{"id":70023,"date":"2017-08-17T13:00:55","date_gmt":"2017-08-17T18:00:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.toiletovhell.com\/?p=70023"},"modified":"2017-08-16T18:17:38","modified_gmt":"2017-08-16T23:17:38","slug":"the-link-up-spell-3-fantasy-beatem-up-recs-for-a-retro-gaming-weekend","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/the-link-up-spell-3-fantasy-beatem-up-recs-for-a-retro-gaming-weekend\/","title":{"rendered":"The Link-Up Spell<\/i>: 3 Fantasy Beat\u2019em Up Recs for a Retro-Gaming Weekend"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Hail, Retro-Warriors! Grab your controllers, kidnap your comrades and prepare your snacks. Let\u2019s spend a weekend night with some ass-kicking and truly old-school fantasy beat\u2019em up titles!
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In the late 80s, arcade machines still reigned supreme in so many countries. The home consoles lived peacefully with the coin swallowers and the two formats constantly exchanged different media and platforms. This was the time of\u00a0Street Fighter II<\/i> dominance, where large colorful sprites, more complex gameplays and primitive voice-overs changed the way we enjoy video games.<\/p>\n

Besides the money-making machine that was Street Fighter II<\/i> (and its numerous iterations), Capcom<\/b> also released another hit in 1989: Final Fight<\/i>. Borrowing the faux-3D side-scrolling movement of the technical achievements from Kung-Fu Master<\/i>, the intense Battletoads<\/i> first stage, the wacky Kunio-Kun<\/i> series and the extremely popular Double Dragon<\/i> trilogy, this was a title that made all the kids who played it scream loudly, \u201cTHIS IS SO R A D\u201d.<\/p>\n

In Final Fight<\/i>, players choose between three street brawlers to\u2026 Uhh\u2026 Brawl some streets, of course. Spin kicks, somersaults, and knife throwing were part of the recipe for this successful debut. You could punch everyone; even the doors were totally destroyed instead of being opened like boring regular people do. The game was challenging, and it became one of those cult hits where the best players were the kings of the arcade, until another person dethroned their highest scores.<\/p>\n

Final Fight<\/i> was not the pioneer; it was just the popular and simpler game around this crazy bunch of titles thanks to the technical marvels inside the chip, and thanks to its massive following, this style saw more titles coming, like the acclaimed Streets of Rage<\/i> saga, made by Sega<\/b>, or the extremely fun Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles<\/i> games, from Konami<\/b>.<\/p>\n