The following is a list of video game characters featured in the Fatal Fury fighting game series developed by SNK. The series consists of the original Fatal Fury, Fatal Fury 2, Fatal Fury Special, Fatal Fury 3, Real Bout Fatal Fury, Real Bout Fatal Fury Special, Real Bout Fatal Fury 2, Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition, and Garou: Mark of the Wolves.
Creation and design
Series' creator Takashi Nishiyama stated that giving the characters depth was of great importance when making the series. He noted that the first Fatal Fury featured a more polished plot and more fleshed out characters than that of his previous work, the original Street Fighter, which led to the game gaining a strong fanbase. To help market the games, certain character details were revealed in magazine promotions rather than the games themselves.[1]
Character appearances
The table below summarizes every single fighter in the series. A green cell indicates that the character is playable, while a red cell indicates that the character is not playable or does not appear.
- Notes
Introduced in Fatal Fury
Andy Bogard
- Voiced by: Jun Hashimoto (FFS–KOF '94), Keiichi Nanba (FF3–KOF XIII), Hiroshi Okamoto (KOF XIV onwards), Hiroyuki Kagura (young; KOF: D), Toshinari Fukamachi (KOF for Girls) (Japanese); Peter Wilds (FF anime films) (English)
Andy Bogard (アンディー・ボガード, Andī Bogādo) is Terry Bogard's younger brother. Andy practices the Shiranui-ryū ("Shiranui style" in Japanese) Ninjutsu and a form of empty-handed ninja combat called Koppō-ken, which he trained in after witnessing his foster father's murder, in order to gain revenge on Geese Howard. Mai is the girl he grew up with who is madly in love with him and self-proclaimed him her fiancé and the granddaughter of Hanzo Shiranui, the man he learned Ninjitsu from. It was after his foster father Jeff's death that Tung Fu Rue took responsibility for raising him and Terry. Andy went to Japan to train under Hanzo and grew up alongside Mai, while Terry stayed in Southtown. During Andy's time in Japan, he met the Muay Thai fighter Joe Higashi and challenged him to a match. When Andy won, he invited Joe to return to America with him to enter the King of Fighters tournament, held by Geese.
Late in the tournament, Andy tried to kill off Geese by himself. Geese's power proved to be too much for Andy as he almost fell to his death. Terry saved Andy, who then acknowledged Terry as the superior fighter. After Terry beat Geese at the end of their first King of Fighters Tournament, a new tournament was held, this time hosted by Krauser. Andy, while present in the tournament, did not accomplish much story-wise.
Ever since Geese's death, the fall of the First Southtown and the birth of Second Southtown, Andy has been busy training his young apprentice Hokutomaru in the ways of the Shiranui-style ninjitsu and Koppo-ken. Instead of fighting in the KOF: Maximum Mayhem tournament himself, Andy sends Hokutomaru in his place to see what his apprentice has learned. In Hokutomaru's ending, Andy writes him a note saying that he was proud of how strong Hokutomaru has gotten. Then he ended the note by saying he is no longer his teacher but his rival and that they will cross paths again.
When the new King of Fighters '94 tournament was announced, Andy joined Terry and Joe in the new 3-on-3 matches. Since then, Andy has always agreed to follow his brother Terry whenever he decided to enter the new version of the King of Fighters tournament. The Fatal Fury Team maintained his original formation (Terry, Andy and Joe) from King of Fighters '94 to '98. With new rules in KOF '99 allowing teams of four members, Mai Shiranui (in KOF '99) and, later, Blue Mary (KOF 2000) joined the team. After the beginning of the Ash Crimson Saga (KOF 2003, XI) Andy left the Fatal Fury team to take care of Shiranui disciple Hokutomaru, who fell sick and Mai went after him. Andy made his return to The King of Fighters XII but does not participate in a defined team. The King of Fighters XIII sees Andy rejoining the Fatal Fury team as his brother's interest in the tournament has compelled him to reunite the original Fatal Fury team from the 1994 event. In his anime incarnations, though sometimes perplexed by her actions, Andy is more open to showing his affection towards Mai.
Billy Kane
- Voiced by: Katsuhisa Namase (FF2–KOF '95), Keiichi Nanba (FF3, "RBFF When start fight", Dengeki Bunko drama CD: Garō Densetsu), Atsushi Yamanishi (RBFF–KOF 2002, KOF: MI series), Seijirō (KOF 2003, KOF: AD, KOF XIII), Masaki Masaki (KOF XIV onwards), Shizuka Itō (Pretty Billy; KOF: AS),[2] Haruki Ishiya (KOF for Girls),[3] Daiki Nakamura (FF: LOTHW), Tomohiro Nishimura (FF: TMP) (Japanese); Paul Dobson (FF: LOTHW) (English)
Billy Kane (ビリー・カーン, Birī Kān) is introduced in Fatal Fury as the righthand man of Geese Howard, a crime lord in the fictitious American city of Southtown. Geese holds The King of Fighters tournament every year with Billy as his champion. Billy was the undefeated champion of the tournament, until he is defeated by Terry Bogard, who moved on to later defeat Geese.[4] He also appears in Fatal Fury Special as a playable character for the first time.[5] After Geese recovers, Billy appears in Real Bout Fatal Fury to assist him in the conquer of Southtown. However, Geese is ultimately killed by Terry, causing Billy to leave Southtown.[6] He later appears in the two following games from the series Real Bout Fatal Fury Special and Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers which do not contain a storyline.[7][8] In the PlayStation version from Real Bout Fatal Fury Special, Billy is brainwashed by his half-brother White in order to aid him in the conquer from Southtown. He then appears as a sub-boss character in the arcade mode, but once he is defeated, he returns to normal.[9] A 3D fighting game version of the series, Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition was produced as well, which retells the plot of the first game.[10]
In The King of Fighters series, Billy was meant to appear in the first game from the series as a member of an England Team, composed of him, Mai Shiranui, and Big Bear, but due to several problems with the capacity of the game, and the desire from the Art of Fighting staff to add Yuri Sakazaki, Billy was removed from the game.[11] When the new King of Fighters tournament began in The King of Fighters '95 under the control of a man named Rugal Bernstein, Billy is ordered by Geese to go in his boss' place because Geese was still healing. He joins with a ninja named Eiji Kisaragi and a mysterious man named Iori Yagami.[12] Billy's team does not win, and at the end of the tournament Iori beats up Billy and Eiji.[13] In The King of Fighters '97 Geese sends Billy to investigate the mysterious Orochi power in Iori. Geese hires a sadistic outlaw named Ryuji Yamazaki and tricks a good freelance agent named Blue Mary to help as well.[14] After the tournament ends, Yamazaki demands his pay from Geese by attacking him and Billy. The same team is shown in The King of Fighters '98, The King of Fighters 2002 and Neowave but none of those contain a storyline.[15][16][17] He also appears as an assistant character (known as "Striker") in The King of Fighters '99: Evolution and The King of Fighters 2000. In the former he is available for any character, while in the latter he is a striker for Andy Bogard.[18][19]
In The King of Fighters 2003, Geese orders the team of Billy Kane, Ryuji Yamazaki, and Gato to infiltrate the tournament in another attempt to take over Southtown.[20] During the spin-off game The King of Fighters Kyo Billy appears as boss character along Geese to fight against the Bogard brothers and the protagonist Kyo Kusanagi.[21] In KOF: Maximum Impact 2, it is revealed Billy has moved to the countryside of the UK with his young sister, Lilly Kane, and has decided to return to Southtown once again, willing to show the Meira twins: Alba and Soiree the town should be embarked by no one.[22]
Billy also appeared in the console version of The King of Fighters XIII, released in November 2011.[23] He is also present in the otome game King of Fighters for Girls.[24]
Billy Kane appears in the TV anime film Fatal Fury: Legend of the Hungry Wolf, where he is voiced by Daiki Nakamura in the original Japanese version and Paul Dobson in the English dubbed version. Like in the original Fatal Fury video game, Billy Kane is one of Geese Howard's underlings alongside Raiden, Ripper and Hopper. He enters the King of Fighters tournament alongside Raiden on Geese's behalf and later mortally wounds Tung Fu Rue while the Bogards and Joe are escaping from Geese's men. In the final battle of the film, he ends up fighting against Andy Bogard and ends up being defeated by him.[25] He appears again in the sequel Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle, where he makes an unvoiced appearance in the beginning of the film, in which he is confronted by Laurence Blood at the Pao-Pao Cafe and is defeated off-screen.[26] Billy makes an extended cameo appearance in the third film, Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture, this time voiced by Tomohiro Nishimura in the original Japanese version and once again by Paul Dobson in English. He encounters his old adversary Andy in a night club, but the two are confronted by Laocorn's henchman Hauer before they get a chance to fight again.[27]
In the second episode of the anime spin-off mini-series The King of Fighters: Another Day, Rock Howard, Geese's son, stops Billy from killing Lien Neville who was carrying out a hit on him. Billy tries to convince Rock to help him, because as he carries Geese's heritage, Lien would try to take him out too. Instead, Rock decides to save Lien's life and fights Billy, who almost manages to kill him as well for shaming Geese's legacy, but is blown away by a beam fired over Geese Tower.[28] He also stars in manhua from the video games which retells his actions from the games.[29] Additionally, in the manga The King of Fighters: Kyo authored by Masato Natsumoto, Billy starts investigating Kyo Kusanagi in order to make him talk about the ancient demon Orochi.[30]
In Gamest's 1997 Heroes Collection, Billy was voted as the staff's fourth favorite character.[31] In the character popularity poll on Neo Geo Freak's website, he was voted as the seventeenth favorite character with a total of 757 votes.[32] For the special endings in The King of Fighters '97, three video games journals, Gamest, Famitsu and Neo Geo Freak, had to create a team composed of three characters from the game so that they would be featured in an image after passing the arcade mode. The special team created by the Neo Geo Freak's staff was a team of fire wielders: Billy, Kyo Kusanagi, and Mai Shiranui. The special ending only appears in Japanese versions of the game.[33]
Duck King
- Voiced by: Kong Kuwata (games), Yūji Mitsuya (FF: TMP) (Japanese); Michael Beard (FFS), Matt Hill (FF: TMP) (English)
Duck King (ダック・キング, Dakku Kingu) appears in the original Fatal Fury as one of the first four opponents in the single-player mode. Possessing incredible talent when it comes to brawling and street dancing, Duck King once challenged Terry Bogard to a street fight and lost. He trained himself in order to surpass Terry. Duck uses a unique fighting style which includes rhythmical dance-like movements and attacks. His primary special move is a flying cannonball technique.
In Fatal Fury 2, Duck was one of the characters from the original game who is defeated by Krauser in one of the game's cut scenes, although he would appear as a playable character in Fatal Fury Special. He would retain his cannonball technique, now dubbed the Head Spin Attack, along with new special moves such as the Dancing Dive, Break Storm, and the Beat Rush. He also has a new hidden special move called the Break Spiral. From Special and onward, Duck would be accompanied by his pet chick "P-chan". He makes another quick cameo in Bob Wilson's ending Fatal Fury 3 before returning as a playable character in Real Bout Fatal Fury and its sequels, Real Bout Special and Real Bout 2. He also appears as an exclusive character in the PlayStation version of Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition.
