the various bootleg editions of the game. Hyper Fighting offered faster gameplay than its predecessors, different character colors and new special techniques (such as Chun-Li's Kikoken or Dhalsim's Yoga Teleport).[5]
Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers, the third revision, gave the game a complete graphical overhaul and introduced four new playable characters (Cammy, Fei Long, Dee Jay and T.Hawk). This game gave previous characters new basic moves (such as giving Vega standing kicks), new special moves (such as Vega's diving claw), and improvements to previously existing special moves (such as Ryu's flaming fireball or Ken's flaming dragon punch). It was also the first game for Capcom’s CPS II arcade hardware. The fourth and final arcade version, Super Street Fighter II Turbo: The Ultimate Championship (or Super Street Fighter II X: Grand Master Challenge) brought back the faster gameplay of Hyper Fighting, new moves for some characters and a new type of special techniques known as “super combos” and hidden character Akuma.
Numerous home versions of the game had been release for various platforms including the Super NES, Sega Genesis, PC Engine, 3DO, PlayStation, Dreamcast and Saturn, Sega Master System among other platforms. Most of these games had been released individually or through compilations such as Street Fighter Collection and more recently the Capcom Classics Collection series. Most notably, Capcom released Hyper Street Fighter II: The Anniversary Edition, a modified version of Super Turbo that allows player to select characters from all five versions of the game, was originally released for PlayStation 2 and Xbox and also saw a limited release in Japanese arcades.[6] Emulated versions have also been recently included in downloadable game services. The Wii's Virtual Console received the SNES versions of Street Fighter II, Street Fighter II Turbo, and Super Street Fighter II, and the Xbox 360's Xbox Live Arcade received an online enabled version of Street Fighter II' Turbo: Hyper Fighting.
Capcom has announced that an updated version of Super Street Fighter II Turbo will be coming soon to the PlayStation Network and Xbox Live Arcade service in 2008.[7] The game, to be called Super Street Fighter II Turbo HD Remix, will have fully redrawn artwork, including HD sprites 4.5x the original size, done by artists from UDON. This will be the first time the Street Fighter characters will have new sprites, drawn by Capcom, since Capcom vs. SNK 2 in 2001. Capcom also promises a newly tweaked version of the game, which addresses character balancing issues, but will also feature the original arcade version gameplay so that players can choose between the two. [8]
[edit] Street Fighter Alpha series (1995-1998)
The interquel Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors' Dreams (Street Fighter Zero in Japan and Asia) became the next game in the series. The game used the same art style Capcom previously employed in Darkstalkers and X-Men: Children of the Atom, with settings and character designs heavily influenced by Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie. Alpha expands on the Super Combo system from Super Turbo, by extending Super Combo meter into three levels (allowing for more powerful super combos), and also introduces Alpha Counters and Chain Combos (also from Darkstalkers). The plot of Alpha is set between the first two Street Fighter games and fleshes out the back stories and grudge matches held by many of the classic SF2 characters.[9] It features a playable roster of ten immediately playable characters (and three unlockable fighters), comprising not only younger versions of established Street Fighter II, but also characters from the original Street Fighter and Final Fight.
Rather than being a mere upgrade, Street Fighter Alpha 2 ended up being a full sequel, featuring all-new stages and endings for each character (some overlapping with those from the original Alpha).[10] It also discarded the Chain Combo system in favor of Custom Combos (which required a portion of the Super Combo meter to be used). Alpha 2 also retained all thirteen characters from the original, adding five new characters to the roster along with hidden versions of returning characters. Alpha 2 was followed by a slightly enhanced arcade release titled Street Fighter Zero 2 Alpha and was released in Japan, Asia and Brazil, was ported to home consoles as Street Fighter Alpha 2 Gold (Zero 2 Dash in Japan). The home versions added Cammy as a hidden character.
