Editing Street Fighter (universe)

From SmashWiki, the Super Smash Bros. wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Warning You aren't logged in. While it's not a requirement to create an account, doing so makes it a lot easier to keep track of your edits and a lot harder to confuse you with someone else. If you edit without being logged in, your IP address will be recorded in the page's edit history.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 5: Line 5:
|image            = [[File:StreetFighterTitle.png|300px]]
|image            = [[File:StreetFighterTitle.png|300px]]
|caption          = [[File:StreetFighterSymbol.svg|50px|class=invert-dark]]
|caption          = [[File:StreetFighterSymbol.svg|50px|class=invert-dark]]
|developer        = [[Capcom]]<br>Tiger Electronics<br>Tiertex<br>Eurocom<br>Rozner Labs<br>Dimps
|developer        = [[Capcom]]<br>Tiger Electronics<br>Tiertex<br>Eurocom<br>Rozner Labs
|publisher        = Capcom<br>Tiger Electronics<br>U.S. Gold<br>GameTek
|publisher        = Capcom<br>Tiger Electronics<br>U.S. Gold<br>GameTek
|distributor      =  
|distributor      =  
Line 48: Line 48:
Their new version of this project was revealed in 2014 as ''Street Fighter V''. The game released in 2016 on PlayStation 4 and Microsoft Windows. Sony helped fund the game in exchange for console exclusivity. The game was met with controversy even prior to release, primarily with its somewhat sloppy presentation and disastrous public beta tests that had to end early due to the sheer amount of problems. Upon release, the game was a bare-bones experience with not much to do other than play games locally or online and next to no replayable single-player content. What was there seemed to be geared towards an Esports experience first and foremost, including features like high input lag and intentionally easier execution to be more beginner friendly at the expense of experienced players. Updates gradually introduced content like a proper story mode, which itself was negatively received for being too easy and poorly written, as well as items that could be bought with in-game currency that evolved into wearable sponsored content that put many players off. The game received a major update titled ''Street Fighter V: Arcade Edition'' in 2017, which introduced new content and addressed many issues with the base game. Said base game also became a free to play option around this time. A proper arcade version of the game released exclusively in Japan in 2019, titled ''Street Fighter V: Type Arcade'' and running on the Taito Type X4 arcade board. Another update released in 2020 titled ''Street Fighter V: Champion Edition'', which again added content and addressed issues. By this point, the game was generally considered in a much better state than at launch. One more season of downloadable content was introduced in 2020 and into 2021. The developers claimed this season was done to bide time while working on the next game.
Their new version of this project was revealed in 2014 as ''Street Fighter V''. The game released in 2016 on PlayStation 4 and Microsoft Windows. Sony helped fund the game in exchange for console exclusivity. The game was met with controversy even prior to release, primarily with its somewhat sloppy presentation and disastrous public beta tests that had to end early due to the sheer amount of problems. Upon release, the game was a bare-bones experience with not much to do other than play games locally or online and next to no replayable single-player content. What was there seemed to be geared towards an Esports experience first and foremost, including features like high input lag and intentionally easier execution to be more beginner friendly at the expense of experienced players. Updates gradually introduced content like a proper story mode, which itself was negatively received for being too easy and poorly written, as well as items that could be bought with in-game currency that evolved into wearable sponsored content that put many players off. The game received a major update titled ''Street Fighter V: Arcade Edition'' in 2017, which introduced new content and addressed many issues with the base game. Said base game also became a free to play option around this time. A proper arcade version of the game released exclusively in Japan in 2019, titled ''Street Fighter V: Type Arcade'' and running on the Taito Type X4 arcade board. Another update released in 2020 titled ''Street Fighter V: Champion Edition'', which again added content and addressed issues. By this point, the game was generally considered in a much better state than at launch. One more season of downloadable content was introduced in 2020 and into 2021. The developers claimed this season was done to bide time while working on the next game.


In November of 2021, the existence of the game ''Street Fighter 6'' was leaked by Nvidia through a data breach. On February 20, 2022, the game was officially announced during a livestream to coincide with the franchise's 35th anniversary. More news would gradually release about the game, including a new World Tour mode that acts as an explorable story mode, a move to the {{iw|wikipedia|RE Engine}}, used in the ''Resident Evil'' series since ''{{iw|wikipedia|Resident Evil 7: Biohazard}}'', and showing Luke Sullivan, the last DLC character from ''Street Fighter V'', as the new protagonist. Several betas and demos also occurred before the game finally released on June 2, 2023. In contrast to the previous entry, ''Street Fighter 6'' was highly rated at launch, praised for its fresh presentation, wealth of content, and solid gameplay. Most of all, the gameplay system itself has many primary gameplay elements derived from previous ''Street Fighter'' mainline games. Although as time passes, some criticisms have emerged like a hands-off approach to character balance leaving unbalanced characters to run amock, expensive in-game shop items and a confusing and potentially predatory in-game currency system on one of the post-launch contents packs. One such crossed over with the ''Fatal Fury'' series by adding [[Terry Bogard]] and Mai Shiranui.
In November of 2021, the existence of the game ''Street Fighter 6'' was leaked by Nvidia through a data breach. On February 20, 2022, the game was officially announced during a livestream to coincide with the franchise's 35th anniversary. More news would gradually release about the game, including a new World Tour mode that acts as an explorable story mode. Several betas and demos also occurred before the game finally released on June 2, 2023. In contrast to the previous entry, ''Street Fighter 6'' was highly rated at launch, praised for its fresh presentation, wealth of content, and solid gameplay. Most of all, the gameplay system itself has many primary gameplay elements derived from previous ''Street Fighter'' mainline games. Although it is later, somehow being criticized for expensive in-game shop's currencies on one of the post-launch contents packs.


Outside of the mainline entries, ''Street Fighter'' has crossed over with many other franchises. The game ''X-Men Vs. Street Fighter'' was a 1996 crossover with the Marvel franchise that blossomed into the ''Marvel Vs. Capcom'' franchise. A fan made an unofficial crossover titled ''Mega Man X Street Fighter'' in 2011 before being officially licensed by Capcom. ''Street Fighter'' have also appeared in many crossover titles like the ''Capcom vs. [[SNK]]'' and ''Project X Zone'' series, as well as ''Tatsunoko vs. Capcom'' and the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series. The franchise has also been referenced in other franchises like ''Final Fight'', ''Slam Masters'', ''Rival Schools'', and countless nods from other companies. Franchise mascot Ryu in particular has frequently attributed to having the most crossovers of any video game character.
Outside of the mainline entries, ''Street Fighter'' has crossed over with many other franchises. The game ''X-Men Vs. Street Fighter'' was a 1996 crossover with the Marvel franchise that blossomed into the ''Marvel Vs. Capcom'' franchise. A fan made an unofficial crossover titled ''Mega Man X Street Fighter'' in 2011 before being officially licensed by Capcom. ''Street Fighter'' have also appeared in many crossover titles like the ''Capcom vs. [[SNK]]'' and ''Project X Zone'' series, as well as ''Tatsunoko vs. Capcom'' and the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series. The franchise has also been referenced in other franchises like ''Final Fight'', ''Slam Masters'', ''Rival Schools'', and countless nods from other companies. Franchise mascot Ryu in particular has frequently attributed to having the most crossovers of any video game character.

Please note that all contributions to SmashWiki are considered to be released under the Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license (see SmashWiki:Copyrights for details). Your changes will be visible immediately. Please enter a summary of your changes above.

Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)