Although Duck King has made numerous cameo appearances thorough The King of Fighters series, including as an alternate Striker (a character who helps the player in battle) in The King of Fighters 2000, he did not appear as a playable character until The King of Fighters XI, where he appears as a member of the new Fatal Fury Team along with Terry and Kim Kaphwan.
Geese Howard
Hwa Jai
- Voiced by: Sōnosuke Nagashiro (KOF XIII)
Hwa Jai (ホア・ジャイ, Hoa Jai) is the first of three opponents the player faces in the original Fatal Fury before the final match against Geese Howard. A former Muay Thai champion once nicknamed "The Hero of Muay Thai" (ムエタイの英雄, Muetai no Eiyū), he once fought against Joe Higashi in the past and lost, causing him to lose his title. Seeking to defeat Joe, he became a more reckless and dangerous fighter. After being banned from competing in the Muay Thai circuit, his brutal talent was noted by Geese Howard, who hired him to serve as one of his bodyguards and a participant in the King of Fighters tournament. His special technique, the Dragon Kick, was developed to compete with Joe's Tiger Kick. He also gains additional strength by drinking a sort of Super Drink, which thrown at him by one of Geese's men when he is in danger.
In Fatal Fury 2, Hwa Jai is one of the characters from the original game who gets defeated by an unknown challenger (Wolfgang Krauser). He is apparently hospitalized and visited by Joe Higashi, as seen in Joe's ending in the game and in Fatal Fury Special. He makes further cameos in the subsequent Fatal Fury games (Fatal Fury 3, Real Bout, Real Bout Special and Real Bout 2) as Joe's training partner and trainer. Despite having been absent since his original appearance as an opponent character in Fatal Fury, Hwa Jai has been confirmed to return in The King of Fighters XIII and marks the first time the character has been playable. Kim, following his "reform" of his previous teammates (Chang Koehan and Choi Bounge), seeks out Hwa Jai and Raiden as he believes they still work under Geese Howard. It is not the case as Geese had returned to America long ago but Raiden manages to talk Hwa Jai into joining the team to bolster their reputations as fighters. Hwa Jai accepts, partially due to wanting to fight Joe once again.
Joe Higashi
- Voiced by: Katsuhisa Namase (FF2, FFS, KOF '94), Nobuyuki Hiyama (FF3 – KOF XIII), Kōzō Mito (KOF XIV onwards), Chiharu Sawashiro (KOF for Girls), Masaaki Satake (FF: LOTHW), Kazuki Yao (Dengeki Bunko drama CD) (Japanese); Jason Gray-Stanford (FF anime films) (English)
Joe Higashi (ジョー・ヒガシ, Jō Higashi, also written as 東 丈, Higashi Jō) first appears in Fatal Fury: King of Fighters as one of the three playable characters along with Andy and Terry Bogard. The plot features Joe allying with the Bogard brothers to enter the King of Fighters tournament and then defeat the host Geese Howard, who killed the Bogard brothers' father. In the tournament, Joe also beats his Muay Thai rival Hwa Jai, and they both become friends. In Fatal Fury 2, Joe learns that Hwa Jai was beaten by the new King of Fighters host Wolfgang Krauser and enters the tournament to avenge him.[34] Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory and Real Bout Fatal Fury end the fight between Joe and the Bogard and Geese, who dies falling from the Geese Tower.[35] The two following games, Real Bout Fatal Fury Special and Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers also feature Joe as a playable character but none of them contain a storyline.[36][37] Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition retells the events from the first game, but with characters who would appear later.[38]
In The King of Fighters series, Joe is a regular member from the Fatal Fury Team (also composed of Terry and Andy), and each game features them entering into an annual tournament to search for competition. Andy's girlfriend Mai Shiranui, joins them in The King of Fighters '99 since the tournament now requires four members per team.[39] By The King of Fighters 2000 and The King of Fighters 2001, Mai leaves and the new fourth member is Blue Mary.[40][41] The King of Fighters 2002 and The King of Fighters 2003 return the tournament to use teams of three members, but in the latter pro-wrestler Tizoc replaces Andy, who is busy taking care of his sick student.[42][43] By The King of Fighters XI, Joe leaves the competition as he enters into a new Muay Thai tournament.[44] However, he returns in The King of Fighters XII, which neither features official teams or plot.[45] The sequel casts Joe back into the classic Fatal Fury team that includes Terry and Andy, the reason being Terry's desire to reunite the original team to participate in the upcoming tournament. In the spin-off The King of Fighters Kyo, the player (who uses Kyo Kusanagi) can challenge Joe to a fight in a game, and also make him join to his team for the upcoming King of Fighters tournament.[46] Joe also takes a minor role in The King of Fighters EX as an assistant character (dubbed "Striker") for the Fatal Fury Team, now composed with the Bogard brothers and Mai.[47] Additionally, he stars in The King of Fighters Neowave with the original Fatal Fury Team.[48] He was also added to the crossover game Capcom vs. SNK Pro, an updated version of Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000 for the PlayStation and Sega Dreamcast, and in the sequel Capcom vs. SNK 2.[49][50] He is also present the otome game King of Fighters for Girls.[51] Joe appears in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate as a background character at King of Fighters Stadium.
Joe Higashi appears in each of the three animated films from Fatal Fury. Jason Gray-Stanford provides the voice of Joe in the English versions. Masaaki Satake provides the voice of Joe in the Japanese version of the first film and Nobuyuki Hiyama in the two following. In the Fatal Fury: Legend of the Hungry Wolf from 1993, Joe enters the King of Fighters tournament along with the Bogard brothers which cause Geese Howard to attack them. Upon learning that Andy and Terry's teacher, Tung Fu Rue, was seriously injured by Geese's right-hand man, Billy Kane, Andy and Joe set to fight Geese. None of them are able to defeat Geese, but are saved by Terry who later defeats Geese.[52] In the 1993 film Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle, Joe becomes ashamed after learning that Terry became depressed after being defeated by Wolfgang Krauser and tries to avenge him. However, he ends up being heavily wounded by Krauser.[53] In Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture from 1994 Joe joins Terry, Andy and Mai into helping a girl named Sulia into stopping her brother Laocorn Gaudeamus, who is the main antagonist from the film.[54]
Michael Max
Michael Max (マイケル・マックス, Maikeru Makkusu) is a black boxer who appears in the original Fatal Fury as one of the first four CPU-controlled opponents whom the player faces. Prior to the events of the game, Michael was a young boxing prodigy who was once considered a strong contender for the title of Worldwide Heavyweight Champion. However, he left the boxing circuit to seek real combat and participate in the King of Fighters tournament, feeling that professional boxing was a mere sport protected by rules. He is also the friend and student of boxing of Axel Hawk. His only other appearances in the series includes in the cut-scenes of Fatal Fury 2, where he is one of the fighters defeated by Wolfgang Krauser, and in Axel Hawk's ending in Fatal Fury Special, where he is depicted as Axel's trainer. In one of his victory poses, it is revealed that he is Catholic. Michael Max is the only character from the original Fatal Fury that has never appeared in The King of Fighters series until he makes a cameo at one of The King of Fighters XV trailer.
Raiden / Big Bear
- Voiced by: Dango Takeda (FFS), Hisao Egawa (FF anime films), Daisuke Gōri (KOF XII–KOF XIII) (Japanese); John Hulaton (FF3–CVS2), Robert O. Smith (FF anime films), Iain Gibb (KOF XIII) (English)
Raiden (ライデン, Raiden) first appears in the original Fatal Fury as the second of the final four computer-controlled opponents in the single-player mode. He was once a popular face wrestler until he was betrayed by his tag partner during a match (a character later revealed to be Big Bombarder from the SNK wrestling game 3 Count Bout). This incident transformed him completely and he became a notorious heel wrestler. Not satisfied with venting his frustration in the ring, he enters the King of Fighters tournament as a masked fighter, acting as one of Geese's guardians. His primary special move in the game is the Vapor Breath. This character was modeled after real life pro wrestler Big Van Vader.
He returns as a regular playable character in Fatal Fury 2 and Fatal Fury Special, where he renounces his Raiden persona and now fights as an unmasked face wrestler under the identity of Big Bear (ビッグ・ベア, Biggu Bea). He trains at his native land of Australia, where his deadly strength increased on several levels. He also develops a friendly rivalry with Terry, as seen in his endings in both games. His special moves in Fatal Fury 2 includes the Giant Bomb, a rushing tackle, and the Super Drop Kick. He also has a hidden special move called the Fire Breath, an improved version of his Vapor Breath. In Special, he gains a new special move called the Bear Bomber.
Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition, being a retelling of the original Fatal Fury tournament, depicts Raiden under his masked heel persona once again. Outside the Fatal Fury series, Raiden also appeared in the Capcom-produced crossover game Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000, and its sequels, Capcom vs. SNK Pro and Capcom vs. SNK 2, being one of the few Fatal Fury characters who did not appear in The King of Fighters as a playable character (at the time) in those games. Raiden also appears in The King of Fighters XII and the sequel. In KOF XII none of the characters are assigned into teams but for KOF XIII they are. Raiden's teammates in KOF XIII are Kim Kaphwan and Hwa Jai. Kim is mistaken in thinking Raiden and Hwa Jai are still in the employ of Geese Howard, wanting to "reform" both men. Raiden convinces Hwa Jai to act as if they are so they are able to enter the tournament to build reputation for themselves. The Fatal Fury characters refer him as "Bear", his face persona, which he denies.
Richard Meyer
- Voiced by: Masaharu Satō (FF: TMP), Kong Kuwata (KOF: MI2) (Japanese); Ward Perry (FF anime films), Kofi Candela (KOF: MI2) (English)
Richard Meyer (リチャード・マイヤー, Richādo Maiyā) appears in the original Fatal Fury as one of the first four computer-controlled opponents in the single-player mode. A capoeira mestre originally from Brazil, Richard makes his daily living in South Town as the manager of the restaurant Pao Pao Cafe. He competes in the King of Fighters tournament in order to make his capoiera style known to the world. In this game, his character specializes in numerous kick techniques. Richard Meyer was the first fighting game character to use Capoeira.
Richard makes cameo appearances in subsequent Fatal Fury games as a friendly acquaintance of the Bogard brothers and Joe. He appears in Fatal Fury 2 in the cut scene shown immediately after the first battle against the CPU, tending to a crowd of spectators at Pao Pao Cafe witnessing the player's fight on television. He appears again near the end of the game, where he is defeated in battle by Wolfgang Krauser, as well in Terry Bogard's ending, serving him and his date their meal.