The third and final Alpha game, Street Fighter Alpha 3, was released in 1998 (following the release of the original Street Fighter III and 2nd Impact). Alpha 3 introduced three selectable fighting style and further expanded the playable roster to 28 characters (including three hidden characters).[11] Console versions of the three games (including the original Alpha 2 and the aforementioned Alpha 2 Gold) were released for the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn, although versions of specific games in the series were also released for the Game Boy Color, Super NES, Sega Dreamcast and even Windows. The home console versions of Alpha 3 further expanded the character roster by adding the remaining "New Challengers" from Super Street Fighter II, along with Guile, Evil Ryu and Shin Akuma (the latter two were omitted from the arcade release). The Dreamcast version of the game was backported to the arcades in Japan under the title of Street Fighter Zero 3 Upper. A version of Upper (simply titled Alpha 3 outside Japan) was released for the Game Boy Advance and added three characters from Capcom vs. SNK 2. A PlayStation Portable version titled Alpha 3 MAX (or Zero 3 Double Upper in Japan) contains the added characters from the GBA version and Ingrid from Capcom Fighting Jam.
[edit] Street Fighter III series (1997-1999)
The true sequel to Street Fighter II, Street Fighter III: The New Generation, made its debut to the arcades on the CPS3 hardware in 1997.[12] Street Fighter III discarded the character roster from previous games (only Ryu and Ken returned),[13] introducing several new characters in their place, most notably the female ninja Ibuki, twin brothers Yun and Yang, and grappler Alex. Street Fighter III introduced the "Super Arts" selection system and the ability to parry an opponent's attack.[14] Several months after its release, it was followed by 2nd Impact: Giant Attack, which made adjustments to the gameplay and added two new characters, as well as the return of Akuma and bonus rounds. Street Fighter III: 3rd Strike, released in 1999, was the third and last iteration of Street Fighter III, bringing back Chun-Li and adding four new characters to the playable roster.
The first two Street Fighter III games were ported to the Sega Dreamcast as a compilation titled Double Impact. Ports of 3rd Strike were released for the Dreamcast as a stand-alone game and then included in the compilation Street Fighter Anniversary Collection for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox.
[edit] Street Fighter EX series (1996-2000)
A 3D version of the series, Street Fighter EX, was released in the arcades in 1996 and was developed by the company Arika. Due to Capcom only allowing the Street Fighter characters for license, these games are not a part of the Street Fighter canon. It was later followed by three arcade follow-ups and three home console games:
- Street Fighter EX (Arcade, 1996)
- Street Fighter EX Plus (Arcade, 1997)
- Street Fighter EX Plus Alpha (PlayStation, 1997)
- Street Fighter EX2 (Arcade, 1998)
- Street Fighter EX2 Plus (Arcade, 1999/Playstation, 2000)
- Street Fighter EX3 (PlayStation 2, 2000)
Arika also released a spin-off of Street Fighter EX in arcades, called Fighting Layer. The game play was very similar to the EX games, and even featured two of the EX characters (Allen Snider and Blair Dame), but was not an actual Street Fighter game, and was distributed by Namco.
[edit] Street Fighter VS series (1996-2001)
- X-Men vs. Street Fighter
- Marvel Super Heroes vs. Street Fighter
- Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes
- Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes
- SNK vs. Capcom: The Match of the Millennium
- Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000
- Capcom vs. SNK 2: Mark of the Millennium 2001
- SNK vs. Capcom: SVC Chaos
The VS series often focused on tag-team or team gameplay. Storywise it is not considered canon due to the large cross-section of characters, but the games were developed by Capcom (with the exception of SNK vs Capcom: SVC Chaos which was developed by SNK) and always contained several Street Fighter characters.
[edit] Street Fighter IV (2008)
Prior to the Jamma show (officially the Amusement Machine Show) in Tokyo in 2005, rumors were circulating that Capcom would unveil a new entry in the series, most probably Street Fighter IV.[15] These reports proved erroneous, however. Though Capcom dropped hints that a new "combat game" would be unveiled at the show, this turned out to be War of the Grail, a 3D battlefield game yet no information was revealed for two years. Several factors seemed to count against the possibility of the series receiving another installment: 2D games had dramatically decreased in popularity and were mostly considered little more than a niche market, especially due to the rising popularity of 3D fighting games such as Tekken and Virtua Fighter. This was also coupled with the rising costs of producing video games in the modern industry — Capcom has reused the sprites of some of the characters in its games for over a decade at this point and was unable to justify the expense of redrawing them against projected sales of the games.
Rumors of Street Fighter IV being in development were sparked in July 2005 at the San Diego Comic Convention where a Street Fighter panel was held. Representatives from Udon Comics and Capcom USA said that there was something in the works. However, given the fact that the Street Fighter Alpha Anthology was announced later on in the year, they might have been referring to that title. As Hyde Park entertainment and Capcom had announced a new Street Fighter movie to be released in 2009, Capcom had also stated multi-platform releases would coincide with the 20th anniversary of Street Fighter which could include new games.
