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Tekken is a fighting video game series developed by Namco and published by Namco Bandai.The series debuted in 1994 with the arcade version of Tekken and is one of the genre's and Namco's best-selling franchises, with over 55 million units sold, and is the 44th best-selling franchise of all time as of 2023.
Tekken 3 was also ported to the Game Boy Advance as Tekken Advance in 2001. [23] Tekken 6-based Tekken 3D: Prime Edition was released for the Nintendo 3DS in 2012. A free to play version of Tekken was released in 2013 for PSN as Tekken Revolution. Tekken Card Challenge was released on the WonderSwan, a Japan-exclusive handheld, in 1999. [24]
Tekken Tag Tournament 2: Bandai Namco Games: PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Arcade, Wii U: 2012 Super Robot Wars OG Saga: Masō Kishin II – Revelation of Evil God: PlayStation Portable: 2012 Dragon Ball Z: For Kinect: Spike Chunsoft: Xbox 360: 2012 Dragon Ball Z: Budokai HD Collection: Spike Chunsoft: PlayStation 3, Xbox 360: 2012 Tekken 3D: Prime ...
Tekken 7 introduces several new elements to the fighting system, such as Rage Arts and the Power Crush mechanic, making the game more beginner friendly than previous iterations in the series. Tekken 7 was a critical and commercial success, selling 12 million copies as of July 2024.
Street Fighter X Tekken – A crossover title with Namco's fighting series. It was announced by Yoshinori Ono at Comic Con 2010. It uses the Street Fighter IV engine and features tag team matches. Tekken X Street Fighter – Namco was developing it with their own Tekken 6 engine, as a 3D fighter. (unreleased)
Kingdom Hearts 358. The Kingdom Hearts series is long and often a bit confusing, having run for over 20 years with a dozen or so main series games that jump all over the place in the timeline.
The Transformers series in chronological order: If you insisted in watching the Transformers film series in chronological timeline order, it would be as follows: Transformers One (2024) Bumblebee ...
The Nintendo Entertainment System has a library of 1376 [a] officially licensed games released for the Japanese version, the Family Computer (Famicom), and its international counterpart, the NES, during their lifespans, plus 7 official multicarts and 2 championship cartridges.