In Fatal Fury 3, Richard opens a new Pao Pao Cafe restaurant, which is maintained by his capoeira apprentice Bob Wilson. In Fatal Fury 3, as well as in Real Bout series, Richard appears to cheer and encourage Bob before each of his matches. He makes cameos in The King of Fighters XI, trying to tell Kim to leave the cafe and in King of Fighters XIII witnessing several female fighters destroy his bar.
Richard appears as a hidden character in the PlayStation 2 game KOF: Maximum Impact 2 (released in North America as The King of Fighters 2006), participating as a fighter for the first time since the original Fatal Fury.
Terry Bogard
Tung Fu Rue
- Voiced by: Keiichiro Sakagi (FFS), Kōji Yada (FF: LOTHW), Shigefumi Nakai (RBFFS: DM–NGBC), Hajime Shikase (KOF XIV) (Japanese); Mina E. Mina (FF: LOTHW, FF2: TNB) (English)
Tung Fu Rue (タン フー ルー, Tan Fū Rū, Chinese: 糖胡芦; Pinyin: Táng Hú-Lú) is one of the first four opponents the players face in the original Fatal Fury (when either Andy or Terry defeats him in Fatal Fury Special, each Bogard brother addresses him as "Master Tan"). He is an elderly martial arts master from China who developed his own fighting style based on Bajiquan known as the Holy Fist of Eight Ways (八極聖拳, Hakkyokuseiken). In the past, he trained Terry and Andy's adoptive father, Jeff Bogard, and his nemesis Geese Howard (as well as Cheng Sinzan). He raised the Bogard brothers after Jeff was killed by Geese and participates in the King of Fighters tournament in the first game with the objective to defeat Geese. He can transform his body into steel and draw out great power using a deadly secret technique known only to himself. In the game, he appears as meek elderly man, but after taking a bit of damage, he transforms into a musclebound warrior, whose special moves including a flying whirlwind punch and a spinning whirlwind kick in which he shoots fireballs at both directions.
In Fatal Fury 2, Tung was one of the characters defeated by Wolfgang Krauser in one of the game's cut-scene. He would appear as a playable character in Fatal Fury Special, the upgraded version of Fatal Fury 2. Unlike the original game, Tung only transforms into a musclebound version of himself while performing certain special moves. Tung reappears in Real Bout Special and Real Bout 2. In Real Bout Special, there are two versions of him in the game. In regular version of him has improved versions of his previous special moves, as well as new moves, while the alternate version of him (EX Tung Fu Rue) has all of his moves from Fatal Fury Special and one Hidden Ability. In Real Bout 2, Tung has special moves from both versions of his character in the previous game.
Tung also appears in the SNK crossover game NeoGeo Battle Coliseum. This version of the character was used as an additional character in the PlayStation 2 port of The King of Fighters XI, until he canonically participates in The King of Fighters XIV. He is also one of the 20 background characters that appears in the King of Fighters Stadium Stage in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
In The King of Fighters timeline, Tung played a vital role in XIV. According to a profile of one of his disciples, and the protagonist central character of that arc, Shun'ei, Tung found Shun'ei after his biological parents abandoned him for having an eerie powers, related to the main antagonist of that arc. Sensing good in the young eerie powered boy, Tung decided to raise Shun'ei as his disciple to be trained by himself against the villains who had a connection to Shun'ei's eerie power, such as the villain who is connected to Shun'ei's left-half power, an avatar of fiery rage and soul containing entity known as Verse. Additionally, he has met Kyo Kusanagi's father, Saisyu Kusanagi, and a fellow elderly Chinese martial arts master, Chin Gentsai, sometime before.
Introduced in Fatal Fury 2 and Fatal Fury Special
Axel Hawk
- Voiced by: Hirohiko Kakegawa (FF2: TNB) (Japanese); Michael Beard (FF2), Michael Dobson (FF2: TNB) (English)
Axel Hawk (アクセル・ホーク, Akuseru Hōku) first appears in Fatal Fury 2 as the second of the final four opponents in the single-player mode. A former heavyweight boxing champion, he was said to be the strongest of all time until his retirement. According to his backstory, he began spending most of his days at home after his retirement, playing with his R/C car and being supported by his elderly mother, his father having died at some point. One day, he received an anonymous letter inviting him to the King of Fighters tournament and began training for his comeback. He was originally a non-playable character in the Neo Geo version of Fatal Fury 2, although he is playable in the SNES and Genesis versions of the game. He became a regular playable character in Fatal Fury Special. He is also the teacher of boxing and the best friend of Michael Max. He makes a cameo at the end of The King of Fighters 2003 cheering on the Fatal Fury Team.
Cheng Sinzan
- Voiced by: Jun Hashimoto (FFS), Shigefumi Nakai (RBFFS–RBFFS2), Chafurin (FF: TMP) (Japanese); Robert O. Smith (FF: TMP) (English)
Cheng Sinzan (チン・シンザン, Chin Shinzan, Chinese: 陳 秦山; Pinyin: Chén Qínshān; Cantonese Yale: Chàhn Chèuhn-sāan) is introduced as one of the new playable characters in Fatal Fury 2. A rotund fighter, he practices tai chi. Despite his immense strength, he hates training and becomes tired very easily. He enters the King of Fighters tournament seeking to gain international recognition and open his own training hall. He is characterized as one of the richest men in Hong Kong, who resides in a high class neighborhood and is married to a former Miss Hong Kong. Despite his social status, he seeks to find ways to make himself even richer. His Special Moves in Fatal Fury 2, as well as in Fatal Fury Special, includes the Thunderblast Powerball (氣雷砲, Kiraihō), the Belly Drum Blast (大太鼓腹打, Daitaikobarauchi), and the Avalanche Crunch (破岩激, Hagangeki), while his Super Special Move is the Exploding Thunder Powerball (爆雷砲, Bakuraihō).
He makes a non-playable appearance in Fatal Fury 3, helping Hon-Fu chase after Ryuji Yamazaki and doesn't return as a playable character until Real Bout Special and Real Bout 2. In the backstory of Real Bout Special, it is revealed that Cheng was once a disciple of Tung Fu Rue trained in Hakkyoku Seiken along with Jeff Bogard and Geese Howard, but was expelled due to his greediness. He would also make money by having people bet against him in street fights and then lose on purpose.
Jubei Yamada
- Voiced by: Dango Takeda (FFS), Jōji Yanami (FF anime films) (Japanese); French Tickner (FF anime films) (English)
Jubei Yamada (山田 十平衛, Yamada Jūbei) is one of the five playable characters introduced in Fatal Fury 2. An elderly judo master who was once known as "Yamada, the Demon" during his youth. Jubei Yamada is the best friend and rival of Hanzo Shiranui (the grandfather of Mai Shiranui). Having lost his charm from his younger days, Jubei fights in the new King of Fighters tournament in order to re-establish his popularity with girls around the world. Despite this, he refuses to change his womanizing lecherous ways. Although Jubei does not return as a playable character in later games, he makes several cameo appearances, including in Mai Shiranui's ending in Real Bout Fatal Fury, where he is shown to have an infatuation with her.
Kim Kaphwan
- Voiced by: Satoshi Hashimoto (FF2–KOF XI), Kazuhiko Nagata (KOF XII–KOF XIV), Daiki Nakamura (FF2: TNB, FF: TMP), Hiroshi Isobe (Dengeki Bunko drama CD: Garō Densetsu 2 and Garō Densetsu Special), Kunihiro Kawamoto (KOF: D onwards), Ayaka Ōhashi (KOFAS; New Kim),[55] Takuya Eguchi (KOF for Girls) (Japanese); David Kaye (FF2: TNB, FF: TMP) (English)
Kim Kap-Hwan (金甲煥 (キム・カッファン), Kimu Kaffan, sometimes written as 김갑환 (Kim Kap-hwan), usually written as Kim Kaphwan) first appears in Fatal Fury 2 as a playable character. He travels to Southtown to fight Wolfgang Krauser, who was looking for some decent challenges in the King of Fighters fighting tournament. On the way, he encounters the former King of Fighters champion Terry Bogard. They soon become good friends, and ever since, Kim always agrees to help Terry in all that he can, though a definite rivalry is maintained.[56] He also appears in all the Real Bout games from the series.[57][58][59] He is also present in Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition, a 3D game which retells the story from the first Fatal Fury game but with characters from the sequels including Kim.[60] He makes a cameo appearance in Garou: Mark of the Wolves in one of his son's (Dong Hwan) win poses.
In The King of Fighters, Kim is considered as both a sport and national hero in his native Korea. This status is what enabled him to convince the authorities to give him custody over Chang Koehan and Choi Bounge to rehabilitate them out of their criminal ways.[61] Although both men resent Kim for his actions, they later grow up to grudgingly respect him.[62] Due to the increase of required members in The King of Fighters '99, Kim's rival, Jhun Hoon, joins the Korea Team.[63] However, in The King of Fighters 2001, Jhun has an accident and he is replaced by Kim's student, May Lee.[64] By The King of Fighters 2003, the requirements of members return to three and this time the members of the Korea Team are Kim, Jhun and Chang.[65] In The King of Fighters XI, Kim appears as a member of the Fatal Fury Team along with Terry Bogard and Duck King as the team needed one more member.[66] In The King of Fighters XII, Kim is a playable character, but like each of them, he does not have a team.[67] As The King of Fighters XIII has returned to assigning the characters into official teams, Kim is cast as the leader of his team, composing of himself, Raiden and Hwa Jai (both from Fatal Fury: King of Fighters). He is teamed with the men because, after "rehabilitating" Chang and Choi, he seeks out Raiden and Hwa Jai believing they are still working for Geese (they are not but they pretend that they still do so they can compete in The King of Fighters tournament). The games from the series which do not contain plot, The King of Fighters '98 and The King of Fighters 2002, also feature Kim along with Choi and Chang in the Korea Team.[68][69] In the console version of The King of Fighters Neowave, Kim appears as a hidden character without an official team.[70]
In the spin-off game, The King of Fighters Kyo, Kim is not playable but he can be aided by the lead character Kyo Kusanagi in order to train Chang and Choi.[71] In the two games for the Game Boy Advance titled EX: Neo Blood and EX2, the Korea Team is featured in its original form.[72][73] Kim does not appear in KOF: Maximum Impact as he was replaced with his pupil Chae Lim. However, he is a hidden character in KOF: Maximum Impact 2 and also makes a cameo in Chae Lim's ending.[74][75] He also appears in the crossovers Neo Geo Battle Coliseum and the SNK vs. Capcom series as a playable character.[76][77] In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, he appears both as a background character in the King of Fighters Stadium stage and as a spirit.[78]
Kim also appears in two of the three animated films from Fatal Fury in which he takes supporting roles. He is voiced by Daiki Nakamura in the Japanese versions and by David Kaye in the English dub. In Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle, Kim challenges Terry to fight after learning that he defeated the former crime lord from Southtown Geese Howard to test his own strength. Although he is defeated, he and Terry become good friends.[79] In the sequel, Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture, he also appears reuniting with Terry and his friends along with his family searching to have a rematch with Terry. However, during the meeting Cheng Sinzan (from Fatal Fury 2), enhanced by cyber-armor attacks all the people and Kim is seriously injured. Despite his wounds, Kim manages to defeat Cheng, but spends most of the time of the film recovering.[80] He also stars in manhua from the video games which retell his actions from the games.[81]
Laurence Blood
- Voiced by: Katsuhisa Namase (FFS), Hiroyuki Arita (RBFFS–RBFF2), Kōji Totani (FF anime films) (Japanese); Ward Perry (FF anime films) (English)
Laurence Blood (ローレンス・ブラッド, Rōrensu Buraddo) first appears in Fatal Fury 2 as the third of the four boss characters the player faces at the end of the single-player mode. He is a former Spanish matador who uses a self-styled martial art based on his deadly bullfighting methods (his fighting style is very similar to the fencing, the French martial art of the Savate). He serves as the right-hand man and servant of Wolfgang Krauser and participates in the tournament under his request. He is a computer-only character in the Neo Geo version of Fatal Fury 2 and became playable in Fatal Fury Special. Blood would return as a playable character in Real Bout Special and Real Bout 2. He is notable for being one of five bullfighter characters in fighting games (the other three being Vega of Street Fighter, Miguel of Human Killing Machine, Miguel Caballero Rojo of Tekken, and Kilian of Samurai Shodown). He is also the only boss character from Real Bout Fatal Fury Special and Real Bout Fatal Fury 2 that hasn't appeared in the King of Fighters tournaments.
