Home versions of Mortal Kombat II: Difference between revisions
PC CD version of MK2 does not, in fact, use CD audio. Check: http://www.hardcoregaming101.net/mortalkombat/mortalkombat2.htm |
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==Console ports== |
==Console ports== |
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===Sega Genesis=== |
===Sega Genesis=== |
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Developed by [[Probe Entertainment]], the [[Sega Genesis]]/Mega Drive port retains all of the blood and Fatalities without a special code having to be entered, unlike the original ''[[Mortal Kombat (1992 video game)|Mortal Kombat]]'' for the system. The game is actually faster than the original arcade version but the visuals are not as brightly colored due to the system's limited color palette.<ref name=gs>{{cite web|url= http://www.gamespot.com/gamespot/features/video/hist_mortalk/p14.html|title=The History of Mortal Kombat - Mortal Kombat II (1993)|publisher=[[GameSpot]]|author=Greeson, Jeff and O'Neill, Cliff|accessdate=2012-12-12}}</ref> All of the characters' shadows are rendered as an oval instead of the normal silhouette and, due to memory limitations, some voice recordings were left out. The music is more upbeat and the arrangement is markedly different in this game as opposed to the arcade version because the music is synthesized by the console's synthesizer (some of the background music is no longer played with its intended stages). The game requires a six-button [[Gamepad|joypad]] for proper input, although, only the low punch is absent on the original three-button controller. Goro's Lair, the secret characters' arena, was removed and replaced with a blue palette swap of the Portal stage. Some of the other arenas are also noticeably missing details.{{#tag:ref|For example, in Kombat Tomb the dragons which can usually be seen flying in the background have been removed, as was the monk levitating in front of the round window in the Tower stage.|group="note"}} The ending screen showing the credits and all of the characters have all been removed; instead, the ending text scrolls over the winner character doing his/her victory stance. The port contains several exclusive [[Easter egg]]s{{#tag:ref|One of them is "Fergality", performed by selecting Raiden and fighting on the Armory stage; when successfully executed, the opponent transforms into a smoking character with an oversized head of Probe Entertainment's Fergus McGovern.<ref>{{cite web|author=K. Thor Jensen|url=http://www.ugo.com/games/fergality |title=Fergality - The Most Gruesome Finishing Moves Ever |publisher=UGO.com |date=2011-02-11 |accessdate=2013-08-11}}</ref>|group="note"}} and features some different character animations for victory poses{{#tag:ref|For example, Baraka's winning stance ends with him bowing forward with his blades pointing down instead him standing straight with his blades crossed over his chest, while Johnny Cage's victory stance has him raise his hands up.|group="note"}} and a support for the motion controller device [[Sega Activator]]. |
Developed by [[Probe Entertainment]], the [[Sega Genesis]]/Mega Drive port retains all of the blood and Fatalities without a special code having to be entered, unlike the original ''[[Mortal Kombat (1992 video game)|Mortal Kombat]]'' for the system. The game is actually faster than the original arcade version but the visuals are not as brightly colored due to the system's limited color palette.<ref name=gs>{{cite web|url= http://www.gamespot.com/gamespot/features/video/hist_mortalk/p14.html|title=The History of Mortal Kombat - Mortal Kombat II (1993)|publisher=[[GameSpot]]|author=Greeson, Jeff and O'Neill, Cliff|accessdate=2012-12-12}}</ref> All of the characters' shadows are rendered as an oval instead of the normal silhouette and, due to memory limitations, some voice recordings were left out. The music is more upbeat and the arrangement is markedly different in this game as opposed to the arcade version because the music is synthesized by the console's synthesizer (some of the background music is no longer played with its intended stages). The game requires a six-button [[Gamepad|joypad]] for proper input, although, only the low punch is absent on the original three-button controller.