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Mileena is a character in the Mortal Kombat fighting game franchise by Midway Games and NetherRealm Studios.Introduced in Mortal Kombat II (1993), Mileena was initially depicted as a clone of the Edenian princess Kitana, created by Shang Tsung with the blood of the fictional Tarkatan species.
Mortal Kombat: Deception is a 2004 ... The Fatalities were developed by a group of animators led by Carlos Pesina; they comically described Mileena's Fatality in ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 2 January 2025. Sixty of the Mortal Kombat franchise's characters featured in Armageddon (2006) This is a list of playable and boss characters from the Mortal Kombat fighting game franchise and the games in which they appear. Created by Ed Boon and John Tobias, the series depicts conflicts between ...
The Mortal Kombat franchise will always be remembered as one of the goriest games of all time, mostly because of the outrageous fatalities that bring more carnage than any fighting game-- ever.
An example of Fatality from Mortal Kombat 1. Fatality is a gameplay feature in the Mortal Kombat fighting game series, in which the victor of the match's final round inflicts a brutal finishing move onto their defeated opponent. Prompted by the announcer saying "Finish Him" or "Finish Her", players have a short time window to execute a Fatality ...
The Mortal Kombat series, particularly its "Fatalities", was a source of major controversy in at the time of its release. [note 1] A moral panic over the series, fueled by outrage from the mass media, [10] resulted in a Congressional hearing and helped to pave the way for the creation of the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) game rating system.
Mortal Kombat 3 is a 1995 fighting game ... All of the different styles of finishing moves featured in Mortal Kombat II (Fatalities, ... (Kitana/Mileena ...
Mortal Kombat II is a fighting game originally produced by Midway for the arcades in 1993. It was ported to multiple home systems, including MS-DOS, Amiga, Game Boy, Game Gear, Sega Genesis, 32X, Sega Saturn, Super Nintendo Entertainment System, and PlayStation only in Japan, mostly in licensed versions developed by Probe Software (later renamed to Probe Entertainment for some ports of the ...