Mai Shiranui
Ryo Sakazaki
Wolfgang Krauser
- Voiced by: Hirotaka Suzuoki (FF2: TNB), Takuya Iwabata (young; KOF:D), Yutaka Aoyama (KOFAS) (Japanese); Michael Beard (FFS), B.J. Love (KOF '96–RBFF2), Paul Dobson (FF2: TNB) (English)
Wolfgang Krauser von Stroheim made his appearance in Fatal Fury 2, where he serves as the final opponent in the tournament. Known as the only man in the world feared by Geese Howard (whom in Fatal Fury Special is revealed to be his elder half-brother from the same father, Rudolph Krauser von Stroheim or Rudolph Von Zanac), Krauser is a German nobleman who is publicly known as the current Earl of Stroheim, a prestigious family in Europe, but within the underworld he is a ruthless warlord known as the Emperor of Darkness. After Geese's supposed death in the original Fatal Fury, Krauser sponsors a new King of Fighters tournament with his three chosen warriors Laurence Blood, Axel Hawk and Billy Kane (a former underling of Geese himself) in order to lure the men who defeated Geese (Terry Bogard, Andy Bogard, and Joe Higashi).
Although Krauser takes his own life following the events of Fatal Fury 2 and Special according to the background story in the subsequent games,[82] Krauser appeared in the special installments of the series, Real Bout Fatal Fury Special and Real Bout Fatal Fury 2.
Outside the Fatal Fury series, Krauser appears as a member of the Boss Team in The King of Fighters '96 with his half-brother Geese and Geese's former partner-in-crime Mr. Big. The Boss Team made another appearance in the remake of The King of Fighters '98 titled The King of Fighters '98 Ultimate Match. Additionally, Krauser also appears as a "Striker" character in the console versions of The King of Fighters 2000.
Krauser serves as the main antagonist in the anime special Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle. According to character designer Masami Ōbari (who also worked on Voltage Fighter Gowcaizer), Krauser was redesigned to be ten years younger than his video game counterpart and given a clean-shaved appearance. In this special, Krauser challenges his half-brother's nemesis Terry Bogard to battle and wins. After Terry regains his courage, he challenges Krauser again and wins the rematch, causing Krauser to commit suicide due to his loss.
Introduced in Fatal Fury 3
Blue Mary
- Voiced by: Harumi Ikoma (FF3–KOF: MIR"A"), Sarah Emi Bridcutt (KOF XIV onwards)
Mary Ryan (マリー・ライアン, Marī Raian), better known as Blue Mary (ブルー・マリー, Burū Marī), is a special agent investigating activity in the city of Southtown, and a recurring love interest of Terry Bogard. She makes her first appearance in Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory, investigating the Secret Scrolls of the Jin Brothers, items able to give immortality to their users.[83] Real Bout Fatal Fury shows Mary allying with Terry Bogard and his friends to fight the crime lord from Southtown, Geese Howard.[84] The two following games, Real Bout Fatal Fury Special and Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers, also feature Blue Mary as a playable character but neither of them presents a storyline. Real Bout Fatal Fury Special also features an "EX" version from Mary with her movesets from Fatal Fury 3.[85][86] The PlayStation version of Real Bout Fatal Fury Special also contains a music video clip featuring the song "Blue Mary's Blues" by Harumi Ikoma, Mary's voice actress.[87]
Following her Fatal Fury inception, Blue Mary becomes a regular character with frequently changing team membership in The King of Fighters series, beginning as a member of the '97 Special Team in The King of Fighters '97 along with Billy Kane and Ryuji Yamazaki. A mysterious benefactor (Geese Howard) requests her services to enter the King of Fighters tournament, along with Billy and Yamazaki, who starts to become insane due to the power from the demon Orochi.[88] However, after discovering that Geese was her client, Mary leaves the team.[89] The team is also featured in The King of Fighters '98, The King of Fighters 2002, and The King of Fighters Neowave, which do not contain a storyline.[90][91][92] In The King of Fighters '99, she joins up with King, Li Xiangfei, and Kasumi Todoh as the new Women Fighters Team, but leaves and becomes the fourth member of the Fatal Fury Team (composed by Terry, Andy Bogard and Joe Higashi) in The King of Fighters 2000 and The King of Fighters 2001.[93][94][95] She would join forces with King again as member of the Women Fighters Team in The King of Fighters 2003, this time with Mai Shiranui as their third member.[96] In The King of Fighters XI, she joins Vanessa and Ramón as a member of the Agents Team in order investigate the host from The King of Fighters tournaments, an organization named Those from the Past.[97] Blue Mary appears in The King of Fighters XIV as a playable character via downloadable content.[98] In The King of Fighters XV, she joins Vanessa again to form the Secret Agent Team, with Luong as their third member. She also appears in the 3D game KOF: Maximum Impact Regulation A, which does not feature official teams.[99] In the spin-off game The King of Fighters: Kyo, Blue Mary appears investigating the actions from Geese along with Kyo Kusanagi and King.[100][101] In Nintendo's Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, she appears as a background character.
Blue Mary also makes an appearance in the Memories of Stray Wolves twenty-minute featurette that serves as a retrospective of the Fatal Fury series, with Terry narrating the events of the games ten years after Real Bout Fatal Fury.[102] She also stars in manhua based on the games retelling her actions in the series.
Bob Wilson
- Voiced by: Toshiyuki Morikawa
Roberto "Bob" Wilson (ボブ・ウィルソン, Bobu Wiruson) is a character introduced in Fatal Fury 3 and appears as a playable character throughout the Real Bout sub-series. He is the bartender of Pao Pao Cafe 2 and was trained in capoeira by Richard Meyer. He specializes in spinning kicks and combination attacks. All of his special moves reference animals in some way, as his Fatal Fury 3 Special Moves are the Wild Wolf, the Bison's Horn, the Lynx's Fang, the Rolling Turtle, and the Hornet Attack. His Super Special Move is the Dangerous Wolf. In Real Bout, he gains the Monkey Dance special move and two Hidden Abilities, the Mad Spin Wolf and the Wolf's Fang. Real Bout Special brings in the Sidewinder, Hunting Frog and Hawk Talon Special Moves, and Real Bout 2 discards Bob's previous Hidden Abilities for a new one called Dancing Bison.
Franco Bash
- Voiced by: B.J. Love
Franco Bash (フランコ・バッシュ, Furanko Basshu) makes his first appearance in Fatal Fury 3 as one of the five new playable characters introduced in the game and also appears thorough the Real Bout sub-series. He is a retired Super Heavyweight-class kickboxing champion who works as a mechanic in South Town Airport to support his wife Emilia, and their son Junior. In Fatal Fury 3 his son is kidnapped by Yamazaki, who blackmails him into helping him obtain the Secret Scrolls of the Jin. He rescues his son in his ending in Fatal Fury 3 and trains to make his comeback in the Real Bout series. He makes a cameo at the end of KOF 2003 cheering on the Fatal Fury Team.
Hon-Fu
- Voiced by: Toshiyuki Morikawa
Hon-Fu (ホンフゥ, Hon Fū) is introduced in Fatal Fury 3 as one of the new playable characters featured in the game and appears all the games in the Real Bout sub-series. He is a police officer from Hong Kong who specializes in using a nunchaku. His objective throughout Fatal Fury 3 and the Real Bout series is to arrest the escaped convict Ryuji Yamazaki and is aided by Cheng in Fatal Fury 3. He is a close friend of Kim Kaphwan according to his backstory in Fatal Fury 3, as the two have nearly identical desperation attacks, although Hon-Fu was given a new one for Real Bout Fatal Fury 2.
Jin Chonrei
- Voiced by: Kappei Yamaguchi
Jin Chonrei (秦 崇雷, Japanese: Jin Chonrei, Pinyin: Qín Chóngléi, also romanized as Qin Chong-Lei) appears in Fatal Fury 3 as the third and final boss character featured in the game and appears as a regular playable character thorough the Real Bout series. Like his younger brother Chonshu, Chonrei is possessed by the spirit of Jin Kuryu (秦 空龍), the elder son of Jin Ōryū and ancestor of Chonrei and Chonshu. In Fatal Fury 3, they head to South Town to seek the Secret Scrolls of the Jin in order to unleash their true power. The scrolls are eventually taken by Geese Howard and in the next game of the series, Real Bout Fatal Fury, the Jin brothers participate in the King of Fighters tournament to recover them. However, the scrolls are destroyed by Chonrei in the Jin Brothers' endings. In Real Bout Fatal Fury 2, Chonrei becomes an apprentice of Tung Fu Rue, as seen in their corresponding ending (although Kim's ending in the game depicts Chonrei training as Kim's disciple along with his brother). Outside the Fatal Fury series, Jin Chonshu and Jin Chonrei have appeared in Neo Geo Battle Coliseum.