{{#tag:ref|When using a three-button pad, moves that require holding a punch button on a six-button controller use kicks instead. But despite this, some moves such as Kung Lao's hat decap fatality, and Johnny Cage's three-head uppercut decal fatality won't work, thus requiring six buttons.|group="note"}} Goro's Lair, the secret characters' arena, was removed and replaced with a blue palette swap of the Portal stage. Some of the other arenas are also noticeably missing details.{{#tag:ref|For example, in Kombat Tomb the dragons which can usually be seen flying in the background have been removed, as was the monk levitating in front of the round window in the Tower stage.|group="note"}} The ending screen showing the credits and all of the characters have all been removed; instead, the ending text scrolls over the winner character doing his/her victory stance. The port contains several exclusive [[Easter egg]]s{{#tag:ref|One of them is "Fergality", performed by selecting Raiden and fighting on the Armory stage; when successfully executed, the opponent transforms into a smoking character with an oversized head of Probe Entertainment's Fergus McGovern.<ref>{{cite web|author=K. Thor Jensen|url=http://www.ugo.com/games/fergality |title=Fergality - The Most Gruesome Finishing Moves Ever |publisher=UGO.com |date=2011-02-11 |accessdate=2013-08-11}}</ref>|group="note"}} and features some different character animations for victory poses{{#tag:ref|For example, Baraka's winning stance ends with him bowing forward with his blades pointing down instead him standing straight with his blades crossed over his chest, while Johnny Cage's victory stance has him raise his hands up.|group="note"}} and a support for the motion controller device [[Sega Activator]]. |
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===Super Nintendo Entertainment System=== |
===Super Nintendo Entertainment System=== |
Revision as of 19:24, 25 October 2015
The 1993 arcade fighting game Mortal Kombat II was later released for a variety of home systems, including the 8-bit (Game Boy, Master System and Sega Game Gear), 16-bit (SNES and Sega Genesis) and 32-bit (Sega 32X, PlayStation and Sega Saturn) consoles, Amiga and PC computers, and the PlayStation Network. The game was also featured in several compilation releases, including as part of Midway Arcade Treasures 2 for the PlayStation 2 and Midway Arcade Treasures: Extended Play for the PlayStation Portable. The early ports were published by Acclaim Entertainment.
Console ports
Sega Genesis
Developed by Probe Entertainment, the Sega Genesis/Mega Drive port retains all of the blood and Fatalities without a special code having to be entered, unlike the original Mortal Kombat for the system. The game is actually faster than the original arcade version but the visuals are not as brightly colored due to the system's limited color palette.[1] All of the characters' shadows are rendered as an oval instead of the normal silhouette and, due to memory limitations, some voice recordings were left out. The music is more upbeat and the arrangement is markedly different in this game as opposed to the arcade version because the music is synthesized by the console's synthesizer (some of the background music is no longer played with its intended stages). The game requires a six-button joypad for proper input, although, only the low punch is absent on the original three-button controller.[note 1] Goro's Lair, the secret characters' arena, was removed and replaced with a blue palette swap of the Portal stage. Some of the other arenas are also noticeably missing details.[note 2] The ending screen showing the credits and all of the characters have all been removed; instead, the ending text scrolls over the winner character doing his/her victory stance. The port contains several exclusive Easter eggs[note 3] and features some different character animations for victory poses[note 4] and a support for the motion controller device Sega Activator.
