Art of Fighting

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{{Infobox CVG |title = Art of Fighting |image = Image:Art of Fighting.png |developer = SNK |publisher = SNK |distributor = |designer = |engine = |version = |released = December 11, 1992 |genre = Versus Fighting |modes = Up to 2 players simultaneously |ratings = ESRB: Not Rated (NR) |platforms = Neo-Geo (Ports available on various consoles of the time) |media = Neo-Geo cartridge |requirements = |input = }} Art of Fighting (龍虎の拳: Ryūko no Ken, in Japan and in video game music archives), or AOF (or RnK in video game music archives) for short, is a fighting game series created by SNK. It is one of the many SNK series that ties into The King of Fighters.

Contents

Gameplay

Art of Fighting was the first fighting game with a super bar, and introduced the spirit gauge and desperation move (the equivalent of super moves, often used with SNK fighting games) into the fighting game vernacular. A spirit gauge is a manually charged super combo gauge where all special moves will utilize and drain, with greater amounts of power dealing greater amounts of damage.

Story

The central story of the original Art of Fighting is a typical damsel in distress story set in the fictitious city of Southtown (a common setting among SNK games), where the duo of Ryo Sakazaki and Robert Garcia try to rescue Ryo's sister and Robert's love interest, Yuri Sakazaki. It takes place before the Fatal Fury series, since Jeff Bogard, father of Terry and Andy Bogard from Fatal Fury, is alive at the time Art of Fighting took place, according to what Takuma Sakazaki said during the ending. Also, in the second game we can see a young Geese Howard, when he was just a corrupt police commissioner making his way through the way of the underworld, as the secret final boss.

Although the story starts this way, future games would focus more on the struggles of the Sakazaki family and their fictitious style of karate known as Kyokugenryu Karate (meaning "Extreme style"). The more recent games containing the Sakazaki family are outside the Art of Fighting series, mostly the King of Fighters series.

On its own, the Art of Fighting series seems to take place in the late 70s or early 80s, judging by the birthdates of its characters (Ryo's AoF birthyear is 1957). When SNK brought the characters from its many games together for the King of Fighters, they adjusted the birthdates (moving Ryo's to 1971, for example) to have the characters interact with each other without having to remake character sprites to account for age. This does create a discrepancy within Takuma's history, as he was originally a contemporary of Jeff Bogard, who is killed in the early to mid 80s. However, to accommodate the fact that the cast of Garou: Mark of the Wolves and characters such as Terry Bogard are being aged to match the supposed timeframe of the Mark of the Wolves games (which is said to take place in the year 2008) for The King of Fighters series, a lot of the Art of Fighting characters are being slowly aged to match how they would look had the Art of Fighting timeline not been altered. An example of this is Ryo in Buriki One and him and Robert in Neo Geo Battle Colosseum.

Games

Art of Fighting series

  • Art of Fighting (1992)
  • Art of Fighting 2 (1994)
  • Art of Fighting 3: The Path of the Warrior (Ryuuko no Ken Gaiden in Japan) (1996)

Ports

All 3 games were released for the MVS Arcade System, Neo Geo Home System, as well as Neo Geo CD. No version of AOF exists for the Neo Geo Pocket.

  • Art of Fighting for the NEC Turbo Duo
  • Art of Fighting for the Sega Genesis/MegaDrive
  • Art of Fighting for the Super Famicon/Super Nintendo
  • Art of Fighting 2 for the Super Famicon (Japan only)
  • Art of Fighting Collection for the Sony Playstation 2



Spin-offs

  • Fatal Fury Special
  • The King of Fighters '94
  • The King of Fighters '95
  • The King of Fighters '96
  • The King of Fighters '97
  • The King of Fighters '98: The Slugfest
  • The King of Fighters '99: The Millennium Battle
  • The King of Fighters 2000
  • The King of Fighters 2001
  • The King of Fighters 2002: Challenge to the Ultimate Battle
  • The King of Fighters 2003
  • The King of Fighters: Maximum Impact
  • The King of Fighters: Neowave
  • Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000
  • Capcom vs. SNK 2: Mark of the Millennium 2001
  • SVC Chaos: SNK vs. Capcom
  • Buriki One: World Grapple Tournament in Tokyo
  • Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition
  • NeoGeo Battle Coliseum
  • The King of Fighters '95 (Game Boy Color port)
  • Nettou The King of Fighters '96 (Game Boy Color port)
  • Quiz King of Fighters
  • The King of Fighters: Kyo
  • The King of Fighters R-1
  • The King of Fighters R-2

Characters

Characters From Fatal Fury

Characters appearing outside this series

These include characters that have appeared in The King of Fighters as well as the SNK vs. series.

Other characters

  • Jack Turner
  • Jin Fuha
  • John Crawley: Inspired by Guile of Street Fighter.
  • Karman Cole
  • Lenny Creston
  • Micky Rodgers
  • Rody Birts
  • Sinclair
  • Temjin
  • Wang Koh-San
  • Wyler

Trivia

  • In the English version of Art of Fighting, SNK erroneously called the Haoh Shoh Koh Ken the "Haow-Ken."

External links

es:Art of Fighting fr:Art of Fighting it:Art of Fighting ja:龍虎の拳