In Gamest's 1997 Heroes Collection, Chonrei was voted as the staff's thirty-ninth favorite character. He shared the spot with four other characters, including Fatal Fury character, Joe Higashi, and Street Fighter character, Zangief.[103]
Jin Chonshu
- Voiced by: Kappei Yamaguchi
Jin Chonshu (秦 崇秀, Japanese: Jin Chonshū, Pinyin: Qín Chóngxiù) first appears as the second boss character in Fatal Fury 3 and appears thorough the Real Bout series as a regular playable character. He is the younger half of the Jin brothers seeking the Three Secret Scrolls of the Jin. While he appears like a regular teenage boy, he is actually possessed by the spirit of Jin Kairyu (秦 海龍), who was the younger son of Jin Ōryū (秦 王龍), the ancient warlord who wrote the Secret Scrolls of the Jin two thousand years prior to the events of Fatal Fury 3. In Fatal Fury 3, they head to South Town to seek the Secret Scrolls of the Jin in order to unleash their true power. The scrolls are eventually taken by Geese Howard and in the original Real Bout Fatal Fury the Jin brothers participate in the King of Fighters tournament to recover them. However, the scrolls are destroyed by Chonrei in the Jin Brothers' endings. In Real Bout 2, Chonshu then becomes a disciple of Kim Kaphwan, as seen in their corresponding endings. Outside the Fatal Fury series, Jin Chonshu and Jin Chonrei have appeared in Neo Geo Battle Coliseum.
Ryuji Yamazaki
- Voiced by: Kōji Ishii (FF3–KOF 2003), Tsuguo Mogami (KOF XIV onwards),[104] Kenjiro Tsuda (KOF for Girls)[105]
Ryuji Yamazaki (山崎 竜二, Yamazaki Ryūji) is first introduced as the sub-boss character of Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory, where he is a criminal known as "Dark Broker". In the game, Yamazaki is hired by the Jin brothers into recovering their Sacred Scrolls, which are able to give immortality to its user. In the following titles from the series, Yamazaki does not work for anybody, normally committing crimes just to entertain himself, despite to this, however, he had secretly still wanting to take the scrolls from Geese. In Garou: Mark of the Wolves, he was believed to be the perpetrator of beating all of Marco Rodriguez's best students in his Kyokugenryu karate gym, as depicted in Marco's ending. Yamazaki's introduction in The King of Fighters series was made as a result of three popularity polls developed by three video games journals in which players voted which character they wanted to see in The King of Fighters '97, the upcoming game from the series at that time. Yamazaki has also appeared in the crossover games Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000 and Capcom vs. SNK 2 as a playable character. Video games publications have commented on Yamazaki's character, with some praising his introduction in Fatal Fury 3 and development in titles from The King of Fighters.[106] Other reviewers criticized how hard defeating him is in the Fatal Fury games and how strong he is in Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000 in comparison to other popular characters.[107]
Yamazaki’s origin in The King of Fighters series eventually revealed that he was a former member of Hakkeshu, the followers of Orochi. Having had lost his father-figure yakuza boss that made him a psychopath, it saves Yamazaki from Orochi’s Riot of the Blood mind control.
Sokaku Mochizuki
- Voiced by: Kōji Ishii
Sokaku Mochizuki (望月 双角, Mochizuki Sōkaku) is introduced in Fatal Fury 3 as one of the five new characters featured in the game and appears in all of the games in the Real Bout series. Mochizuki is a Buddhist monk who practices the Authentic Pathless style Martial Arts (正伝無道流武術, Seiden Mudō Ryū Bujutsu), a fighting style created to hunt down Shura after its founder lost to the Shiranui style. He is said to have the strongest psychokinetic power in the history of the art's style. In Fatal Fury 3 and the original Real Bout, his objective is to seek the Scrolls of the Jin and destroy them, because he believes that it would be a source of a Shura. His Real Bout 2 ending shows him trapping a demon larger than a house within a single paper talisman.
Introduced in Dominated Mind
Alfred
- Voiced by: Hiro Yūki
Alfred (アルフレッド, Arufureddo) is the protagonist of the main story mode in Real Bout Garou Densetsu Special: Dominated Mind, a Japan-only PlayStation game based on the original Real Bout Fatal Fury Special. Prior to his debut, he appears as a secret final boss in Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers and Fatal Fury: First Contact. When he was young, his friend John (the elderly co-pilot who accompanies Alfred) took him on a trip on his biplane. When John flew to Russian airspace, MiG missiles were sent after him, but he managed to outfly them without getting struck. John became a hero in Alfred's mind, as the man who won against the MiGs, and Alfred was charmed by flying since then. Alfred seeks to defeat White, who took over the hometown where his deceased father is interred. Alfred goes to Southtown to seek Terry Bogard's aid and help him defeat White.
Alfred makes minor appearances in later games, including as a secret striker in the Dreamcast version of The King of Fighters '99, as a trading card in SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters Clash, and as a stage cameo in KOF: Maximum Impact 2 and KOF 2002: Unlimited Match.
White
- Voiced by: Keiji Fujiwara
White (ホワイト, Howaito) is the antagonist of Real Bout Garou Densetsu Special, where he serves as Alfred's rival. A demented psycho and all-around disturbed fellow, White finds pleasure in making people suffer and follow his every wish. He uses his mind-controlling abilities to make people his personal toys, manipulating them to his desire. White enjoys playing around with those foolish enough to challenge him, using the great amount of power that he possesses. He appears to be based on the main character, Alexander DeLarge from Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange novel.
Introduced in Real Bout Fatal Fury 2
Lao
Lao (ラオ, Rao) is a character who first appears in the opening sequence of Real Bout 2, being defeated by Rick Strowd. He makes his only playable appearance in the versus mode of Fatal Fury: First Contact. In Garou: Mark of the Wolves, he becomes a member of B. Jenet's Lillien Knights crew.
Li Xiangfei
- Voiced by: Mami Kingetsu
Li Xiangfei (Chinese: 李 香緋; Pinyin: Lǐ Xiāngfēi; Japanese: 李 香緋 Rii Shanfei) makes her first appearance in Real Bout 2. She is a 17-year-old Chinese-American girl who works part-time as waitress in her Uncle Pai's restaurant in the Chinatown district of South Town and has trained in various Chinese martial arts since an early age. She also appears in Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition as a hidden guest character.
Li Xiangfei would later make her debut in The King of Fighters series in The King of Fighters '99, forming part of the Woman Fighters Team along with King, Blue Mary, and Kasumi Todoh.[108] She was absent in The King of Fighters 2000, but would return in The King of Fighters 2001, taking Kasumi Todoh's place from the previous game.[109]
Rick Strowd
- Voiced by: Taney Yamaguchi
Rick Strowd (リック・ストラウド, Rikku Sutoraudo) is one of the two new characters introduced in Real Bout 2.[110] He is a casino show boxer known as the "White Wolf of the Ring", who is the son of a Native American father and a white mother. He seeks the opportunity to fight in a championship match as well as fight Terry Bogard. Rick's Special Moves are the Shooting Star, the Divine Blast, the Hellion, and the Blazing Sun Burst. He also has a special dodging maneuver called Full Moon Fever. His Super Special is the Gaia's Breath, and his Hidden Ability is the Machine-Gun Wolf. Rick is seen to have a girlfriend, a blonde woman wearing a red dress, name unknown, with whom he rides off into sunset on horseback in his ending. Fans have speculated a probable connection between him and fellow boxer, Vanessa, from SNK's King of Fighters series, as she later began using Rick's Hellion, and had the Gaia's Breath as a DM in The King of Fighters 2002.
Introduced in Wild Ambition
Toji Sakata
- Voiced by: Masashi Sugawara
Toji Sakata (坂田 冬次, Sakata Tōji) is one of two characters who appears exclusively in Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition. He is the legendary practitioner of the fighting style Dainan-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu (大南流合気柔術, lit. "The Great South Style of Aiki-jūjutsu", modeled the non-fictional Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu). He was once the best friend and the rival of Tatsumi Suoh (周防 辰巳, Suō Tatsumi), Blue Mary's grandfather and the man who trained Geese Howard in jujutsu. Believing that he was destined to challenge Tatsumi in a death match, this encounter never occurred since Tatsumi was eventually killed by his former student, Geese Howard. He enters the King of Fighters tournament to defeat the man who killed his rival.[111]
Tsugumi Sendo
- Voiced by: Kayo Deguchi
Tsugumi Sendo (千堂 つぐみ, Sendō Tsugumi) is one of the two new characters exclusive to Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition. She's a high school girl from Osaka who was taught wrestling by her father, Kantetsu (寛鉄) since an early age. However, she is secretly ashamed of this, especially after she was told by a boy she had a crush on that women wrestlers are "unfeminine", after hearing this she wanted to drop out of her wrestling training. After butting heads with her overbearing father, Kantetsu will allow her to drop out, but only under the condition that she brings a decisive victory in the King of Fighters tournament. Despite her original hatred for wrestling, she has come to enjoy fighting as she began to win matches.[112] Some of Tsugumi's move names reference her hometown, like "Tsūtenkaku Driver", "Naniwa Lariat", and "Okonomiyaki-Ire".
Introduced in Mark of the Wolves
B. Jenet
- Voiced by: Rei Saitō (MOTW–KOFAS), Mikako Komatsu (KOF XV) (Japanese); Gina Rose (KOF: MI2) (English)
B. Jenet (B・ジェニー) (real name Jenet Behrn) is a character from both Garou: Mark of the Wolves and the King of Fighters series. Jenet is the leader of a group of pirates known as the Lillien Knights. Jenet entered the tournament hosted by Kain R. Heinlein to rob him of anything valuable he might be keeping in his mansion. In her ending, she passes out amidst the destruction of Kain's mansion after defeating him. Her crew saves her from being trapped under the rubble, but fails to secure any of the treasure they had been looking for.
In The King of Fighters Maximum Impact 2, her parents are revealed to be incredibly wealthy; she formed the Lillien Knights when she became bored of her tedious lifestyle. Before the start of the tournament, she attends a party in her otherwise occupied parents' place. While there, the son of the host attempts (and fails quite miserably) to impress her with his paltry skills in Savate. Although Jenet is rather repulsed by his arrogance and embarrassing lack of skill, she learns from him that the King of Fighters tournament is being held once again. After her Lillien Knights knock the man unconscious and rob his father, Jenet decides to join the tournament in hopes of winning the prize money. She is voiced by Rei Saitō in Japanese, and by Gina Rose in the English version of KOF: MI2.
Jenet is very comfortable around men, and her win quotes and prefight and postfight animations express that she doesn't seem very serious about fighting. In The King of Fighters XI, she was in the tournament for monetary gain strictly, and she enters with Tizoc and Gato to form the Fatal Fury/Mark of the Wolves team.
Her fighting style, the LK (Lillien Knights) arts, is similar to savate, a French form of kickboxing. Her moves are mostly made up of attacks by swooping her dress (in moves such as specials "The Hind" and "Crazy Ivan" and Super Special Move "Aurora") and she is able to control the wind (being reflected in her projectile attack "Buffrass" and her Super Special Move "Too Many Torpedoes"). She also, as a Super Special Leader Move in KOF XI, takes off her left shoe and beats her opponent with it. The move is called "An Oi Madamoiselle".
Her appearance consists of a purple dress with a skull and crossbones, red fingerless gloves, a red belt with gold lining, and blonde hair, along with stiletto heels as used in "An Oi Madamoiselle".
