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Fighter's History - TV Tropes

  • ️Wed Apr 11 2012

Fighter's History (Video Game)

Fighter's History was a short-lived Fighting Game series by Data East. The first game was released in March 1993 on arcades. It also featured the protagonist of their 1987 platformer, Karnov, as a Final Boss.

Nevertheless, it is mainly remembered for being THE Street Fighter II ripoff.Note Capcom filed a lawsuit against them, but they lost, and the game was successful enough to get a port to Super Famicom and SNES the following year. 1994 also saw a sequel titled Fighter's History Dynamite (also known as Karnov's Revenge, named after the final boss) and a spin-off Super Famicom game titled Fighter's History: Mizoguchi Kiki Ippatsu!! Translation No new entry to the series has been made, since Data East filed for bankruptcy in 2003, aside from a Japan-only crossover with Fatal Fury for cellphones made by SNK. The original game came to the Nintendo Switch's SNES app in 2022.

Has a character sheet in the works.

This game provides examples of:

  • Alliterative Name: The tournament in both games is called the Great Grapple.
  • Attack Its Weak Point: This game uses an unusual stun system. Rather than doing a certain amount of damage as quickly as possible, attacking a certain part of the body will cause an article of clothing to be knocked off, such as Ryoko's headband, the lightning bolt on Ray's shirt or Feilin's breastplate (don't worry, she is wearing something under it). At this point, the character becomes dizzy for that round. That area also becomes an actual weak point, causing the character to take more damage at that point when it's exposed.
  • Beauty Is Never Tarnished:
    • The worst the female competitors get are tattered clothing, a few hairs out of place, and bandages. The guys... aren't so lucky.
    • Heck, the "hairs out of place thing" is all that Feilin gets!
  • Breakout Character: Mizoguchi.
  • Calling Your Attacks
  • Camp Gay: Clown's endings in the Japanese versions actually involves him trying to pick up younger men. The endings were altered in the English versions to downplay Clown's homosexuality, yet the manual for Karnov's Revenge still makes references to his sexual preference by stating that he likes "young boys" and is seeking an "attractive male fighter."
  • Canon Immigrant:
  • Cast of Expies:
  • Child Prodigy: Ryoko is one, having studied Judo since the age of three.
  • Clothing Damage: A minor form that is an actual mechanic; see Attack Its Weak Point above.
  • Continuity Nod: Karnov still has the power of God, which he inherited in the end of the Famicom version of his self-titled game.
  • Creepy Changing Painting: In Clown's Home Stage within Fighter's History Dynamite, there is a large painting of Clown posing with a rose and a smug smile stamped on his face. After he is defeated in the first round, the painting changes to Clown looking on in despair.
  • Cross Counter: The characters in the title screen.
  • Demoted to Extra: Ray, Marstorious, Jean, Samchay, and Matlok in the Super Famicom spin-off. They're not playable fighters, but they still appear in the game's Story Mode.
  • Denser and Wackier: Fighter's History and Karnov's Revenge are fairly straight-forward tournament fighters no goofier than Street Fighter II got at its silliest moments. Mizoguchi Kiki Ippatsu!!, on the other hand, sees Mizoguchi getting into a series of fights across the world to recover a statue missing from his favorite takoyaki spot and features several outlandish scenarios like him getting Double German Suplexed by Marstorius's wife or him getting strapped to the outside of Jean's private jet.
  • Extremity Extremist: Liu Yungmie, the token teen Taekwondo trainee, uses kicking attacks exclusively (and is one of relatively few fighting game characters to launch her projectiles with her feet).
  • Expy: Most of which are based on Street Fighter, naturally:
    • Ray is Ken Masters as an attorney/detective.
    • Mizoguchi seems to be partially based on Momotaro Tsurugi from Sakigake!! Otokojuku, while also taking the opportunity to parody Ryu.
    • Matlok and Jean are European cousins of Guile (with a few dashes of Vega in the latter case).
    • Marstorius is an Italian Zangief.
    • Yungmie is more or less a Korean Chun-Li, although how explicitly varies from appearance to appearance. Feilin is another Chun-Li wannabe, albeit less so.
    • Zazie is a Kenyan, more serious Dee Jay. He also vaguely resembles Jeffry McWild. Furthermore, his stage features a woman in the background (his wife? a female relative? a friend/colleague/acquaintance?) cheering him on, much like Sari would do for her husband Dhalsim in Street Fighter Alpha 2, Alpha 3, SSFIV, and SFV.
  • Flash of Pain: Character-specific weakpoints flash white when about to fly off.
  • Guest Fighter:
  • Large Ham: Karnov ("BALLOOOOOOOOOOOOOOON!"), Marstorius ("DOUBLE German!"), Zazie ("Hell FIRE!"), whatever the hell Mizoguchi is shouting...
  • Mundane Made Awesome/Rule of Cool:
    • Fighting Marstorius in front of the Fontana di Trevi? Oh yeah.
    • How 'bout fighting Ray at the gates of the friggin' United States Congress?
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed: Like her World Heroes 2 and Rumble Roses counterparts, Ryoko Kano was based on real world Judo champion Ryoko Tani.
  • Razor Wind: Matlok's Spinning Wave.
  • Rubber-Band A.I.: Once the computer recovers from being dizzied after their weak spot is exposed and knocked off, there's a good chance you've already lost the round regardless of how well things were going beforehand.
  • Spotlight-Stealing Squad: Ray is the main character of the series, but Mizoguchi became more popular and even starred in the Super Famicom-exclusive final game in the series.
  • Spotlight-Stealing Title: Fighter's History Dynamite was released as Karnov's Revenge overseas due to the cult popularity of Karnov.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: Feilin is a narcissistic, opera-loving girly girl, while Ryoko is a Bifauxnen tomboy who hates shoes.