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Street Fighter IV (ストリートファイター IV, Sutorīto Faitā Fō) is a 2008 fighting game developed by Capcom and Dimps and published by Capcom. [8] It was the first original main entry in the series since Street Fighter III in 1997, a hiatus of eleven years.
Super Street Fighter IV (スーパーストリートファイター IV, Sūpā Sutorīto Faitā Fō) is a 2.5D fighting game produced by Capcom.It is an updated version of Street Fighter IV and has been said to mark the definitive end of the Street Fighter IV series. [1]
In addition to the characters below, several titles have also introduced characters to the Street Fighter series that are considered canon only to their respective media. . This includes the Monitor Cyborg for the Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie and related game, Shin from the browser video game Street Fighter Online: Mouse Generation, and the characters Blade, Arkane, Kyber, F7, and ...
Akuma reappears in Street Fighter IV, being one of the main antagonists and once again a secret boss in the Arcade Mode as well as an unlockable character in both console versions. A new form of Akuma, known as Oni (狂オシキ鬼, Kuruoshiki Oni, lit. The Mad Demon), was confirmed in Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition by leaked videos. [15]
Super Street Fighter IV: 3D Edition is a 2011 fighting video game developed and published by Capcom for the Nintendo 3DS handheld game console.Released as a launch title in all regions, it is a port of the console game Super Street Fighter IV; the '3D' in its name refers to the 3DS hardware stereoscopic capabilities rather than a change to the in-game graphics or gameplay style.
Street Fighter II (Game Boy – this version combined elements from the first 4 versions of SFII (Street Fighter II: The World Warrior to Super Street Fighter II)) Street Fighter II: The World Warrior ( PlayStation – part of Street Fighter Collection Vol. 2 (US), Capcom Generation Vol. 5: Fighters (Japan))
Street Fighter 30th Anniversary Collection was developed by Digital Eclipse and published by Capcom. [4] To provide minimal latency in online play, the development team implemented "rewind" technology and allowed players to adjust their own input latency via an in-game menu.
Street Fighter IV brought back the Metsu Hadouken, though it instead acts simply like a more powerful variant of the Shinkuu Hadouken. Street Fighter V brought back the Denjin Hadouken, which can be performed by performing the Shinku Hadouken while in Ryu's V Trigger mode. In Street Fighter 6, one of Luke's taunts involves him mocking a Hadoken.