Freeman
- Voiced by: Eiji Yano
Freeman (フリーマン, Furīman), real name unknown, is a mysterious English serial killer that fights using slashing movements with his hands as if they were claws. Little is known about him, except that he killed the partner of Kevin Rian. Many of Freeman's special techniques are references to heavy metal bands, such as Nightmare, Morbid Angel, Overkill, and Vision of Disorder.
Gato
- Voiced by: Kōji Ishii (MOTW–KOF XI), Yuma Yamaguchi (KOF XV onwards)
Gato (牙刀, Gatō) is a character from Garou: Mark of the Wolves and the King of Fighters series. A ruthless and serious martial artist, Gato has no concerns outside of besting anyone unfortunate enough to cross his path. In his Mark of the Wolves ending, a stranger saves Kain R. Heinlein from the crumbling mansion. Gato appears to know the stranger, but he is blinded before he can act. As the mansion falls, the stranger taunts Gato, telling him to start training in order to defeat him. Gato appears to have a vision of his past and his father, and angrily swears vengeance - this insinuates that the stranger is connected to Gato's past (the stranger's outfit appears to resemble Gato's), but nothing has been officially confirmed. Gato also appears in the ending of Hotaru Futaba, who claims that he's her older brother and slaps him when he denies even knowing her. He then leaves her there, and Hotaru silently prays for Gato to come back to her and their father.
Gato first appears in the King of Fighters series in King of Fighters 2003 as part of the Outlaw Team, along with Ryuji Yamazaki and Billy Kane. Gato is summoned to Geese Howard's office and forced to cooperate in order to prevent his sister from being harmed. Gato does not like his teammates at all as revealed by the ending, in which Gato ditches the other two immediately and tells them off, leaving Yamazaki and Billy to fight. In KOF XI he is partnered with B. Jenet and Tizoc to form a Garou Team. He also immediately leaves them, though on somewhat friendlier terms (he declines their invitation to celebrate) reinforcing Hotaru's description of his true nature.
Grant
- Voiced by: Yō Kitazawa
Grant (グラント, Guranto), real name Abel Cameron (アベル・キャメロン, Aberu Kyameron), is a master of the dark style known as Ankoku Karate. He is Kain R. Heinlein's closest friend and personal bodyguard, and appears as the sub-boss of Garou: Mark of the Wolves.
Hokutomaru
- Voiced by: Junko Takeuchi
Hokutomaru (北斗丸) is a ninja who trained under Andy Bogard. He is extremely fast and crafty, with many moves that are among the fastest in Garou, making him a nearly unpredictable opponent to deal with. His stage is a traffic accident that he caused, as he was unfamiliar with urban ways due to his age and training. Hokutomaru carries a sword on his back, but he seldom draws it except during two special moves.
Hotaru Futaba
- Voiced by: Yuki Horie (MOTW–KOFAS)
Hotaru Futaba (双葉 ほたる, Futaba Hotaru) is a character who was introduced in Garou: Mark of the Wolves and also makes an appearance in Neo Geo Battle Coliseum and in the PS2 version of The King of Fighters XI. Hotaru is the daughter of a family of martial artists, but is not very fond of violence. She never wants to hurt others, which is the probable reason why her father taught her the lighter side of Chinese kenpo; the Juu-kei style, which suits her easygoing personality. There are two things that Hotaru appreciates the most after her mother's suicide:[113] her sable, Itokatsu, and her older brother, Gato. Gato was a man who was tormented to become an accomplished martial artist, and was pushed too far by their father. Still, Hotaru knows who the real Gato is, and she is sure that he is not such a bad person at heart.
Gato's disappearance led Hotaru to a hostile city located in the United States: Second South Town, where fighting rules all, crime rules the society, and strength dictates who lives and dies. In this harsh place, Hotaru set out to find clues about her brother. She then heard news of a fighting tournament of epic proportions that would soon occur in Second South Town - "King of Fighters: Maximum Mayhem". Hotaru had a feeling that her brother would enter the tournament, as he was always looking for strong opponents to fight. Following her premonitions, Hotaru entered the tournament as well.
Kain R. Heinlein
- Voiced by: Jun Hashimoto
Kain R. Heinlein (カイン・R・ハインライン, Kain R Hainrain) is the mysterious host of Southtown's "King of Fighters: Maximum Mayhem" tournament. He is Rock Howard's maternal uncle, being the younger brother of Rock's deceased mother Marie Heinlein. He appears as the final boss of Garou: Mark of the Wolves, and is set to return in the upcoming Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves.
Kevin Rian
- Voiced by: Yō Kitazawa
Kevin Rian (ケビン・ライアン, Kebin Raian) is a high-spirited police officer of Second Southtown. He is also a friend to both Terry and Rock. He fights using Sambo, similar to his distant relative Blue Mary,[114] although much of his fighting style revolves more around direct strikes than grappling. He is cheered on during fights by his friend's son Marky. In Garou, he seeks revenge for the death of his partner, who was murdered by Freeman.
Kim Dong-Hwan
- Voiced by: Jun Hashimoto
Kim Dong-Hwan (キム・ドンファン, Kimu Donfan), sometimes written as 김동환 (Kim Dong-hwan), was taught Taekwondo by his father, Kim Kaphwan, using techniques infused with lightning, and has a friendly rivalry with his younger brother Kim Jae-Hoon. He is more of a show-off and slacker than his brother, relying more on aerial attacks and juggles (i.e. attacks that strike the opponent into the air uncontrollably). He believes he is a "genius" in the story, and doesn't need to study diligently in order to master Taekwondo, but his father and brother see it differently.
Kim Jae-Hoon
- Voiced by: Hiroki Asakawa
Kim Jae-Hoon (キム・ジェイフン, Kimu jeifun), sometimes written as 김재훈 (Kim Jae-hoon), was taught Taekwondo by his father, Kim Kaphwan, using techniques infused with fire, and is a brother of Dong Hwan's. Jae-Hoon admires his father, so he fights more like him than Dong-Hwan does, with a combination of high and low attacks with plenty of power behind them. Like his father, he has a strong sense of justice and chivalry, but unlike his brother, he establishes his strength through constant practice.
Marco Rodriguez
- Voiced by: Hikaru Hanada
Marco Rodriguez (マルコ・ロドリゲス, Maruko Rodorigesu) is a Brazilian Kyokugen-style karate expert, who trained under Ryo Sakazaki. He leads a somewhat austere life in a wooded area on the outskirts of town, and fights using powerful, deliberate attacks. Just like Ryo, he has several famous moves from Art of Fighting with some of his own derivatives.
Marco was renamed Khushnood Butt in the U.S. release of Garou: Mark of the Wolves, possibly to avoid confusion with mixed martial artist Ricco Rodriguez; the character's name would be reverted to Marco in future localizations beginning in The King of Fighters XV (2022).
Rock Howard
- Voiced by: Eiji Takemoto (MOTW–KOF: MIRA), Yuuma Uchida (KOF XIV onwards), Ami Koshimizu (young; KOF: D)
Rock Howard (ロック・ハワード, Rokku Hawādo) is the son of Geese Howard and Marie Heinlein, and adopted son of Terry Bogard. He makes his first appearance in Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory, in which it is revealed how he becomes friends with Terry.[115][116] After Geese falls to his death by refusing Terry's help, Terry adopts Rock, whom he takes care of like his son.[117] Rock becomes a playable character in Garou: Mark of the Wolves, having both lived with Terry and studied martial arts under him for ten years. During this time, a new King of Fighters tournament arose under the name "Maximum Mayhem", which Rock and Terry both decide to compete in.[118] By the end of the tournament, Rock finds his final opponent is Kain R. Heinlein, who reveals himself to be both the host and Rock's uncle. Kain, aware that Geese Howard's will held presumably valuable secrets but unable to discover them without assistance, wins Rock's aid in working through the document by offering information regarding Rock's mother Marie—whom Kain claimed was still alive. Terry accepts Rock's decision to become Kain's new partner, with Rock promising to return.[119]
Despite making several cameos in games from The King of Fighters series, Rock was only playable in the spin-off games KOF: Maximum Impact and Maximum Impact 2 for several years. Both games feature Rock entering into King of Fighters tournaments developed in Southtown prior to the events of Mark of the Wolves.[120] Rock makes his first playable appearance in a mainline King of Fighters title in The King of Fighters XIV, being added to the game via post-launch downloadable content. However his canonical first participation on the team-based tournament is in The King of Fighters XV, where he is a new leader of the DLC Team Garou.[121][122] Rock also appears as a playable character in the crossover video games NeoGeo Battle Coliseum and Capcom vs. SNK 2.[123][124]
Rock also appears in the 2006 original net animation The King of Fighters: Another Day. In the second episode Rock finds Lien Neville fighting Billy Kane, Geese's former right-hand man, in the Geese Tower. As Lien is about to be killed, Rock saves her, which enrages Billy as he cannot believe that he is Geese's son. As Billy attacks Rock, Lien shoots a laser that takes Billy out of the tower.[125] Memories of Stray Wolves, a twenty-minute featurette serves as a retrospective of the Fatal Fury series, with Terry narrating the events of the games to Rock.[102] The first seven volumes from the manhua The King of Fighters 2003 by Wing Yen features a short chapter from Garou: Mark of the Wolves based on Rock's training with Terry.[126] In the last of the chapters, Rock fights Grant, who is revealed to be a childhood friend who always protected him. Despite feeling sad for fighting his friend, Rock defeats Grant in order to meet the host of the Maximum Mayhem tournament, his uncle, Kain.[127]
A young Rock appears in the 2017 webseries, The King of Fighters: Destiny. In episode eleven, Rock meets Terry at a coffee shop. He is caught by a worker attempting to steal food, so he pretends that Terry is his father to escape trouble. After learning that the boy has no one to raise him, Terry promises to adopt Rock as his son after he defeats Geese. Terry's display of kindness towards Rock also convinces Angelina to stop herself from poisoning him.
Rock is featured in The King of Fighters All Star, and makes a cameo in the King of Fighters Stadium stage in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
Tizoc / King of Dinosaurs
- Voiced by: Hikaru Hanada
Tizoc, otherwise known as Griffon Mask (グリフォンマスク, Gurifon Masuku) or the Griffon in the Japanese version, is a character from both the Fatal Fury and King of Fighters series. He started out in the Fatal Fury game Garou: Mark of the Wolves and is described as being a well-renowned and popular professional wrestler. By the time of Garou: Mark of The Wolves, Tizoc already sees himself as a washed up has-been and enters the tournament in order to gain his passion into going back into the ring. When the events of King of Fighters 2003 occur, Tizoc is an up-and-coming superstar in the professional wrestling circuit and joins the Fatal Fury team after being invited by Terry Bogard himself after his brother Andy becomes unavailable since he is teaching a young boy in Shiranui style ninjutsu in Japan (the boy would later grow up to be known as Hokutomaru in Garou).