Super Nintendo Entertainment System
The Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) port was developed by Sculptured Software. This particular port has a secret intro (in which a scene between Shao Kahn and Kintaro will take place during the Acclaim logo) and a hidden special team mode. Also in this port is the use of the Super Nintendo's Mode 7, a graphics mode that allows the scaling and rotation of a single background on a scanline-by-scanline basis, during the overhead fall on the Pit II's Stage Fatality.[note 5] However, the game plays with some slowdown[1] and the sprites look like they have been painted rather than photographed due to the image distortion resulted from the downscaling required to match the console's 256x224 display resolution. The SNES has a larger color palette than most other ports of the game and the music is more downbeat and faded in contrast to the Genesis/Mega Drive's upbeat version.[3] John Tobias favored this version over the Genesis version, and added that "I would go so far as to say that the Super NES version is one of the best arcade-to-home conversions I've seen."[4] Because of poor sales of the censored SNES version of the original game, Nintendo decided to allow depictions of blood and Fatalities this time around.[5] Because the industry-wide rating system was not expected to be in effect until November 1994 at the earliest, this version had no formal rating; instead, a warning label was put on the game's box in order to inform prospective buyers about the game's mature content.[6] The Japanese version, however, is censored to a degree, with green blood for all fighters,[7] as well as the screen colors turning black-and-white for all character-specific lethal Fatalities.[8] North America had two different editions released. The second release fixes some major bugs (such as enabling the player to reach Noob Saibot after 50 wins), shows a new company logo at startup, runs an arcade-style attract mode if the game is left alone long enough, and has Johnny Cage's "Shadow Kick" randomly leave a red trail rather than the usual green.[3]
Game Boy
Developed by Probe Entertainment, the Game Boy port is superior to the Game Boy version of the original game but only contains eight of the 12 playable fighters from the arcade game (lacking Baraka, Johnny Cage, Kung Lao and Raiden); Kintaro and Noob Saibot were also removed from the game. Only three of ten arenas are retained from the arcade version: the Kombat Tomb, the Pit II and Goro's Lair. The Kombat Tomb contains the port's only Stage Fatality and Goro's Lair is much simpler in this version (consisting of a brick wall with no openings or glowing eyes). Blood is completely removed and each playable character retains only one of their Fatalities plus the Babality.
Sega Game Gear and Master System
Developed by Probe Entertainment, the Sega Game Gear and Master System ports are similar to the Game Boy port, but are in color instead of in monochrome. Both of them are almost identical, except for the reduced size of the Game Gear screen, featuring the same fighters and arenas as the Game Boy port, but with Kintaro.[9] The arena where players fight Jade and Smoke is exclusive to each version. Unlike the Game Boy version, blood is present, even as drastically reduced in quantity as compared to the other ports. Because of the limited graphical resources of the systems, some of the Fatalities in the game were altered to completely destroy the opponent's body, except for the generic gibs of bones and limbs.[note 6] Some of the Fatalities were also simplified to use common animations.[note 7]
Sega 32X
Developed by Probe Entertainment, the Sega 32X port contains improved graphics over the Sega Genesis/Mega Drive counterpart, with added background details and a bigger color palette to help the visuals come even closer to the arcade version.[1] Although there is a broader variety of sound effects than in the Genesis version,[note 8] the background music is nearly identical to the Genesis version. The 32X version also requires a six-button joypad for proper input.[10] The Japanese version of the port was retitled Mortal Kombat II: Kyuukyoku Shinken (モータルコンバットII 究極神拳, Mōtaru Konbatto Tsū Kyūkyoku Shinken, "Mortal Kombat II: Ultimate Godly Fist")JP,[11] the subtitle being the specific Japanese terminology for the Fatality moves.
PlayStation
The PlayStation port was only released in Japan. While the graphics in this port remains close to the arcade game, the sound quality does not and some voice effects are missing. Instead of utilizing the CD-ROM format and converting the music into CD audio tracks, the game uses the PlayStation's own SPU internal sound chip. Loading times occur when performing certain actions (such as Shang Tsung's morph ability): gameplay ceases and the Mortal Kombat II symbol is displayed for 1–2 seconds, rather than being instant like in ROM cartridge-based versions.[note 9]
Sega Saturn
The Sega Saturn port features synthesized music as substitution for the original soundtrack and is missing some sound effects.[note 10] It allows players to preload certain morphs for Shang Tsung, reducing loading lag time but causing a glitch allowing the player to morph between the palette-swap ninja characters.[note 11] The game lags any time a special move is pulled off for the first time in a match (the move is loaded into the system RAM). Characters' shadow sprites are present in the Goro's Lair stage unlike the arcade version and Jade has white skin unlike the arcade version where she has tanned skin[12] An announced[13] compilation release MK Duo from Acclaim was never released.
