Street Fighter II Turbo explained

Street Fighter II Turbo: Hyper Fighting
Developer:Capcom
Publisher:Capcom
Designer:Akira Nishitani
Akira Yasuda
Producer:Yoshiki Okamoto
Composer:Yoko Shimomura
Isao Abe
Series:Street Fighter
Genre:Fighting
Modes:Single-player, multiplayer
Arcade System:CP System

Street Fighter II Turbo: Hyper Fighting[1] [2] is a competitive fighting game released by Capcom for arcades in 1992. It is the third arcade version of Street Fighter II, part of the Street Fighter franchise, following , and was initially released as an enhancement kit for that game.[2] [3] Released less than a year after the previous installment, Turbo introduced a faster playing speed and new special moves for certain characters, as well as further refinement to the character balance.

Turbo is the final arcade game in the Street Fighter II series to use the original CP System hardware. It was distributed as an upgrade kit designed to be installed into Champion Edition printed circuit boards.[4] The next game, Super Street Fighter II, uses the CP System's successor, the CP System II.

Gameplay

Turbo features faster playing speed compared to Champion Edition. As a result, the inputs for special moves and combos requires more precise timing. The faster playing speed also allowed players to get into battle quicker, as well as to react quicker. All of the fighters, with the exception of Guile and the four Shadaloo Bosses, were each given at least one new special move.

Each fighter also received a new default palette. The original palettes are now featured as alternate palettes for each character, replacing the ones that were in Champion Edition. The only character exempt to this change is M. Bison, who retains his original default palette, but still gets a different alternate palette.

Ports

Year PlatformMediaDeveloperPublisherNotes
1993Super NES20 Megabit ROM cartridgeCapcomCapcomIncludes Champion Edition rules as an alternative mode.
1993Mega Drive/Genesis24 Megabit ROM cartridgeCapcomCapcomTurbo rules and speed were included as a mode in Street Fighter II Special Champion Edition.
1998Sega SaturnCD-ROMCapcomCapcomIncluded in Capcom Generation 5. Released exclusively in Japan.
PlayStationCapcom
Virgin Interactive (EU)
Included in Street Fighter Collection 2.
2005PlayStation 2DVD-ROMDigital EclipseCapcomIncluded in Capcom Classics Collection Vol. 1. Based on the PS version.
Xbox
2006PlayStation PortableUMDCapcomCapcomIncluded in . Based on the PS version.
Xbox 360Online distributionSensory Sweep StudiosCapcom
2017Super NES ClassicInternal Flash MemoryCapcomCapcomRe-release of 1993 Super NES port.
2018PlayStation 4BD-ROMDigital EclipseCapcomIncluded in Street Fighter 30th Anniversary Collection.
Xbox One
Nintendo SwitchROM cartridge
WindowsOnline distribution
2022Evercade EXPOnline distributionCapcomCapcomIncluded as one of 18 built-in titles.

Super NES

A port was released for the Super Famicom on July 11, 1993 in Japan, and for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (Super NES) in August 1993 in North America and October 1993 in the PAL region.[5] The port was developed using the SNES port of the original Street Fighter II as its base, but with a larger cartridge size of 20 Megabits. Despite being titled Turbo, this port also contains the Champion Edition version of the game in the form of a "Normal" mode. The game's playing speed is adjustable in Turbo mode by up to four settings by default, with a cheat code that allows up to six faster settings. Other cheat codes allow players to enable and disable special moves in Versus mode, as well as play through the single-player mode with all of the special moves disabled.

The pitch change in the characters' voices when they perform a variation of their special moves based on the strength level of the attack was removed, but the voice clips of the announcer saying the names of each country were restored, along with the barrel-breaking bonus stage that was removed in the first SNES port. The graphics of each character's ending were changed to make them more accurate to the arcade version. Sound effects featuring people or animals shouting after a round ended were added as well, an aesthetic element that was not present in the arcade version of Turbo, but rather was added in Super Street Fighter II.

Nintendo re-released Turbo in September 2017 as part of the company's Super NES Classic Edition.[6]

Other releases

The NEC PC Engine and Sega Mega Drive/Genesis version, , while based primarily on Champion Edition, allows players to play the game with Turbo rules as well. The game's content is almost identical to the SNES version of Street Fighter II Turbo.

Turbo is included in Street Fighter Collection 2 (Capcom Generation 5) for the Sega Saturn and PlayStation. The PlayStation port was later included in Capcom Classics Collection Vol. 1 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox, as well as Capcom Classics Collection: Reloaded for the PlayStation Portable. A stand-alone re-release of Hyper Fighting was also released for the Xbox 360 via Xbox Live Arcade which features an online versus mode. It was also released for the iPod Touch, iPhone, iPad, and Android, along with Street Fighter II and Champion Edition, as part of Capcom Arcade.