On October 17, 2007, however, the wait was over. Capcom unveiled Street Fighter IV at a Capcom Gamers Day event in London.Capcom had released a trailer for Street Fighter IV, but no gameplay was shown. The game was confirmed to be made in 2.5D, and Capcom said that the trailer provided hints on what the gameplay will be like. Also for note is that this fourth iteration's story will chronologically fall in the events that occur after the second Street Fighter tournament and before the third Street Fighter Tournament, making this game (chronologically) the 4th in the series (including the Alpha series).
Details continued to emerge and gameplay media revealed 3D rendered characters and backgrounds, but the game still plays in traditional 2D, thus creating a "2.5D" effect. The gameplay itself is heavily influenced by Super Street Fighter II Turbo, considered by some fans to be one of the high-points of the series. The game is scheduled for release in July 2008 in Arcades, and will be released on Xbox 360, Playstation 3 and the PC later.
[edit] Future Games
Capcom has also licensed Street Fighter to developer Daletto for a PC versus fighter, Street Fighter Online: Mouse Generation. The game solely uses the PC's mouse for combat, and the characters are customizable to some degree. Confirmed thus far are Ryu and Chun-Li, as well as two new characters, Hiko and Teiran. [16]
Capcom is also working on a new 'Vs.' title called Tatsunoko vs. Capcom Cross Generation of Heroes, which is a cross-over 2D fighting game with 3D cell-shaded graphics and features 2 on 2 tag team gameplay. Capcom favorites like Chun-Li and Ryu will take on Tatsunoko's popular anime characters from G-Force, Battle of the Planets, Gatchaman, Eagle Riders, Shinzo Ningen Casshan, and more.
[edit] In other media
[edit] Film and animation
The series has inspired several movies.
- Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie (animated movie produced by Group TAC)
- Street Fighter (live-action film produced and released by Columbia Pictures and Universal Pictures, starring Jean-Claude Van Damme)
- Street Fighter II V (animated television series produced released by Group TAC)
- Street Fighter (American animated series)
- Street Fighter Alpha (original video animation produced by Group TAC)
- Street Fighter Alpha: Generations (animated movie produced and released by Manga Entertainment)
A Hong Kong movie version was also released in 1993 called Future Cops, or Chao ji xue xiao ba wang(超級街頭霸王(called 超級學校霸王 in Taiwan))[17] roughly translated School King (and a.k.a. Future Cops), but it was an "unofficial" adaptation so the characters names were heavily changed (one notable play on words is E. Honda is changed to Toyota). Andy Lau and Jacky Cheung are in this movie, which was directed by Hong Kong director Wong Jing (famous for his God of Gamblers trilogy).
In the Channel 4 sit-com Father Ted, Father Dougal McGuire and Father Damien (Damo) Lennon play Street Fighter.
In the Hong Kong film City Hunter, Jackie Chan's character gets shocked by arcade mechines (all of them are Street Fighter II) after being attacked by a henchman. After a brief recovery, the henchman (who is Caucasian) becomes Ken while Chan turns into various characters from the game. Chan then finishes the opponent after becoming Chun-Li. It is noted that all the music and the sound effects were taken from the Super Nintendo port.
In October 2006, Hyde Park Entertainment and Capcom announced its intention to produce a film adaptation of the game series in a joint venture, with the storyline to focus on the Street Fighter character Chun-Li. Screenwriter Justin Marks was attached to write a script for the adaptation. Street Fighter is set for a 2009 release for the 20th anniversary of the fighting game series.[18] The film adaptation is part of Capcom's multi-platform launch for 2008 that will also launch video games and a potential TV series in 2008.[19]
On December 21, 2007, it was announced that the new film will be titled Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li, and will star Kristin Kreuk in the title role.[20]
[edit] Comic books
There have been various Street Fighter comic books produced, including Masaomi Kanzaki's Street Fighter II manga (one of the few Street Fighter manga titles translated into English), and a role playing game adaptation released by White Wolf in 1994.