In The King of Fighters XIV, there is a new character known as King of Dinosaurs (キング・オブ・ダイナソー, Kingu Obu Dainasō), who shares the same voice actor, a similar fighting style, build, color schemes and feather decor as Tizoc, now teamed with the former NESTS agent Angel and Ramon on Team Mexico. During the tournament, several opponents, such as Tizoc's former teammate Terry, easily address King of Dinosaurs as Tizoc despite the new fighter's denials,[128][129] while other characters, who may or may not identify King of Dinosaurs as Tizoc, merely deem him foolish.[130] Despite Eisuke Ogura's pre-release claims that King Of Dinosaurs is not Tizoc,[131] the Team Mexico ending reveals that King of Dinosaurs is in fact Tizoc who suffered a humiliating defeat by Nelson. To seek revenge, Tizoc adopted a new "heel" persona, King of Dinosaurs, relying on his teammates Ángel and Ramón to help cover his former identity. In The King of Fighters XV, King of Dinosaurs/Tizoc and Ramón would be teamed up with the former KOF XIV tournament hosts Antonov to form the new wrestling team named Team G.A.W. (Galaxy Anton Wrestling).
Reception
The characters from Fatal Fury have received major positive reaction with GamesRadar calling Terry Bogard as "one of SNK's most memorable characters", as 86th "most memorable, influential, and badass" protagonist in games.[132] IGN praised the increase of the series' cast but heavily criticized the final boss Geese Howard for his high difficulty.[133] Avi Krebs from GamingExcellence.com commented that Billy Kane is one of the hardest boss characters from the first Fatal Fury, but he remains "pale" in comparison to Geese.[134] Kotaku's Patricia Hernandez wrote "one of Fatal Fury 2's biggest contributions to the medium was that it was the first game to introduce a character with breasts that moved on their own. Known as Mai Shiranui, that character is famed for having very, uh, lively breasts. Though Fatal Fury may not be a huge franchise nowadays, its legacy is very much alive: many top fighting games include a similar jiggle effect".[135] While acknowledging that Fatal Fury fans might be disappointed by the reduced roster of fighters in Fatal Fury 3, GamePro praised the new third fighting plane and ranking system, and concluded that "instead of simply adding more fighters, FF3 does more with fewer fighters (hidden moves and so on) and a unique method of gameplay".[136] They remarked that Bob and Franco are "uninteresting" new characters but praising and the modifications to Mai Shiranui's Swan Dive attack.[137] The cast of Garou was praised for their animations which was compared with the ones from Marvel vs. Capcom 2.[138]
THEM Anime Reviews criticized the characterization of the main characters in the three films citing them as "one-dimensional" and also the villains.[139][140][141] On the other hand, Anime News Network's Bamboo Dong enjoyed the portrayal of the characters in the films, particularly praising Terry's character development as "most adaptations of this nature barely let their characters show any weaknesses at all, much less an extended period of insecurity and despair, so it was pretty compelling seeing Terry's journey through his dark period".[142] In another review, Dong praised the selection of the main characters.[143] Chris Beveridge from Mania Beyond Entertainment also praised the development of the characters such as the interactions between the couple of Andy Bogard and Mai Shiranui as well as the grief of Terry over the loss of his girlfriend.[144]
References
- ↑ "The Man Who Created Street Fighter". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on January 22, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2016.
- ↑ @KOF_ALLSTAR (July 25, 2019). "【公式】KOF ALLSTAR @KOF_ALLSTAR 【KOF ALLSTARに新ファイター予告!】 「フン!」 姉(?)になった今も、妹思いのプリティー・ビリーが参戦! CV.伊藤 静 KOFASでしか見られない彼女の姿を動画でチェック! 7/30新イベント開催💖 DL▼ kofallstar.netmarble.jp #KOFAS #KOF #KOFAS1周年 #プリティー・ビリー" (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-05-17 – via Twitter.
- ↑ "『KOF』の女性向け『KOF乙女』発表。友情あり恋愛ありのイケメン格闘家育成ゲーム". dengekionline.com (in Japanese). 2019-06-12. Retrieved 2023-05-17.
- ↑ SNK (1991-12-20). Fatal Fury: King of Fighters (Neo Geo). SNK. Level/area: Stage 8.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury Special". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website (in Japanese). Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ SNK (1995-12-21). Real Bout Fatal Fury (Neo Geo). SNK. Level/area: Terry Bogard ending.
Geese: RAISING.... ahhhh... uhu./Terry: TRIPLE GEYSERRRRR.../Geese: AHHHHHHHHHHAAAGH!!!!/Terry: GEEEEEEEEESEEEEE!!!!/Geese: Hmph... WAH, HAH, HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!/Terry: ....
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury Special". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-03-27. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-04-10. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Real Bout Special Dominated Mind". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2009-03-27. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website (in Japanese). Retrieved 2009-01-21.
- ↑ "Yuri Sakazaki Official Profile". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-07.
- ↑ "Rival Team Official Story ~ KOF 95". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ SNK (1995-07-25). The King of Fighters '95 (Neo Geo). SNK.
Iori: What a fool! Such power can only by mine! Well, shall we wrap this up?/Eiji: What?/Billy: Hey! You're... you're Geese!/Iori: Just wait, Kyo. You're next for extermination. You and all Kusanagis! Yah, hah, hah
- ↑ "'97 Special Team Back Story". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters '98". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-02-20. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ "KOF 2002". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-02-07. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters Neowave official website". SNK Playmore. Archived from the original on 2009-02-07. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ The King of Fighters Fighting Evolution 10th (in Japanese). SNK Playmore. December 2004. p. 94. ISBN 978-4-575-16431-2.
- ↑ "Another Striker" (in Japanese). SNK Playmore. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
- ↑ "Outlaw Team Official Story ~ KOF 2003". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ SNK (1999). The King of Fighters Kyo (PlayStation). SNK. Level/area: Southtown: Medicine Plant.
- ↑ SNK Playmore (2006-04-27). KOF Maximum Impact 2 (PlayStation 2). SNK Playmore. Level/area: Billy Kane Back Story.
- ↑ "The King Of Fighters XIII On PS3 And Xbox 360 Adds Billy Kane". Siliconera. Retrieved 2011-06-28.
- ↑ "SNK, Victor Entertainment Reveal 'King of Fighters for Girls' Smartphone Game". Anime News Network. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ↑ Fatal Fury: Legend of the Hungry Wolf (VHS). Viz Video. 1992.
- ↑ Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle (VHS). Viz Video. 1993.
- ↑ Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture (VHS). Viz Video. 1994.
- ↑ SNK Playmore (2006-04-27). KOF Maximum Impact 2 (PlayStation 2). SNK Playmore. Level/area: The King of Fighters: Another Day.
- ↑ "Remembrances of KOF: An Interview with Eiji". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2007-06-28. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ Natsumoto, Masato (1996). The King of Fighters Kyo, volume 1. Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-319759-4.
- ↑ Gamest, ed. (1997). Gamest Game Hero Collection 1997; issue 208 (in Japanese). Shinseisha. p. 240.
- ↑ "Character polls". Official Neo Geo Freak website (archived version). Archived from the original on 2000-06-19. Retrieved 2009-01-26.
- ↑ All About SNK (in Japanese). Dempa Shimbunsha. 2000. ISBN 978-4-88554-677-8.
- ↑ SNK (1991-12-20). Fatal Fury: King of Fighters (Neo Geo). SNK. Level/area: Joe Higashi ending.
Joe: It's the beginning of Joe's legend.
- ↑ SNK (1995-12-21). Real Bout Fatal Fury (Neo Geo). SNK. Level/area: Terry Bogard ending.
Geese: RAISING.... ahhhh... uhu./Terry: TRIPLE GEYSERRRRR.../Geese: AHHHHHHHHHHAAAGH!!!!/Terry: GEEEEEEEEESEEEEE!!!!/Geese: Hmph... WAH, HAH, HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!/Terry: ....
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury Special". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-03-27. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-04-10. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-03-28. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury Team Story 99". The King of Fighter 10th anniversary website. Archived from the original on 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury Team Story 2000". The King of Fighter 10th anniversary website. Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury Team Story 2001". The King of Fighter 10th anniversary website. Archived from the original on 2009-10-23. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters 2002". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-02-07. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "King of Fighters 2003 - Fatal Fury Team". The King of Fighter 10th anniversary website. Archived from the original on 2009-03-03. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
- ↑ "King of Fighters XI Garou Team". The King of Fighter 10th anniversary website. Archived from the original on 2008-12-18. Retrieved 2009-03-28.
- ↑ "『ザ・キング・オブ・ファイターズXII』稼動時期が決定!" (in Japanese). Official The King of Fighters XII Homepage. Archived from the original on 2009-02-28. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ SNK (1999). The King of Fighters Kyo (PlayStation). SNK. Level/area: Korea: Camp.
- ↑ "Game Spot: The King of Fighters EX". Game Spot. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters Neowave official website". SNK Playmore. Archived from the original on 2009-02-07. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "CAPCOM VS. SNK PRO". Capcom. Archived from the original on 2009-02-27. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "SNK Fighters". Capcom. Archived from the original on 2009-04-08. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "SNK, Victor Entertainment Reveal 'King of Fighters for Girls' Smartphone Game". Anime News Network. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ↑ Fatal Fury: Legend of the Hungry Wolf (VHS). Viz Video. 1992.
- ↑ Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle (VHS). Viz Video. 1993.
- ↑ Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture (VHS). Viz Video. 1994.
- ↑ @KOF_ALLSTAR (June 10, 2020). "【KOF ALLSTARに新ファイター参戦!】 「悪は許さん!」 姿が変わってしまったキム・カッファン、KOFASに参戦! CV. 大橋 彩香 プリティー・キムを動画でチェック! 次回もお楽しみにSmiling face with smiling eyes ダウンロードはこちら▼ http://kofallstar.netmarble.jp #KOFAS #KOF #プリティー・キム" (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-05-23 – via Twitter.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury 2". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-07.
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury" (in Japanese). Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-04-10. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury Special" (in Japanese). Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-03-27. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers" (in Japanese). Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-04-10. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition" (in Japanese). Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
- ↑ "Kim Team KOF 94 Backstory". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-07.
- ↑ SNK (1999-07-22). The King of Fighters '99 (Neo Geo). SNK.
Chang: Hey, Choi. There's only one thing left to do.../Choi: You mean? We do that and we're free! Gah, hah, hah!/Chang, Choi: We can't do it! Can we!?/Chang: Nope, we've gotten soft. A few years ago, we could've./Choi Yeah, a few years ago. We're actually becoming... nice. And Kim knows it, too. We've gone legitimate!/Chang: This year, I haven't felt guilty about anything!/Choi: We'll have to change that. Next year, we get evil!
- ↑ "Korea Team KOF 99 Backstory". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-07.
- ↑ "Korea Team KOF 2001 Backstory". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-07.
- ↑ "Korea Team KOF 2003 Backstory". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-07.
- ↑ "Garou Team KOF XI Backstory". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved 2009-03-07.
