Mortal Kombat - Project X Ikemen Go

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Here’s a structured blog post draft you can use or adapt for your site. It’s written for fighting game enthusiasts, modders, and curious Mortal Kombat fans. Inside ‘Mortal Kombat Project X Ikemen Go’: The Fan Engine That’s Rewriting MK’s Rules Mortal Kombat Project X Ikemen Go

It’s rough, unbalanced, and occasionally janky—but it’s also the most fun I’ve had with MK sprites in a decade. If you’re a fighting game tinkerer or a longtime fan of the klassic era, this project is worth a download. Inside ‘Mortal Kombat Project X Ikemen Go’: The

If you haven’t heard of it yet, imagine Mortal Kombat Trilogy remixed like a MUGEN dream, but running on the blisteringly fast, rollback-ready engine. This isn’t just another fan game. It’s a reimagining. This isn’t just another fan game

I spent a weekend labbing Project X v0.92 on a mid-range PC. The rollback netcode? Flawless in local tests. Online casual matches felt responsive even at 100+ ping.

The “Project X” team took the Ikemen Go skeleton and grafted on a massive roster of MK fighters—from Liu Kang and Scorpion to obscure 3D-era picks like Hotaru and Nitara. But here’s where it gets interesting: .

The combo system takes adjustment. Landing a teleport punch with Scorpion into a jump-in air combo into a spear reset feels illegal—and awesome. But some MK staples suffer. Zoning feels weaker without a block button, and wake-up game is more aggressive than traditional MK.