Developed by the now defunct Daft Co as well as long established developer HuneX Co. World Fighting is a PlayStation 2 exclusive fighting game published by D3Publisher and 505 GameStreet and released in Japan as a part of the Simple 2000 Series of budget titles under the title Simple 2000 Series Vol. 42 The Ishu Kakutougi.
World Fighting features 10 different fighters and four arenas, these arenas are nothing special just different coloured boxing rings, rather than a boxing match however it is more of a basic MMA style fighting system. World Fighting features versus mode for up to 2 players a tournament mode, survival mode and a training mode.
1. Intro 00:00
2. Gameplay 00:15
3. Outro 11:39
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So I was playing this PS2 game called 10,000 Bullets (ツキヨニサラバ) which is a third-person shooter that was developed by Blue Moon Studio and Metro Corporation and was published by Taito and 505 GameStreet only in the PAL version. The game was released on February 24, 2005 in Japan and October 6, 2005 for the PAL version. So I had this idea were Sparks from SuperKitties and Koppa from Shiren the Wanderer meeting Crow from 10,000 Bullets, mostly because I think it would be really interesting seeing Sparks and Koppa meeting Crow.
Release: April 25th, 1989 | GGF: Action, Beat 'Em Up, RPG | Developer(s): Technos Japan Corp. | Publisher(s): Technos Japan Corp., American Technos Inc., Sharp Corporation, Naxat Co., Ltd., Atlus U.S.A., Inc., Arc System Works Co., Ltd., 505 GameStreet, Aksys Games Localization, Inc., WindySoft Co., Ltd. | Platform(s): Family Computer/NES (1989), Sharp X86000 (1990), TurboGrafx CD (1993), Game Boy Advance (2004), Wii (2007), Nintendo 3DS (2012), Wii U (2015), Nintendo Switch (2018), PlayStation 4 (2020), Xbox One (2020)
The star of Splatter Master is a pumpkin-headed scarecrow child who packs twin chainsaws. He's the perfect protagonist for the setting he inhabits, a super-deformed, horror-themed world which takes a cue or two from Splatterhouse: Wanpaku Graffiti - you can even wear a hockey mask to increase the power of your chainsaw attacks.
Yakuza Fury is a fun game. It may be odd to state this, but it seems necessary to establish this before anything else, because this is a game that does not make the best first impression. For one thing, it's a budget game, originally released as part of D3 Publisher's ill-reputed Simple 2000 line. The cover art to 505 Gamestreet's European release - it didn't come out in North America, but still runs at 60fps on NTSC televisions - is hideously cheap. Who's that gun-toting lady in a red dress, standing next to a pile of loose change and a tiny plastic gun? Could she be the first gaijin woman to make it in the ranks of the yakuza? Who knows; she's not in the game. At least the logo has a dragon in it. Reputation and packaging aside, things don't immediately look up once you start to play; your character is slow, the controls awkward, and you seem to be getting knocked down a lot. You might be tempted to turn it off right then. But stick with it long enough to finish the first level, and you will gain access to a shop that sells clothes and weapons. Said clothes can not only increase you power and defense, but your speed and ease of movement, too; before long, if you know what's good, you'll have purchased a Grey Suit, improving gameplay considerably. By the third chapter, when enemies start packing weapons and the story gets into gear, Yakuza Fury really shines.