Sango Fighter
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Sango Fighter | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Korean name | |||||
Hangul | 무장쟁패2[1] | ||||
Hanja | 武將爭覇2 | ||||
| |||||
Japanese name | |||||
Kanji | 三国武将争覇[1] |
The Sango Fighter games are a series of fighting game for DOS made by the Taiwanese Panda Entertainment. Set in the Three Kingdoms period of Chinese history, it is very similar to Street Fighter and Samurai Shodown, but with historical context.
"Sango" is a rough romanization of Three Kingdoms. Using pinyin, it would be romanized as "san guo".
Sango Fighter
Sango Fighter Chinese Historic Fighting Game (PC-98 English title) 三國武將爭霸 (PC-98 Japanese title) | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Panda Entertainment (PC/AT, Super A'Can) Great Co., Ltd. (PC-98) |
Publisher(s) | Panda Entertainment (Commercial PC/AT Chinese version) Accend Inc. (Commercial PC/AT English version) Super Fighter Team (DOS freeware) Imagineer (PC-98) Dunhuang Technology (Super A'can) |
Series | Sango Fighter |
Platform(s) | PC/AT with MS-DOS 3.3, Super A'Can, PC-98 with MS-DOS 5.0A |
Release | 1993-? (Panda PC/AT) 1995-? (PC-98) 1995-? (Super A'can) 2009-06-18 (PC/AT DOS freeware) |
Genre(s) | Fighting game |
Mode(s) | Single player, multi-player (max 2) |
The first Sango Fighter game was originally published by Panda Entertainment and released in 1993 for PC/AT platform.
Shareware developer and publisher Apogee Software was planning on licensing and releasing the game in the United States under the title Violent Vengeance, but the plans for the deal fell through. Instead, the game was distributed in English under its original title by a Taiwanese company named Ascend, albeit without official permission from Panda Entertainment.
In 1995, Taiwan's fledgling 16-bit Super A'can game console saw release of a cartridge version of Sango Fighter, completely programmed inhouse by a single employee of Panda Entertainment. Being a rushed port from the PC version, the A'can adaptation suffered from awkward gameplay and quite a few glitches.
Sango Fighter was also released for the Japanese PC-98 computer, in 1995. For this release, a portion of the game's story text was translated into Japanese. It was otherwise identical to the original DOS version, upon which its code was based. This adaptation was produced by Great Co., Ltd., and released by Imagineer.[2]
The game was illegally ported to the Sega Master System console, with the name Sangokushi, and released only in South Korea. This port is one of the larger games in the console library, with 8 megabits of data size.
While Sango Fighter was quite popular in Taiwan, a lawsuit by C&E Inc. (producers of the PC fighting game Super Fighter) stopped Panda Entertainment from distributing the game, let alone adapting it to other machines. Thus the game was never able to reach its full market potential.
On February 24, 2009, the full legal rights to both Sango Fighter and its sequel were acquired by the North American company Super Fighter Team. Following this, on June 18, 2009, both Chinese and English language editions of the game were released as a free download on the Official Sango Fighter Website.[3] An updated version of the game was released, also as freeware, on February 15, 2011. It featured several significant changes and additions.[4] The current Super Fighter Team version supports English, Chinese and Japanese languages, with Japanese based on the PC-9801 release of the game with newly translated text.
There may have also been a planned, but unfinished 3D sequel by Panda Entertainment.[5] However, the former owner of Panda's intellectual properties stated that no records of any such title exist.
Reception
Sango Fighter drew much attention of PC gamers when it was released, offering the first fighting game with great graphics for that time and became the definitive fighting game for DOS. The game came in six 1.44 MB floppy disks, considered a large size compared with other games of the same genre.
