Real Bout Fatal Fury

Real Bout Fatal Fury
Developer(s) SNK
Publisher(s) SNK
Series Fatal Fury
Platform(s) Arcade, Neo Geo, Neo-Geo CD, Sega Saturn, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Network, Virtual Console
Release date(s)

Arcade

  • JP: December 21, 1995
  • NA: 1995

Neo Geo

  • INT: January 26, 1996

Neo-Geo CD

  • INT: February 23, 1996

Sega Saturn

  • JP: September 20, 1996

PlayStation

  • JP: January 10, 1997
  • EU: August 1997

PlayStation Network

  • JP: May 30, 2007

Wii Virtual Console

  • JP: January 24, 2012
  • NA: December 13, 2012
  • PAL: April 25, 2013
Genre(s) Fighting game
Mode(s) Single-player, two-player
Cabinet Upright
Arcade system Neo Geo

Real Bout Fatal Fury (リアルバウト餓狼伝説 Rearu Bauto Garō Densetsu, "Real Bout Legend of the Hungry Wolf") is a 1995 fighting game released by SNK for the Neo-Geo arcade and home platforms. It is the fifth installment in the Fatal Fury series, following Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory. Ports of Real Bout were released for the Neo-Geo CD, PlayStation (in Japan and the PAL region)[note 1] and the Sega Saturn (in Japan, requires SNK's 1MB RAM cartridge for the system). The game was later included in Fatal Fury Battle Archives Vol. 2, a compilation released for the PlayStation 2.

Gameplay

Real Bout changes the play controls from the previous Fatal Fury games, reducing the number of attack buttons from four to three: a standard punch and kick button, a "Strong Attack" button which can be either a stronger punch or kick attack, depending on the character. The game retains the three-plane "oversway" system from Fatal Fury 3, which features a main lane for fighting, with foreground and background planes used to avoid attacks or leap towards the opponent. A dedicated button is now used to make an "oversway" (or change plane) towards the background or foreground.

Real Bout introduces a Power Gauge, which fills up as the player performs normal or special techniques against their opponent or defend themselves, similar to many super move gauges featured in other fighting games. The Power Gauge allows players to perform one of three types of Special Techniques, depending of the level of the Power Gauge.

Real Bout also introduces stages with ring-outs, a gameplay feature previously introduced in 3D fighting games such as Virtua Fighter. If the player performs certain attacks on their opponent while next to the boundaries, the character will eventually destroy the barrier keeping the opponent in the ring and be able to knock them out of the stage for an easy win. The normal chain combo system, including in the mid-air, is similar to that of X-Men: Children of the Atom.

Characters

The game retains the character roster from Fatal Fury 3, with the boss characters (Ryuji Yamazaki, Jin Chonrei and Jin Chonshu) now part of the regular cast. Duck King, Billy Kane and Kim Kaphwan, who were all last featured in Fatal Fury Special, are added to the cast. Series antagonist Geese Howard reprises his role from the original Fatal Fury as the game's final boss. Real Bout was Geese Howard's final appearance in the Fatal Fury storyline, as the game's ending with Terry or Andy depicts the character's demise at the hands of either brother by falling off the roof of his tower. This was reflected by SNK's tagline for the game, "So long, Geese!" (さらば、ギース Saraba, Gīsu).

Reception

Electronic Gaming Monthly gave the Neo Geo AES version a 8.75 out of 10 and their "Game of the Month" award. Their four reviewers applauded the pits, the overhauled personality of the characters, the high end graphics, and the humor. Andrew Baran described the game as "intense, both in speed and pyrotechnics."[1] Major Mike of GamePro deemed it a major improvement over Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory, citing the greater effectiveness of the characters Bob and Mary, the more refined combo system, and the inclusion of moves which were taken out of the previous game. He criticized the reduction from four action buttons to three, the reuse of Geese Howard as the final boss, and the music ("ranges from banal rock to obnoxious drek"), but concluded that "With its emphasis on gameplay, this is one of the best Fatal Fury games ever."[2] While they derided the game's lack of originality, particularly its similarity to the previous installment Fatal Fury 3, Maximum assessed it as "a well-rounded and entertaining fighting title". They particularly approved of the oversway system, the barriers preventing easy ring outs, the balanced difficulty of the one-player mode, and the two-player battles. They gave it four out of five stars.[3]

Notes

  1. An American version was advertised alongside the PlayStation ports of Samurai Shodown III and The King of Fighters '95, but was never released.

References

  1. "Review Crew: Real Bout Fatal Fury". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Ziff Davis (80): 28. March 1996.
  2. "ProReview: Real Bout Fatal Fury". GamePro. IDG (91): 84. April 1996.
  3. "Maximum Reviews: Real Bout Fatal Fury". Maximum: The Video Game Magazine. Emap International Limited (4): 154. March 1996.
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