[edit] Japanese comics
Masahiko Nakahira did four different Street Fighter manga series: Cammy Gaiden (translated and released in English as Super Street Fighter II: Cammy by Viz Media), Street Fighter Zero (translated and released in English as Street Fighter Alpha), Sakura Ganbaru and Street Fighter III: Ryu Final. Street Fighter Alpha, Sakura Ganbaru and Street Fighter III: Ryu Final have all been released in English by UDON. Two characters created by Nakahira, Evil Ryu (introduced in Street Fighter Alpha)[21] and Karin Kanzuki have been integrated into the Street Fighter canon.
[edit] Other Asian comics
Asian comic book publications outside Japan were also available; that contains canon-type storylines or totally unrelated to the official backgrounds from Street Fighter Universe (Practically just borrowing characters and their special moves). These publications arose at the era when Street Fighter II was popular in the Asian continent, especially Hong Kong, Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia (The most popular publication was from Jade Dynasty which was based in Hong Kong).[22] Most of these publications were not yet known to be legally licensed from Capcom.
[edit] American comics
Malibu Comics launched a Street Fighter comic series in 1993, but it flopped, lasting only three issues.[23]
UDON has been licensed by Capcom to produce an American comic book based on the Street Fighter franchise, in addition to Darkstalkers and Rival Schools. This series draws not only on the established Street Fighter canon, but also occasionally addresses various continuity retcons, and even draws from fanon and non-official sources as well. In 2005, UDON released Street Fighter: Eternal Challenge, the first Capcom series history and art book to be translated into English. More recently, UDON has announced continuation on its currently running Street Fighter series (based on SF: Alpha and Super SF Turbo) and is expecting to launch a Street Fighter III series in 2008.
[edit] Brazilian comics
Editora Escala published Malibu's unfinished series in Brazil, and promised to publish Kanzaki's manga afterwards. But instead, starting in 1994, they published an original series titled Super Street Fighter II, later renamed simply Street Fighter. Its main writer was Alexandre Nagado. This series lasted for 20 issues.
Brazilian artist and writer Marcelo Cassaro did an unlicensed comic parody, published by Editora Escala in 1993, titled simply Street Fighter II. It only lasted for two issues. [1]
Cassaro later wrote a more mature and ambitious 4-issue miniseries based on Street Fighter Zero 3, which was drawn by Erica Awano, and properly licensed by Capcom. It was published by Trama Editora (later Editora Talismã, now defunct) in 1998/99.
[edit] Card games
On April 14, 2006 Sabertooth Games released a Street Fighter set for its Universal Fighting System (UFS) game along with a set for Soul Calibur III. This was not the gaming companies first release for UFS, that being a Battle box for Penny Arcade released in February 2006. As the name implies, UFS is to be a universal system. There are plans to incorporate other licenses into the game, slated for December 2006, being based on SNK's King of Fighters and Samurai Shodown.
The first set for Street Fighter featured cards for Chun-Li, Dhalsim, Ken, Ryu, Sagat and Zangief. A later expansion, Street Fighter: World Warriors, included the remaining characters from the original Street Fighter 2 arcade series, Blanka, Balrog, E. Honda, Guile, M. Bison and Vega. Another set, titled Street Fighter: The Next Level, was released in December 2006, parallel with the SNK release. The characters included are Akuma, Fei Long, Dudley, and Cammy. A new expansion, Street Fighter: The Dark Path was released February 14, 2007 along with the next Soul Calibur Set, Soul Arena. Characters include a new version of Chun-Li and (Evil) Ryu, along with Adon, Charlie, Rose, Sakura, T.Hawk and Twelve. A new set, entitiled Street Fighter: Extreme Rivals, which was released in May 2007, features Cody, Dee Jay, Ibuki, R. Mika, and a new version of Ken.
In July of 2007 Sabertooth Games will release an exclusive Battle Pack featuring a battle between Ryu and Akuma. These 2 sixty card decks will be fully compatible with the Universal Fighting System and contain 36 unique cards.
There is currently a free demo deck request form to try out the UFS CCG at Sabertooth Games Demo Deck Request Form.
Another trading card game, the now discontinued Epic Battles (released by Score Entertainment), also featured Street Fighter characters, as well as characters from other fighting game franchises, such as Mortal Kombat.
[edit] Role Playing Game
White Wolf released a storytelling game based on the series in 1994 (featuring characters from Super Street Fighter 2). The system used many of the game mechanics of the World of Darkness games. The system is now out of print but retains a small following on the internet.