Computer Gaming World in 1994 stated that "Game play in Sango Fighter is very good, on par with the PC version of Street Fighter". It praised the graphics and sound: "the overall quality of this release is equivalent to any commercial offering". The magazine concluded that the $30 shareware registration fee "is a good value, and comes recommended".[6]
Sango Fighter 2
Sango Fighter 2 Fighter in China 2 (Panda floppy disk version box title) | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Panda Entertainment |
Publisher(s) | Panda Entertainment Super Fighter Team (freeware) |
Series | Sango Fighter |
Platform(s) | MS-DOS |
Release | 1995 2013-11-06 (freeware) |
Genre(s) | Fighting game |
Mode(s) | Single player, multi-player (max 2) |
A sequel was released in 1995, Sango Fighter 2, with more characters and more detailed graphics. Sango Fighter 2 also featured a conquest mode in which the player attempted to unify the empire by invading other nations. In addition, the kingdom of Wu was added to the game.
On November 6, 2013, Sango Fighter 2 was released as a free download on the Official Sango Fighter 2 Website.[7] In addition to being translated into English, the updated game also features several new additions and enhancements.[8] The Super Fighter Team version supports English, Chinese and Korean languages.
Characters
The following is a list of the characters from Sango Fighter and Sango Fighter 2.
Character | His warload | Playable in Sango Fighter story mode? | Playable in Sango Fighter battle and two-player mode? | Playable in Sango Fighter 2? |
---|---|---|---|---|
Guan Yu | Liu Bei | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Zhang Fei | Liu Bei | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Zhao Yun | Liu Bei | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Ma Chao | Liu Bei | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Huang Zhong | Liu Bei | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Liu Bei | Liu Bei | No as warload | No show | No, warload in story mode only |
Zhuge Liang | Liu Bei | No as advisor | No show | No, advisor in story mode only |
Xiahou Dun | Cao Cao | No as enemy | Yes | Yes |
Xiahou Yuan | Cao Cao | No as enemy | Yes | Yes |
Xu Huang | Cao Cao | No as enemy | Yes | Yes |
Xu Chu | Cao Cao | No as enemy | Yes | Yes |
Dian Wei | Cao Cao | No as enemy | Yes | Yes |
Lü Bu | Lü Bu | No as enemy | Yes | Yes, also warload in story mode |
Cao Cao | Cao Cao | No as enemy | Yes | No, warload in story mode only |
Sima Yi | Cao Cao | No show | No show | No, advisor in story mode only |
Zhang Liao | Cao Cao | No show | No show | Yes |
Gan Ning | Sun Quan | No show | No show | Yes |
Taishi Ci | Sun Quan | No show | No show | Yes |
Huang Gai | Sun Quan | No show | No show | Yes |
Sun Ce | Sun Quan | No show | No show | Yes |
Sun Quan | Sun Quan | No show | No show | No, warload in story mode only |
Zhou Yu | Sun Quan | No show | No show | No, advisor in story mode only |
Cao Cao is not a playable character in Sango Fighter 2, but he retains a role as a character within the story. Liu Bei, Sun Quan, Sima Yi, Zhuge Liang and Zhou Yu also serve as story characters.
Even though Sun Ce served as leader of the kingdom of Wu historically before his death, in Sango Fighter 2, he is made a subordinate of his younger brother.
External links
- Super Fighter Team page: Sango Fighter, Sango Fighter 2
- Super Fighter versus Sango Fighter: Chinese War Ends in America
- Sango Fighter at MobyGames
- Sango Fighter 2 at MobyGames
- Sango Fighter 2 can be played for free in the browser at the Internet Archive
References
- ^ a b Cite error: The named reference
East Asian
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ "Sango Fighter for PC-98 (1995)". MobyGames. 2012-01-09. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
- ^ Brandon Cobb. "Super Fighter Team". www.superfighter.com. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
- ^ "Sango Fighter".
- ^ [1]
- ^ Miller, Chuck (February 1994). "Shaking Those Winter Blues". Best of the Rest. Computer Gaming World. pp. 130, 132.
- ^ Brandon Cobb. "Super Fighter Team". www.superfighter.com. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
- ^ "Sango Fighter 2 development history".