Sega Dreamcast
Entertainment System video game review
Street Fighter III: Third Strike (Fighting, 1-2 Players) |
Street Fighter III: Third Strike is nothing more than an attempt by CAPCOM to wring out another buck of its top man-whore, the wandering brawler Ryu. From the first Street Fighter to all of the modifications made on its sequel and passed off as brand new games, to the Alpha prequels that beat out the Star Wars prequels by 5 years, and through the psychotic Marvel branchoffs, Ryu has seen it all and has changed very little. Unfortunately, neither have his enemies. Same ol' Bison and Vega, Barlog and arch-nemesis Sagat. The stage music hasn't changed much and is even harped upon in other games. That all began to change with the original sequel to Street Fighter II, sequentially titled Street Fighter III.
The original Street Fighter III brought over the usuals of Ken and Ryu, but with better animations, new characters altogether, new stages and a new art style. There was a catch to all this cool stuff: you only had the choice of ONE Super-Art(the Super Attack from previous games) out of 3 to choose from. That made it hard to trip up your enemy, but they made the Super-Arts work at different levels on the SuperMeter so that one Super-Art can be used 3 times with good damage, while a Super-Art that uses up the entire bar will cause massive amounts of damage. There are moves that I wanna talk about, but only within the context of Third Strike, because those same moves can be found in Street Fighter III and its sequel, Street Fighter III: Second Impact.
Third Strike, the third "sequel" to the third sequel in the Street Fighter series (read that last sentence back and you'll understand how ludicrous that should be to CAPCOM execs, but is not) brings back some characters from the Street Fighter III series, adding new ones and one revamped old-school character. The formula would seem to say, despite its features, that this is nothing but an old retread of the other Street Fighter III games. That's where Third Strike changes it up with a very significant change to the music.
CAPCOM went straight hip-hop.
This game holds a special merit in my life, due to the fact that they got a fighting game right on the money. Let's start with it's name of Street Fighter III: Third Strike.
It was a shock when I played the game and heard hip-hop beats blaring as I beat my opponents and in the menus. It also allwed me to get deeper into the game than I ever wanted to. There are several instances where Street Fighter gets me and keeps me playing. Example of that are:
It took me long enough to say, but this game is awesome. The music is so great and makes you wanna go. The characters are good, especially new additions like Makoto(a karate mistress with exceptional power and spirit), Remy(a Goth version of Guile & Charlie), Hugo(a refugee of the Mad Gear gang from Final Fight) and Q(aka "the Unknown", neither man or machine). The most significant addition to the Street Fighter III character lineup was the reintroduction of the first female character in Street Fighter, Chun-Li Zhang.
She's dropped her Street Fighter Alpha tracksuit and is back in her traditional costume. Her fighting style still has the high jumps and quick kicks, but shows a bit more grace in its animations. Chun-Li's Spinning Bird Kick has been changed so it doesn't look like she's doing a HEADspring and then spinning, but using a spinning momentum to get off the ground; so fluid it makes me happy to see it. She doesn't have a KIkosho, but her other supers are mean. Even her win poses are smooth, living things: Miss Zhang bows upon entering and the "V for victory" win pose is changed from static female-looking sprite pointing fingers upward to an excellent representation of Chun-Li having a silly moment.
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Street Fighter III: Third Strike is a milestone in gaming for me; it put almost everything into a fighting game AND not a lot of people hogged it up at the arcade. When something like that happens to a fighting game, that means there's something in it for me and will probably earn a high mark with me. With that said, Street Fighter III: Third Strike gets a rating of 8.
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