Fatal Fury: King of Fighters


Fatal Fury: King of Fighters, known as in Japan, is a 1991 fighting game developed and published by SNK for the Neo Geo MVS arcade system. It was later ported to numerous home consoles, including the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1992 and Sega Genesis in 1993. Fatal Fury was SNK's first fighting game for the Neo Geo system, and served as the first entry in their Fatal Fury series. The three playable characters are the Bogard brothers Terry and Andy alongside their friend Joe Higashi. In the story they oppose their nemesis Geese Howard, the host of "The King of Fighters" tournament where the player must use martial arts to defeat enemies until becoming the champion and reaching Geese.
The game was designed by former Capcom employee Takashi Nishiyama, the creator of the original Street Fighter. Fatal Fury placed more emphasis on the timing of special moves as well as storytelling. The character of Terry Bogard was originally going to be used in Street Fighter but was scrapped in favor of the SNK project. Nishiyama personally developed the game as his own response to Street Fighter II. The two final bosses Geese and Billy Kane were influenced by the film The Godfather.
Fatal Fury inspired multiple sequels published by SNK following its success. There have also been several original video animations and manga adaptation based on the story. Its IP and Art of Fighting share the same continuity by placing a younger Geese in the second installment, Art of Fighting 2, whereas Art of Fighting lead Ryo Sakazaki would return in the remake Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition. Both Fatal Fury and Art of Fighting became the basis for the later The King of Fighters games by SNK where Terry, Ryo and other SNK protagonists fight alongside other crossover characters created by SNK in new tournaments. Critical response to Fatal Fury was positive, drawing positive comparison to Street Fighter II based on special moves and visuals.

Gameplay

The gameplay follows the typical formula of most fighting games: the player competes against their opponent in best two-out-of-three matches. The play controls consist of an eight directional joystick and three attack buttons: punch, kick and throw. Each of the playable characters has special techniques that are performed by inputting specific commands in combination with the joystick and buttons. The input methods for special moves are shown to the player during the course of the game, as opposed to being given in an instruction card in the game's cabinet.
The most novel aspect of Fatal Fury was the addition of two-lane battles. Many stages featured two rows, a background row, and a foreground row. Players can change between rows at any time other than in the Single Player Mode, where they have to wait for the CPU opponent to change rows before they can in almost every stage. The player is not required, however, to do so. When a second player joins during the middle of a one-player fight, instead of postponing the current battle for a match between the two players, the game will make both players team up against the current CPU opponent in a two-on-one match before their battle takes place. After every other match in the single-player tournament, the player will participate in a bonus round mini-game involving an arm wrestling match against a machine. The player must tap the A button rapidly to win these mini-games.

Plot

Terry and Andy were unrelated orphans who raised themselves on the streets of South Town. They were soon adopted by Jeff Bogard, a master martial artist. A few years after being adopted by Jeff, both Terry and Andy witnessed the brutal murder of their adoptive father at the hands of Geese Howard: a ruthless businessman and expert martial artist who rules South Town's criminal underworld as a merciless crime boss. Geese, who was once Jeff's rival, had murdered Jeff when the latter had tried to expose Geese's criminal activities to the public. Knowing that they weren't strong enough and needed more training to confront Geese, the brothers made an oath to spend a decade to fine tune their martial arts before trying to avenge their adoptive father. Terry chose to wander in his home country, combining his self-taught street fighting techniques with the Hakkyokuseiken fighting skills he learned from both his adoptive father and his mentor, Tung Fu Rue who is the shih-fu of both the art of Hakkyokuseiken and the art of Bajiquan. Andy decided to perfect his own martial arts style in Japan to differentiate himself from his older brother by being taught the Shiranui-ryū Ninjutsu and a form of empty-handed combat called Koppōken.
A decade later in 1991, Geese Howard has organized a fighting tournament, dubbed "The King of Fighters". Terry reunites with Andy after the latter returns to South Town from Japan. After the Bogard brothers pay respects to Jeff's grave, they encounter and befriend a Japanese Muay Thai champion named Joe Higashi from Thailand and learn about the KOF tournament hosted by Geese. Determined to avenge their adoptive father's death, Terry and Andy enter KOF alongside Joe and fight against many competitors, including Tung Fu Rue who had wanted to test the brothers out in making sure they were ready for their potential battle against Geese. Despite their best effort, both Andy and Joe were badly injured after defeating two of Geese's fighters, Raiden and Hwa Jai respectively, leaving Terry to continue on alone and facing off against Geese's right-hand man Billy Kane within the final match of the tournament. Although Terry succeeds in defeating Billy and winning the tournament, he is suddenly captured by two of Geese's henchmen and sent to Geese's personal tower by force, leading to a one-on-one showdown against the crime boss himself. Geese is a formidable opponent for Terry, but the latter gains the upper hand during their battle and defeats the former with a powerful jump kick, causing Geese to fall from his tower and plummet to his death. As Terry, who had finally avenged his adoptive father's death, leaves the tournament victorious, Andy feels a mixed sense of closure and returns to Japan to continue his martial arts training, while Joe, who has said his goodbyes to the brothers after the tournament's conclusion, travels back to Thailand in order to continue his Muay Thai training.

