//=time() ?>
Mine is Base Goku's Kaioken.
It's an open-ended Deadly Rave dude. To me it's the coolest thing because it gives players freedom to end in whatever side of the screen they want, dump meter if they wanna kill and it has a special ender?
I LOVE it.
Strider Hiryu wasn't part of the roster in Marvel Vs. Capcom 3. This is because of licensing issues between Capcom and his co-owners, Moto Kikaku.
Because of fan demand, these issues were resolved, and he was one of the first characters to be revealed for UMvC3 and MvCI.
Today is Rugal Bernstein's birthday.
Thanks for all the lost quarters.
In Marvel Vs. Capcom, Ryu's Theme isn't a remix of his theme but of the SFIITWW Opening Theme, with his own theme's melody being thrown in at the last part of it.
This is because Ryu isn't representing himself alone, but Ken and Akuma as well.
https://t.co/bA27FvvRD0
Something I love to think about is that Fatal Fury: King of Fighters (1991) and Garou: Mark of the Wolves (1999) run on the exact same hardware.
It's not even the final Neo Geo game by a LONG long shot, but the difference in quality of everything is mind blowing to me.
Paris is Ky Kiske's stage, Dizzy eventually became his wife, and Kliff was Ky's mentor and superior, before passing away in the first Guilty Gear.
Marvel has its own set of AUs each with their own numeration, the main one being Earth-616.
All Capcom crossover games with Marvel are part of their Earth-30847. This universe seems to have shared a lot with the original 616 universe with sprinkles of the others here and there.
Both Zangief and Soda Popinski had at one point the first name of "Vodka".
Zangief's Vodka name was a working name before picking the final name, whereas Soda's was his name in the Arcades but was censored from the NES release of Punch-Out!! onwards.
The real world is a dungeon in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, labeled as the World Tour. In it, you can find several Spirits from the Street Fighter series, culminating in a final battle with Akuma's Spirit.
Moving from spirit to spirit parodies the movement of the plane from SFII.