[edit] Unauthorized conversions
Street Fighter has been ported, without Capcom's authorization, to the Famicom in Asia. It has appeared in several multicarts in China. One of the popular titles was known as Master Fighter, that had several sequels (including one featuring Nintendo character Mario). Due to memory limitations of the Famicom system, the bootleg copy was unable to list all the available rosters; the only characters available are Ryu, Guile, Chun-Li, Zangief and non playable M. Bison (his original Japanese name — Vega, was misspelled as Viga). Another title is Super Fighter III, and due also to hardware limitations, only nine among the normal roster of twelve are selectable characters (missing were Balrog, E. Honda, and Zangief). Character names, captions and subtitles during the endings are also removed. Chun-Li's stage was redesigned as the Forbidden City outdoors rather than one of China's busy streets.
In 1992, the Hotel Keitel bootleg group in Korea released a Korean version of the game known as SFIBM, running on PC compatibles. Programmed by Jung Young Dug, the first release had only Ryu and Guile available. Eventually all the characters were released (although hand drawn versions of SNK's Andy Bogard and Terry Bogard replaced Vega and Balrog in some versions).
The gameplay was quite poor, but many of the data files were unoptimized and available for editing. After the game had proliferated to the West, Derek Liu and Brian Chan used this information to edit the files into SFLiu,[24] the closest translation of Street Fighter II Turbo the game engine could allow. After adding in Balrog and Vega, they updated the files to Super Street Fighter II standards.
As more and more editors worked on the game, more patches were created. The most widespread of these patches were SFWarm by Stan Warman (which added new features for all the characters), SFJenn by Jenn Dolari (which added the Mortal Kombat characters of Mileena and Kitana) and SFNinja (which replaced most of the roster with parody versions of Mortal Kombat's numerous ninjas).
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ CAPCOM History
- ^ a b c History of: Street Fighter by Nick Petty, Sega-16, 2005-09-02
- ^ The History of Street Fighter, GameSpot, page 3.
- ^ Street Fighter 2 Champion Edition on Street Fighter Central
- ^ Street Fighter 2 Turbo on Street Fighter Central
- ^ Street Fighter Anniversary Collection on Street Fighter Central
- ^ Capcom® Entertainment expands digital initiative with new downloadable games, Capcom Entertainment Press Center, 2007-04-12.
- ^ IGN's Super Street Fighter II Turbo HD Remix preview
- ^ Street Fighter Legends: History
- ^ PS2 Game Reviews: Street Fighter Alpha Anthology by Frank Provo, PSX Extreme, 2006-06-26.
- ^ Street Fighter Alpha 3 on Killer List of Videogames.
- ^ CP System III (CPS3) Hardware
- ^ IMDb
- ^ Street Fighter: Anniversary Collection - review on ntsc-uk
- ^ Capcom preps new arcade fighting game by Hirohiko Niizumi, GameSpot 2005-08-29.
- ^ Only In Japan: New Street Fighter Goes Online, Mouse-Only, Very Ugly
- ^ Chao ji xue xiao ba wang. Retrieved on 2007-02-02.
- ^ Pamela McClintock; Nicole Laporte. "'Street Fighter' packs Hyde Park punch", Variety, 2006-10-29. Retrieved on 2007-02-10.
- ^ John Gaudiosi. "Exclusive: Capcom Talks New Street Fighter Movie", GameDaily BIZ, 2006-11-01. Retrieved on 2007-02-10.
- ^ Kristen Kreuk is Chun-Li in Street Fighter!
- ^ Street Fighter Alpha 2 on Killer List of Videogames
- ^ The SFZAC-X Manga Comix section
- ^ Street Fighter Comics Check List
- ^ The Tale of SFLIU. Retrieved on 2007-02-02.
[edit] External links
- Capcom Official site of Capcom
- Street Fighter Capcom USA's official Street Fighter page
- Street Fighter 15th Capcom Japan's Street Fighter 15th Anniversary homepage
- Street Fighter IV Official site of Street Fighter IV
- Capcom Comics Official Capcom Comics website created by UDON
- Street Fighter Devotion Street Fighter Museum
- Capcom artwork archive Original game artwork
- 1UP Street Fighter IV Producer Interview Insight and history into the oft-rumored sequel and its genesis
- Wikia has a wiki on this subject: Street Fighter Wiki
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