The game also had an unofficial port for the Virtual Boy, under the name Hyper Fighting.[7] [8] [9]

Reception

Arcade

In Japan, Game Machine listed Street Fighter II' Turbo on their February 1, 1993 issue as being the second most-successful table arcade cabinet of the month, outperforming titles such as Warriors of Fate and Street Fighter II': Champion Edition.[10] Street Fighter II' Turbo went on to become the highest-grossing arcade game of 1993 in Japan.[11]

In North America, the RePlay arcade charts listed Street Fighter II Turbo as the top-grossing software conversion kit in March 1993,[12] and then again April[13] and June 1993.[14] It was also one of the five top-grossing arcade games during Summer 1993.[15]

Console

In Japan, the Super Famicom version topped the Famitsu sales charts in July 1993.[16] [17]

Worldwide, the SNES version sold copies in total, making it the ninth best-selling game for the console and the highest-selling game that was never bundled with the system.[18]

Accolades

In the February 1994 issue of Gamest, Street Fighter II' Turbo, along with Super Street Fighter II, was nominated for Best Game of 1993, but lost to Samurai Spirits. Turbo was ranked as sixth, while placing fifth in the category of Best Fighting Games.[19] Nintendo Power rated the game the third best SNES game of 1993.[20]

Retrospective

In 1996, GamesMaster ranked the game ninth on their "Top 100 Games of All Time."[21] In 1997, Electronic Gaming Monthly listed Street Fighter II Turbo as the best arcade game of all time.[22] They also listed the Super NES conversion as the fifth best console game of all time, explaining that it was the last and best refinement of Street Fighter II before the basic formula of the series changed with the Super and Alpha installments.[23] In 2018, Complex rated the game sixth on their The Best Super Nintendo Games of All Time list, and called it the best fighting game on the SNES.[24]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Akagi . Masumi . アーケードTVゲームリスト国内•海外編(1971–2005) . Arcade TV Game List: Domestic • Overseas Edition (1971–2005) . October 13, 2006 . Amusement News Agency . ja . Japan . 978-4990251215 . 113–4 .
  2. Capcom's S.F. II Turbo Kit May Arrive Early Dec. . RePlay . October 1992 . 18 . 1 . 14 .
  3. Street Fighter: The Evolution of Greatness . RePlay . December 1992 . 18 . 3 . 3 .
  4. Web site: Turbo Street Fighter II Champion Edition installation instructions. The Arcade Manual Database.
  5. Street Fighter II Turbo Import Review . Super Play . September 1993.
  6. Web site: Super NES Classic Edition. Nintendo of America, Inc.. September 29, 2017. September 29, 2017. September 28, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170928025849/https://www.nintendo.com/super-nes-classic. live.
  7. Web site: Fan creates a fighting stick for the Virtual Boy . January 9, 2019 . March 24, 2023 . March 24, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230324173436/https://gonintendo.com/stories/326168-fan-creates-a-fighting-stick-for-the-virtual-boy . live .
  8. Web site: Street Fighter II Has Somehow Been Ported to Virtual Boy . February 10, 2015 . March 24, 2023 . March 24, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230324173436/https://kotaku.com/street-fighter-ii-has-somehow-been-ported-to-virtual-bo-1684937248 . live .
  9. Web site: Street Fighter II for Virtual Boy is red and amazing . August 26, 2013 . March 24, 2023 . March 24, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230324173433/https://venturebeat.com/games/street-fighter-ii-for-virtual-boy-is-red-and-amazing/ . live .
  10. Game Machine's Best Hit Games 25 - テーブル型TVゲーム機 (Table Videos). Game Machine. 442. Amusement Press, Inc.. 1 February 1993. 25. ja.
  11. ja:第7回 ゲーメスト大賞 〜 ヒットゲーム BEST 10 〜 インカム中心 . 7th Gamest Awards – Hit Games: Best 10 – Income Center . . December 27, 1993 . 107 (February 1994) . 20–43 (39) . ja. alternate url
  12. Top Coin-Ops of March 1993 . . April 1993 . 1 . 8 (May 1993) . 14 .
  13. Top Coin-Ops of April 1993 . . May 11, 1993 . 1 . 9 (June 1993) . 14 .
  14. Top Coin-Ops of June 1993 . . July 22, 1993 . 1 . 11 (August 1993) . 16 .
  15. Game Center Poll: Top Games . RePlay . November 1993 . 19 . 2 . 142 .
  16. Weekly Top 30 (7月12日〜7月18日) . . 13 August 1993 . 243 . 14 to 15 . ja.
  17. Weekly Top 30 (7月19日〜7月25日) . Famicom Tsūshin. 244/245 . 20 August 1993 . 14 to 15 . ja.
  18. Web site: Platinum Titles . September 30, 2013 . . November 2, 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150208030840/http://www.capcom.co.jp/ir/english/business/million.html . February 8, 2015 .
  19. ja:第7回 ゲーメスト大賞 . 7th Gamest Awards . . December 27, 1993 . 107 (February 1994) . 20–43 . ja. alternate url
  20. January 1994. Top Titles of 1993. Nintendo Power. 56. 2–5. January 23, 2022.
  21. July 1996 . Top 100 Games of All Time . GamesMaster . 44 . 78 . July 14, 2022 . December 11, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211211224737/https://retrocdn.net/images/c/cf/GamesMaster_UK_044.pdf . live .
  22. The 10 Best Arcade Games of All Time . Electronic Gaming Monthly. 100 . . November 1997. 130.
  23. 100 Best Games of All Time . Electronic Gaming Monthly. 100 . . November 1997. 155. Note: The intro to the article (on page 100) states that the list covers console video games only, meaning PC games and arcade games were not eligible.
  24. Web site: Knight. Rich. April 30, 2018. The Best Super Nintendo Games of All Time. 2022-02-16. Complex. en. September 22, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220922115315/https://www.complex.com/pop-culture/the-100-best-super-nintendo-games/. live.