Street Fighter Ii Victory Guide

It is essentially Road Trip meets Enter the Dragon , and it works surprisingly well. If you love the cel-shaded, sweaty, muscular aesthetic of Fist of the North Star or JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure (Part 3), you will drool over Victory .

The animation quality fluctuates—it was a weekly TV series, not a movie—but the highs are astronomical. The character designs are fantastic. Ryu looks feral and hungry. Ken is a cocky golden retriever. Chun-Li is a sharp Interpol agent rather than just a trophy fighter. And Guile? He has the flattest top and the most American jawline ever committed to celluloid. Unlike later entries where fighters throw Hadoukens every three seconds, Victory treats energy attacks as a final, desperate trump card. street fighter ii victory

If you grew up in the 90s, your afternoons were ruled by two things: mashing buttons on a Super Nintendo and rushing home to watch animated adaptations of your favorite games. While everyone remembers the live-action train wreck that was the Street Fighter movie (shout out to Raul Julia’s immortal performance), there is a forgotten gem lurking in the shadowy alleys of Suzaku Castle. It is essentially Road Trip meets Enter the