Home computer ports
Amiga
The Amiga port of Mortal Kombat II was released at the very beginning of 1995,[14] developed by Probe Entertainment.[15] This is the first and only Amiga title directly published by Acclaim, as their others games were previously published by Virgin Games, including the first Mortal Kombat. As the Amiga market was reputed slowly dying at this time, this version was unenexpected, even by the Amiga's press.[16][17] The Amiga version has sprite sizes and gameplay nearly identical to the Genesis/Mega Drive version, but lacks multi-layered scrolling and animated backgrounds and uses only a single or two-button joysticks for controls (a two-button joystick option does not work on the Amiga 1200[18]). The game suffers from long loading times and requires a frequent disk-swapping in the machines with less than 1.5 MB RAM. It can be only installed to a hard disk drive through unofficially released installer programs. The sounds effect are improved over the Mega Drive/ Genesis version, adding sounds effects lifted directly from the arcade board.[19][20] The attract mode's demonstration matches always show Johnny Cage and Liu Kang. In this version, Shang Tsung can only morph in his direct opponent.
DOS
Probe Entertainment was responsible for converting the game to the PC DOS in 1995. The PC version was the best of the early ports and the only problem was it only supported up to four buttons on joypads.[1] Along with the later Sega Saturn and Sony PlayStation versions, this port is among the closest replications of the arcade version. The game came packaged in CD-ROM or floppy disk format, but unlike the Saturn and PlayStation versions, it could be installed onto the user's hard drive to reduce loading times. Because of the PC's less restricted storage capacity, a wider variety of sound effects is available.[note 12] Probe Entertainment chose not to use the PC's CD audio capability for the music, converting the music into synthesized form instead. Music quality varies depending on what type of sound card was installed, ranging from the average quality Sound Blaster's synthesizer to the high quality Roland LAPC-I and Gravis Ultrasound.
Later releases
Midway Arcade Treasures
Mortal Kombat II was re-released in 2004 as a part of Midway Arcade Treasures 2 for the GameCube, PlayStation 2 and Xbox. This version was an emulation of the original arcade game, rather than a port, and thus plays closer to the original Mortal Kombat II arcade game than any version released previous to it. Unfortunately; it suffers from a graphical bug making each characters' shadow sprites flicker; it's also missing characters' shadow sprites in the Dead Pool stage; music and sound effects are also prone to cutting out or playing out of sync. Due to a control mapping issue involving the "Start" button, it is impossible to fight Smoke, though the "random select" can still be activated. The game is also unlockable via either a secret code or by completing Smoke's missions in the game Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks in identical quality to the edition released in Arcade Treasures 2. In 2005, Mortal Kombat II was released on the PlayStation Portable in Midway Arcade Treasures: Extended Play, but with more graphical errors than in Arcade Treasures 2, lacking certain graphics and details from some stages;[note 13] Its animation and sound can also get choppy during the Fatalities, and this version on Midway Arcade Treasures: Extended Play also suffers from heavy loading times. In 2006, Mortal Kombat II was released as part of Midway Arcade Treasures Deluxe Edition for Windows. It featured the same bugs as the console versions and also had missing music. In the two months after its release, two official patches were released for the collection, one to fix the missing music and a second one to correct the button mapping issue that prevented Random Select and the Smoke battle.
PlayStation Network, Xbox Live Arcade and Windows
The 2007 PlayStation Network release of Mortal Kombat II is an arcade-perfect version (minus the missing characters' shadow sprites in the Dead Pool stage) that also features an online multiplayer.[21] An arcade-perfect compilation release Mortal Kombat Arcade Kollection, consisting of Mortal Kombat, Mortal Kombat II and Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3, was released as a downloadable title for the PlayStation 3 via PlayStation Network and the Xbox 360 via Xbox Live Arcade on August 31, 2011.[22] The Windows version was released on Steam on February 2, 2012.[23]
Notes
- ^ When using a three-button pad, moves that require holding a punch button on a six-button controller use kicks instead. But despite this, some moves such as Kung Lao's hat decap fatality, and Johnny Cage's three-head uppercut decal fatality won't work, thus requiring six buttons.
- ^ For example, in Kombat Tomb the dragons which can usually be seen flying in the background have been removed, as was the monk levitating in front of the round window in the Tower stage.