- ↑ "『ザ・キング・オブ・ファイターズXII』稼動時期が決定!" (in Japanese). Official The King of Fighters XII Homepage. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters '98". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-02-20. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters 2002". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-02-07. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters NeoWave Hints & Cheats". GameSpot. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ↑ SNK (1999). The King of Fighters Kyo (PlayStation). SNK. Level/area: Korea: Gym.
- ↑ "Game Spot: The King of Fighters EX". Game Spot. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ↑ "Game Spot: The King of Fighters EX2: Howling Blood". Game Spot. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters 2006 Hints & Cheats". GameSpot. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
- ↑ SNK Playmore (2006-04-27). KOF Maximum Impact 2 (PlayStation 2). SNK Playmore. Level/area: Chae Lim Ending.
- ↑ "Neo Geo Battle Coliseum official website". SNK Playmore. Archived from the original on 2006-11-04. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "Capcom VS. SNK official website". Capcom. Archived from the original on 2008-08-08. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "Super Smash Bros. Ultimate – Mr. Sakurai Presents "Terry Bogard"". Nintendo. Youtube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved June 25, 2020.
- ↑ Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle. Viz Video. 1993.
- ↑ Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture. Viz Video. 1994.
- ↑ "Remembrances of KOF: An Interview with Eiji". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on December 19, 2008. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ As seen in the DVD retrospective Garou - Memories of Stray Wolves
- ↑ SNK (1995-03-27). Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory (Neo Geo). SNK. Level/area: Blue Mary ending.
Blue Mary: Why didn't you tell me about the Jins?! Oh, take you job! I'm off to the..../
- ↑ "RB餓狼伝説". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-04-10. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury Special". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-03-27. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Real Bout Fatal Fury 2: The Newcomers". Fatal Fury 15th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-04-10. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ SNK (1998). Real Bout Garou Densetsu Special: Dominated Mind (PlayStation). SNK. Level/area: Blue Mary's Blues.
- ↑ "'97 Special Team Back Story". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ SNK (1997-07-28). The King of Fighters '97 (Neo Geo). SNK.
Mary: Yamazaki's location: Unknown. He may be in Hong Kong but no clues remain. Searched during the contest. This client is part of Geese's massive organization. Duped by the Gesster, I've lost completely. But I'll get vengeance./Geese: A job well done./Billy: Yagami's lost but Yamazaki remains. He's Orochi that's for sure./Geese: I used Mary too. But losing her was a mistake.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters '98". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-02-20. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ "KOF 2002". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-02-07. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters Neowave official website". SNK Playmore. Archived from the original on 2009-02-07. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
- ↑ "Women Fighters Team Backstory '99". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-04-21. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury Team Story 2000". The King of Fighter 10th anniversary website. Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury Team Story 2001". The King of Fighter 10th anniversary website. Archived from the original on 2009-10-23. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- ↑ "Women Fighters Team Backstory 2003". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-05-28. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ "Agents Team Backstory XI". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2009-04-20. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ "The King of Fighters XIV - Blue Mary Trailer | PS4". YouTube. 2018-04-05. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- ↑ "KOF Maximum Impact Regulation A: Blue Mary" (in Japanese). SNK Playmore. Archived from the original on 2009-02-17. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
- ↑ SNK (1999). The King of Fighters Kyo (PlayStation). SNK. Level/area: Southtown: Downtown.
- ↑ SNK (1999). The King of Fighters Kyo (PlayStation). SNK. Level/area: California: Hospìtal.
- 1 2 餓狼伝説 15th Anniversary BOX (CD+DVD). SNK Playmore. 2006.
- ↑ Gamest, ed. (1997). Gamest Game Hero Collection 1997; issue 208 (in Japanese). Shinseisha. p. 1.
- ↑ @SNKPofficial (April 5, 2017). "THE KING OF FIGHTERS XIV: We are proud to introduce the voice actors for all DLC characters to be relased [sic] on April 5th (PST)! #KOFXIV #KOF14" (Tweet). Retrieved March 3, 2021 – via Twitter.
- ↑ @KOFG_info (October 8, 2020). "【お知らせ📺】 #KOFG サブキャラクターのキャストが発表! 山崎竜二 CV #津田健次郎 さん ゲーニッツ CV #安元洋貴 さん 後日、ボイスの公開や実装を予定しております。 公式サイトやTwitterの更新をお楽しみに! #KOFGファイパ #KOFG始めるなら今" (Tweet). Retrieved March 3, 2021 – via Twitter.
- ↑ Lucard, Alex (2007-04-28). "Interview with Ignition Entertainment's Shane Bettenhausen About The King of Fighters XII". Diehardgamefan.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-15. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- ↑ The King of Fighters Fighting Evolution 10th (in Japanese). SNK Playmore. December 2004. p. 106. ISBN 978-4-575-16431-2.
- ↑ SNK Playmore. "Woman Fighters Team Story in KOF '99". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on April 21, 2009. Retrieved February 27, 2008.
- ↑ SNK Playmore. "Woman Fighters Team Story in KOF 2001". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Retrieved February 27, 2008.
- ↑ Bridgman, Andrew. "The Dorklyst: The 7 Most Stereotypical Native American Characters in Fighting Game History (Page 2)". Dorkly Article. Archived from the original on 2014-01-25. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
- ↑ "Touji Sakata's bio from the official Garou Densetsu Wild Ambition homepage (waybacked)" (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2009-02-08. Retrieved 2009-01-07.
- ↑ "Tsugumi Sendo's profile from the official Garou Densetsu Wild Ambition site" (in Japanese). Archived from the original on August 8, 2001.
- ↑ SNK, ed. (2001). Garou: Mark of the Wolves instruction manual. SNK. T-44306N.
- ↑ [餓GAROU狼] 〜MARK OF THE WOLVES〜 キャラクター人気投票
- ↑ SNK (1995). Real Bout Fatal Fury (Neo Geo). SNK. Level/area: Terry Bogard ending.
Terry: Oh, enough of this senseless combat! Let's be friends. Call me, pop, son!
- ↑ All About SNK (in Japanese). Dempa Shimbunsha. 2000. ISBN 978-4-88554-677-8.
- ↑ SNK (1995-12-21). Real Bout Fatal Fury (Neo Geo). SNK. Level/area: Terry Bogard ending.
- ↑ SNK (November 1999). Garou: Mark of the Wolves (Arcade). SNK.
Rock: The semifinals. If I win.../Terry: You'll know your lineage./Rock: I know Terry. No mercy for you./Terry: Funny! Let's see your stuff. Young wolf cub!
- ↑ SNK (November 1999). Garou: Mark of the Wolves (Arcade). SNK. Level/area: Rock Howard ending.
Rock:Well, answer me! Why use my mother...to summon me here? You're really mother's.../Kain: I did it all...for the legacy of Geese Howard!/Rock: Geese Howard? Legacy?/Kain: After his death...his will was found...But...it's true message...was indecipherable to all.../Rock: You think I understand you? Too bad. It's Greek to me! Try someone else, freak./Kain: Hmm... Even if I know...your mother's alive?/Terry: Rock! Where are you?/Kain: Welcome, Terry Bogard./Terry: Why you! Where's Rock?/Kain: Rock? He's here, of course./Terry: Rock!/Kain: He's with me now, blondie! We're team now. So back off, wolf boy!/Terry: What's going on, Rock?!/Rock: Don't talk me out of this. When my accounts are settled, I shall return to this town./Terry:So be it! It's your choice. Just know I believe in you!/Rock: Forgive me...Terry./Kain: What do we do now, partner?
- ↑ "The King of Fighters: Maximum Impact 2 official website". SNK Playmore. Archived from the original on 2008-05-04. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
- ↑ PlayStation (29 March 2017). "THE KING OF FIGHTERS XIV - Rock Howard Trailer - PS4". Archived from the original on 2021-12-22 – via YouTube.
- ↑ SNK (1 February 2022). "[ENG] KOF XV DLC: TEAM GAROU (TEAM SOUTH TOWN TEASER)" – via YouTube.
- ↑ "Neo Geo Battle Coliseum official website". SNK Playmore. Archived from the original on 2006-11-04. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
- ↑ "Capcom VS. SNK official website". Capcom. Archived from the original on 2008-08-08. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
- ↑ SNK Playmore (2006-04-27). KOF Maximum Impact 2 (PlayStation 2). SNK Playmore. Level/area: The King of Fighters: Another Day.
- ↑ Yen, Wig (2005). The King of Fighters 2003, Volume 1. Dr. Master Productions. ISBN 978-1-58899-030-3.
- ↑ Yen, Wig (2006). The King of Fighters 2003, Volume 3. Dr. Master Productions. ISBN 978-1-59796-009-0.
- ↑ SNK. The King of Fighters XIV. Atlus USA.
Terry Bogard: Yo! Long time no see, Tizoc! / King of Dinosaurs: Terry, long time no... Wait, no. I don't know you or any Tizoc! I'm the king of the dinosaurs! KING OF DINOSAURS!
- ↑ SNK. The King of Fighters XIV. Atlus USA.
King of Dinosaurs: I have cast aside my past, now have a good taste of my prehistoric power! / Nelson: Ah! Could it be... Are you Tizoc?!
- ↑ SNK. The King of Fighters XIV. Atlus USA.
King of Dinosaurs: YOU! The new masked one! Are you an assassin from the secret society to extinguish the dinosaurs?! / Mian: You aren't supposed to sign in as a comedian, are you?
- ↑ "新生Snkのモノ作りはここから始まる。「餓狼Mow2」の話題も飛び出した,「The King of Fighters Xiv」開発陣インタビュー".
- ↑ "100 best heroes in video games". GamesRadar. Future plc. October 12, 2012. Retrieved February 14, 2014.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury: Battle Archives Volume 1". IGN. 16 August 2007. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
- ↑ Krebs, Avi (2007-10-19). "Fatal Fury: Battle Archives Volume 1 Review". GamingExcellence. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
- ↑ "How Video Game Breasts Are Made (And Why They Can Go Wrong)". Kotaku.com. 24 February 2015. Retrieved 2015-07-09.
- ↑ "ProReview: Fatal Fury 3". GamePro. No. 82. IDG. July 1995. p. 68.
- ↑ "ProReview: Fatal Fury 3". GamePro. No. 85. IDG. October 1995. p. 80.
- ↑ IGN: Fatal Fury: Mark of The Wolves Review Archived 2008-10-07 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "Fatal Fury: Legend of the Hungry Wolf". THEM Anime Reviews. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture". THEM Anime Reviews. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
- ↑ "Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle". THEM Anime Reviews. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
- ↑ Dong, Bamboo. "Shelf Life Kings of Reon". Retrieved March 19, 2016.
- ↑ Dong, Bamboo. "Shelf Life Designated x Diver". Retrieved March 19, 2016.
- ↑ Beveridge, Chris. "Fatal Fury The Motion Picture". Mania Beyond Entertainment. Archived from the original on April 20, 2009. Retrieved March 19, 2016.