![street fighter iii new generation ryu street fighter iii new generation ryu](https://static.wikia.nocookie.net/gameideas/images/1/1b/Street_Fighter_III_Ultra_Challengers_Wallpaper.jpg)
Ryu vs Dan The King of Fighters '95 playthrough (Neo Geo CD) Classic Game Room - MS. Ugh.Streets of Rage 4 : SoR2 Blaze's Kikoshou Misses Target The King of Fighters '98 playthrough (Playstation) The King of Fighters '98 playthrough (Playstation) The King of Fighters '95 playthrough (SEGA Saturn) Street Fighter. Except it wasn't there and all I got was a dull grassland with animal silhouettes in the background. Complete models Fast-Anime: 1/8 Street Fighter III 3rd Strike Fighters Legendary Ryu - 10920. Years later when I was older and finally had a Dreamcast, I quickly hurried to fight Elena wanting to relive that memory. I remember when the transition hit and the bridge fell to take us to stage 2.my jaw dropped. I remember first playing New Generation in an arcade in some amusement park when I was a scrubby 10 year old some older guy kicked my ass and we were playing on Elena's stage.
![street fighter iii new generation ryu street fighter iii new generation ryu](https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/superiorbattles/images/2/26/Ryu-SFV.png)
#STREET FIGHTER III NEW GENERATION RYU SERIES#
Capcom did the same thing with the Alpha series too IMO - Alpha 2 seems to have great presentation with stages and arcade mode art while 3 gets funkier with the music and gameplay but strips back a lot of the stages to their bare essentials and makes everyone's story end with fighting Bison, which is kinda dumb. Ian Rozylo as Ken Masters Marshall Bingham as Balrog Gigi Neil as Eliza Masters Darren E Scott as Ryu Kelvin Lum as Gouken Nick Baric as Head Shadaloo Guard Darryl King as Shadaloo Scientist Aidan Pringle as M. It seems to me that Third Stroke doubled down on the fighting mechanics at the expense of a lot of other things - the gameplay is undoubtedly fantastic and the game kicks ass in the music department, but man does it feel bland when it comes to stages, transitions, the LACK of those killer victory screens, etc. Street Fighter: Psychosis is a live-action short film based on Street Fighter series. I have always preferred the presentation of New Generation and 2nd Impact as well. At this point I'm going to let the pictures do the talking, so sit back and enjoy some 90s fighting game goodness: That being said, let's start off by looking at the stages themselves. The games name as it appears on the cabinet is Three: A New Generation of Street Fighters. The aim of this thread is not to argue about which _ is better than _, it's to admire these gorgeous games and appreciate the good old days of 2D fighting games. Street Fighter III: New Generation is a fighting video game in Capcoms Street Fighter series, originally released as a coin-operated arcade game in 1997. People often talk about how Street Fighter III: 3rd Strike is the pinnacle of 2D fighting games in terms of its graphics, but if you ask me that honour still goes to, and always will go to, its two predecessors. Street Fighter III: New Generation and Street Fighter III: 2nd Impact are now just over 20 years old (both games released in 1997), but the use of Capcom's CPS3 hardware resulted in one of the most beautiful and staggeringly good looking games of the 2D era, if not all time. So I've been thinking of making this thread for a couple of days now due to the Street Fighter 30th Anniversary Collection finally adding these games to a console other than the Dreamcast, but after Capcom put out their final retrospective video on the Street Fighter III series I decided to go through with it.