Let’s Compare ( Street Fighter 2 )

Video Locations.

Arcade 0:25
Commodore 64 1:20
NES 2:15
Gameboy 3:09
DOS 4:03
Amiga 4:58
Sega MS 5:53
tg16 6:47
Sega Genesis / Mega Drive 7:42
Super Nintendo 8:36
Sharp X68000 9:29
3DO 10:24
Playstation 11:20
Sega Saturn 12:14
FM Towns 13:09

Description Source:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_Fighter_II

Street Fighter II: The World Warrior (ストリートファイターⅡ -The World Warrior-?) is a competitive fighting game originally released for the arcades in 1991. It is the arcade sequel to the original Street Fighter released in 1987 and was Capcom’s fourteenth title that ran on the CP System arcade hardware. Street Fighter II improved upon the many concepts introduced in the first game, including the use of command-based special moves and a six-button configuration, while offering players a selection of multiple playable characters, each with their own unique fighting style.

The success of Street Fighter II is credited for starting the fighting game boom during the 1990s which inspired other game developers to produce their own fighting game franchises, popularizing the genre. Its success led to a sub-series of updated versions (see below), each offering additional features and characters over previous versions, as well as several home versions. In 1993, sales of Street Fighter II exceeded $1.5 billion in revenue[1] and the Super NES port was Capcom’s best-selling consumer game of all time as of 2010.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Street_Fighter_2

Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers (スーパーストリートファイターⅡ -The New Challengers-?) is a head-to-head fighting game produced by Capcom originally released as a coin-operated arcade game in 1993. It is the fourth game in the Street Fighter II sub-series of Street Fighter games, following Street Fighter II: Hyper Fighting. In addition to refining and balancing the existing character roster from the previous installments, Super Street Fighter II also introduced four new characters. It was also the first game to be developed on Capcom’s CP System II hardware, which permitted more sophisticated graphics and audio over the original CP System hardware, used by the previous versions of Street Fighter II.

Super Street Fighter II was followed by Super Street Fighter II Turbo, a fifth version of Street Fighter II released during the following year 1994, which further refined the balance between characters and introduced additional new features.

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