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Human Killing Machine (unofficially titled as Street Fighter 2: Human Killing Machine and acronym-titled as H.K.M.) is a 2D fighting video game.The game was developed by British company Tiertex, who hired external team Blue Turtle (Nick Pavis and Leigh Christian) to produce the graphics, and published by U.S. Gold, released in March 1989.
The original Street Fighter II features a roster of eight playable characters. This includes Ryu and Ken—the main protagonists from Street Fighter —plus six new international newcomers. In the single-player tournament, the player fights the other seven main fighters, then the final opponents—a group of four CPU -only opponents known as ...
It refines and balances the existing character roster from the previous versions, and introduces four new characters, including Cammy and Dee Jay. It is the first game on Capcom ' s CP System II hardware, with more sophisticated graphics and audio over the original CP System hardware used in previous versions of Street Fighter II .
Street Fighter II: The World Warrior (ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, Atari ST, Amiga, MS-DOS) 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))
IGN ' s D. F. Smith cited Zangief as defining an archetype many later fighting game characters would utilize, and though he called him "a bit of a stereotype", he praised how well the character was portrayed and added that "it is hard to imagine a more perfect embodiment of the muscle-bound grappling goon."
The CP System II (CPシステムII, CP shisutemu 2), also known as Capcom Play System 2 [2] or CPS-2, is an arcade system board that Capcom first used in 1993 for Super Street Fighter II.
The Software Toolworks, Inc. (commonly abbreviated as Toolworks), was an American software and video game developer based in Novato, California. The company was founded by Walt Bilofsky in 1980 out of his Sherman Oaks garage, which he converted into an office, to develop software for the Heathkit H89 microcomputer .
This version was re-released for download on the North American PlayStation Network on October 18, 2011. The 1999 Dreamcast version, titled Street Fighter Alpha 3: Saikyo Dojo (or Street Fighter Zero 3: Saikyō-ryū Dōjō in Japan), uses all the added features from the PlayStation version of the game, but features a different World Tour mode ...