Characters

At the beginning of the game, the player is given the option to select one fighter which is either Terry, Andy, or Joe. The player is then given the next option to select from one of four fighters as their first opponent: Duck King, Richard Meyer, Michael Max, and Tung Fu Rue. After defeating their first opponent, the player faces the other three opponents in the following order: Richard, Michael, Duck, Tung. The cycle begins at whichever opponent the player has selected. The three bosses before the final boss Geese Howard are fought in the following order: Hwa Jai, Raiden and Billy Kane.
;Competitors
  • Terry Bogard - an American martial arts expert seeking to avenge his father's death.
  • Andy Bogard - Terry's younger brother, who learned Koppōjutsu in Japan.
  • Joe Higashi - a Japanese Muay Thai master and a friend to the Bogard brothers.
;Challengers
  • Duck King - a street dancing talent who uses a "rhythmical" fighting style.
  • Richard Meyer - a capoeira master with numerous kick techniques.
  • Michael Max - a Catholic boxer who has a projectile attack called the Tornado Upper.
  • Tung Fu Rue - a meek, elderly Bajiquan master. After taking enough damage, he transforms into a musclebound version of himself for a set amount of time before reverting.
;Bosses
  • Hwa Jai - a Muay Thai master from Thailand who gains his strength from drinking an unknown liquor. His special technique is a flying knee kick called the Dragon Kick, similar to Joe's Tiger Kick.
  • Raiden - a heel professional wrestler, known for ruthlessly manhandling his opponents in the ring. After moving to South Town in search of stronger fighters to face, he was hired as one of Geese Howard's henchmen. His special move is the Vapor Breath.
  • Billy Kane - a Bōjutsu master who serves as the tournament's undefeated champion. In his signature move, he throws his staff in front of his opponent, then cowers in a defensive position until Geese's bodyguard Ripper tosses Kane a spare.
;Final boss
  • Geese Howard - the final boss of the game. An underworld crime boss and the sponsor of the "King of Fighters" tournament. After defeating Billy, the player's character is kidnapped by Geese's men and taken to his building, Geese Tower, for the game's final battle. His fighting style is aikido and has a projectile attack similar to Terry's Power Wave called the Reppuken. He can also slam his opponent after blocking a close-range attack, this technique is called the Atemi Nage. When the player loses to Geese, instead of the standard continue screen, they witness their character falling off from Geese Tower. However, if the player wins, their character will knock off Geese from his building, seemingly killing him.

    Development

Fatal Fury: King of Fighters was designed by Takashi Nishiyama, the creator of the original Street Fighter at Capcom. After leaving Capcom for SNK, Nishiyama wanted to create a fighting game with a storyline and characters that were easier to empathize with, something he wasn’t able to achieve with Street Fighter. Fatal Fury, which Nishiyama envisioned as a spiritual successor to Street Fighter, was developed around the same time as Street Fighter II. While Street Fighter II placed more emphasis on combos, Fatal Fury placed more emphasis on the timing of special moves as well as storytelling, which are two features that he failed on during the original Street Fighter. Developed at the same time as Capcom's own Street Fighter sequel, Nishiyama referred to Fatal Fury as "my Street Fighter II."
The sound team had between four and five months to develop the audio. The voice acting was done by the staff themselves which was disapproved by higher ups resulting in next installments having professional voice actors. According to Nobuyuki Kuroki, "The Fatal Fury series was always about macho fighters", something which resulted in changes in later installments when the developers believed the games were becoming outdated in comparison to their other famous IP, The King of Fighters. Veteran developer Yasuyuki Oda believes the detailed facial expressions and 2D backgrounds were the secret behind Fatal Furys fame. Oda also believes the fact that the cast does not look like actual fighters left a major impact. Nishiyama originally created Terry for Street Fighter as a Caucasian man wearing a leather jacket; they decided to make the main playable character a dougi-clad karateka named Ryu instead. They still wanted to use this concept in a game; after their move to SNK, they implemented him as a playable character in Fatal Fury. Terry's original appearance was made with the intention that he did not look like a martial artist, contrasting the looks of his brother Andy. In the making of the series, Terry and his brother Andy were characterized as the heroic leads, contrasting with the comical Joe Higashi. The SNK staff described his original design as "the most macho, stand-out, original Terry". A sumo wrestler was meant to be part of the roster but was removed by Michael Max. SNK avoided Fatal Fury to be too similar to Street Fighter II. Andy originally wore black costumes and had short hair. A character model named Tau To would serve as the basis for Hwa Jai. Duck King, meanwhile, was originally known as Ellie Jones with the designer having several troubles with him. However, the main designer had no problems with Geese as he enjoyed his Japanese-loving characterization. Tung Fu was originally going to appear younger than in the finished product.
Youchiro Soeda was in charge of the animation of most of the characters in the game. Although Geese was not modeled after any famous person or fictional character, SNK based him on Italian mafia. SNK had multiple doubts how his design should be until it was decided he would wear a gi based on martial arts, as well as his overall name, likeness, and appearance being references to the three boss characters Black Gallop, Geese, and King from SNK's previous Neo Geo game The Super Spy. Despite being American, SNK wanted him to be a man inspired by Japanese culture resulting in his final look. Geese became famous for his special moves which allows him to interrupt the player's attacks and counterattack in a grab. Sub-boss Billy Kane obtained similar fame with both Geese and him having The Godfather-like influences that were expanded on in later games.