Feb 7

I know I said no updates this week really (I’m still working on the project) but Magnetro sent this over to me and I figured it was worth a look for those of you wanting to know how to break the game with Urien’s Charge-Partition techniques. The editing is flat-out horrible but the information is the TRUTH.

What I really need to do is to stop playing DotA and start waking up early so I can do this stuff.

Popularity: 74% [?]

Jan 28

Slightly off-schedule: The player “Ken” is actually a friend of mine who I met at Family Fun Arcade a while back. Tall, black and handsome, he’s originally from Boston, and now resides in Japan… where he ended up winning a fricking Street Fighter Zero(Alpha) 2 tournament at Mi-Ka-Do.  This tournament apparently occured in October.

In other news, irrefutable evidence that Justin Wong was trained by the French surfaced yesterday… and a Boeing 747 Flight at LAX is delayed due to abnormal weather patterns resembling airborne pigs.

Popularity: 84% [?]

Jan 27

This is a tournament video from A-Cho Game Center, one of the top competitive fighting game arenas in Western Japan. It’s from a Guilty Gear XX: Accent Core tournament featuring a ridiculously insane performance by “Osaka B”, a Faust player who manages to score an OCV… TWICE. This video features one of them.

boingboingboingboing
*pogo*

Popularity: 81% [?]

Jan 24

This is a Japanese Twinkle Star Sprites match between 503(Sprites) and Kattachiyo(Really Till). For those unawares, Twinkle Star Sprites is one of the first versus shooter games ever made. It might even be the first. And if nothing else, it’s sickeningly cute.

A quick primer on the rules: You get two bombs, chargeable attacks, special attacks that can’t be killed like a typical enemy, and a Boss attack. You can either send the latter two by charging your super meter, or you can get a successful Reversal combo against the flashing fireball attacks.

A flashing fireball typically occurs like this: You fire off a 12 hit combo, sending three normal fireballs to your opponent. Your opponent manages to get a combo at the same time, and the area-effect explosions not only send three normal fireballs your way, but bounces back YOUR three fireballs at you. However, because they were yours in the first place, they now come back in a flashing state, which means if you bounce them back again, they reincarnate as un-counterable Special attacks, or as a Boss attack (depending on how many you hit in a combo).

Also, if a match takes too long, a cutesy version of Death appears, and his touch is an instant kill. The longer a match goes on, the harder he is to defeat, and the faster and more persistent he becomes.

Really Till, by the way, is a fairly low-tier character; her Charge attack has sucky range, sucky damage and no directional ability. It’s also fairly easy to dodge her Special attacks (those pudgy dragons) since they only travel in one direction and tend to appear ahead of you, not on top of you. However, she has a three-star(Max) agility rating, so she’s able to dodge just about anything.

Sprites, the transformed-with-bubz version of Ran, is a fairly basic character, if balanced. You can try the game out on GameTap (download their free client first), but for a true arcade experience, you’ll have to find a Neo Geo machine with the MVS cart installed.

And yes, this game is typically 2/3 rounds. However, most players aren’t good enough to survive for this long.

Links: Hardcore Gaming 101: Twinkle Star Sprites , GameTap (Play Twinkle for Free)

Popularity: 86% [?]

Jan 20

YouTube legend TheShend has made a reputation for himself of posting the best in 3rd Strike videos on the internet. (He would normally put up our Denjin RanBat vids too but we had an in-house YouTube plan that ended up falling flat on its face. >_<) Today is a feature on last year’s Super Bowl/World Cup/Olympics of arcade fighting games, Super Battle Opera.

The teams are:

Team Kokujin-San vs. Team Fourth Eternal Blizzard
Yuki Otoko (Akuma)   Umezono (Chun-Li)
Hirai (Ken)   Shiro Itachi (Makoto)
Momochi (Yun)   Matsuda (Yun)
     

This video is in multiple parts, so to watch the entire thing, you’ll have to check out the “Related Videos” on the right. The highlight of the video is the comeback that Momochi makes against Shiro Itachi near the end.

Popularity: 91% [?]

Jan 17

So there’s this indie game out there, a hardcore mashup of Megaman, Metroid, Castlevania and aRgH that’s known as I Wanna Be The Guy. The rules: You die in one hit, but you get unlimited lives, save points, and the freedom to explore the entire labyrinth. It breaks more copyright laws than Napster, but it’s an amusing source of speed runs, provided that you lack the intestinal fortitude to beat this game.Thanks to Nicholas Eckert aka Vidstudent for the link.

The other game video I’d like to highlight today is Bionic Commando: Rearmed.

… Just watch the movie, okay? *_*

Popularity: 100% [?]

Jan 14

This is a video from a recent Melty Blood: Act Cadenza ver.B tournament at Family Fun Arcade in Granada Hills, CA.

Matchup:

For the record, this match is heavily against Nero’s favor. Red Arc’s full-screen punishing abilities, zero-startup aerial fireballs and high attack priority are all capable of shutting down Nero’s ranged attacks, summon setups and corner traps. Fortunately, Red Arc isn’t capable of dealing massive amounts of damage at a time like other top-tier characters, but her upgraded air fireballs between ver.A and ver.B gave her a pressure game so effective that few characters have an adequate method of stopping it. Also, Nero is a low-damage character, averaging between 2300-2800 damage per combo, but has the highest defense in the game. More often than not, he’ll have to rely on a strategy of attrition, especially against more agile characters who can do 4500+ damage per opening.

Melty Mechanics

One feature unique to Melty Blood is the Damage Reduction system. Players must press a button right before an attack hits them to reduce the damage inflicted. Good players can soak up to 10-12% of a combo’s damage through successful reductions.

Melty Blood also has something akin to a Parry from SF3:3rd Strike, which is the Ex-Shield. However, unlike Parries, an Ex-Shield carries a 60% damage reduction for the subsequent combo. For someone who relies on Ex-Shields to compensate for difficult matchups, this can be a pretty severe handicap. Here’s to hoping that the system is adjusted for the next game in the series, Actress Again.

Popularity: 59% [?]