Gaming
 

Street Fighter

From Wikia Gaming, your source for walkthroughs, games, guides, and more!


Street Fighter

Developer(s) Capcom
Publisher(s) Capcom
Release date 1987 (NA)
Genre Fighting
Mode(s) Single player, 1-2 players
Age rating(s) N/A
Platform(s) Arcade
Credits | Soundtrack | Codes | Walkthrough


Street Fighter is one of the earliest examples of a fighting game, featuring only two playable characters. It is the beginning of the revolutionary Street Fighter series. The only characters that made it into the next game, Street Fighter II, were Ryu, Ken and Sagat. Characters like Birdie and Adon were later reintroduced.

The story mode featured the player going on a world tour beating up fools. This tour starts in Japan, goes to the United States, then China, England and Thailand. Each country features two different fighters.

[edit] Playable Characters

[edit] Unplayable Characters

[edit] Source


Street Fighter series
Main series
Street Fighter - Street Fighter II - Street Fighter II: Champion Edition - Street Fighter II: Turbo
Super Street Fighter II - Super Street Fighter II: Turbo
Street Fighter III: New Generation - Street Fighter III: Double Impact - Street Fighter III: Third Strike - Street Fighter IV
Spinoffs
Alpha series: Street Fighter Alpha | Street Fighter Alpha II | Street Fighter Alpha III
EX series: Street Fighter EX | Street Fighter EX II | Street Fighter EX III
Other games: Street Fighter II pinball - Street Fighter: The Movie (arcade game) - Street Fighter: The Movie
Media
Street Fighter (film) - Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie - Street Fighter Alpha: The Movie - Street Fighter Alpha: Generations - Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li
Street Fighter II V - Street Fighter (TV series)
Street Fighter comics
Related games & series
Capcom vs SNK series - Marvel vs Capcom series - Namco × Capcom
Final Fight series - Capcom Fighting Evolution
Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo - Pocket Fighter


Street Fighter stub
This Street Fighter-related article is a stub. You can help by adding to it.

Stubs are articles that writers have begun work on, but are not yet complete enough to be considered finished articles.