- ^ One of them is "Fergality", performed by selecting Raiden and fighting on the Armory stage; when successfully executed, the opponent transforms into a smoking character with an oversized head of Probe Entertainment's Fergus McGovern.[2]
- ^ For example, Baraka's winning stance ends with him bowing forward with his blades pointing down instead him standing straight with his blades crossed over his chest, while Johnny Cage's victory stance has him raise his hands up.
- ^ When the opponent is falling, the background scales forward and rotates slightly counter-clockwise. In the arcade version, the background are only scaling forward.[1]
- ^ For example, Sub-Zero's "Deep Freeze" Fatality would no longer split the victim in half, instead pulverizing them completely.
- ^ For example, Liu Kang's Dragon transformation would scorch the opponent with a fireball (similar to one of Scorpion's Fatalities), instead of eating his/her upper body.
- ^ For example, Raiden shouts while performing his "Torpedo" attack, and his victory stance features realistic lightning sounds, rather than the synthesized buzz that is heard in the Genesis version.
- ^ Due to a loading delay, Stage Fatalities in Pit II cause characters to continue screaming after hitting the ground.
- ^ Such as Shao Kahn's "Round 1" voiceover and Kitana's death scream.
- ^ Any male ninja can morph into the other two even when not selected, and the same works for Kitana and Mileena.
- ^ For example, in the arcade version, the sound used for Jax's "Ground Pound" special attack is reused as the thunder storm sound in the title sequence and in the continue screen sequence, whereas the PC version has a unique sound effect for each event.
- ^ For example, the clouds in the background of Kahn's Arena do not seem to move while the Tower stage does not have any clouds outside, unlike the original arcade version.
References
- ^ a b c d e Greeson, Jeff and O'Neill, Cliff. "The History of Mortal Kombat - Mortal Kombat II (1993)". GameSpot. Retrieved 2012-12-12.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ K. Thor Jensen (2011-02-11). "Fergality - The Most Gruesome Finishing Moves Ever". UGO.com. Retrieved 2013-08-11.
- ^ a b Retrobate: Mortal Kombat II, Retro Gamer
- ^ "What Does John Think?". GamePro. No. 61. IDG. August 1994. p. 25.
- ^ Nintendo Power 68 (January 1995)
- ^ "Fatalities on SNES!!". GamePro. No. 61. IDG. August 1994. p. 25.
- ^ EGM2 5 (November 1994), page 96
- ^ Gerald Wurm (2011-11-16). "Mortal Kombat II (Comparison: Japanese SNES Version - International Version)". Movie-Censorship.com. Retrieved 2013-08-11.
- ^ "Portable Mortal Kombat Mortal Kombat II - GameGear".
- ^ Levi Buchanan, Mortal Kombat II 32X Review - Sega 32X Review, IGN, December 9, 2008
- ^ "Mortal Kombat II: Kyuukyoku Shinken (JP, 05/19/95)". Retrieved 2009-09-02.
- ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-GpUJZYUt4
- ^ Official Sega Saturn Magazine 10, page 16
- ^ http://hol.abime.net/2516
- ^ "Cold Blood". Amiga Power (44). December 1994.
- ^ The One Amiga, Dec 1994, P32 : The development of Mortal 2 have been shrouded in secrecy, http://amr.abime.net/review_28210
- ^ Amiga Action 65, Xmas 1994, P72 : The Amiga version came as a shock to us because nobody really expected a conversion, yet there it is, http://amr.abime.net/review_28210
- ^ "Mortal Kombat II - Manual, Docs, Documentation". Lemon Amiga. Retrieved 2013-08-11.
- ^ The One Amiga, Dec 1994, P34, http://amr.abime.net/review_28210
- ^ CU Amiga, Dec 1994, P42, http://amr.abime.net/review_28210
- ^ Mike Harradence, Inside PlayStation Network - Mortal Kombat II, PlayStation Universe, January 11th, 2011
- ^ Mortal Kombat gets kompiled this summer, GameSpot, May 12, 2011
- ^ "Mortal Kombat Kollection on Steam". Store.steampowered.com. 2012-02-02. Retrieved 2013-08-11.