The Capcom Fighting Collection, a collection of various retro fighting games by Japanese game publisher and developer Capcom, is great for fans of the genre as well as fans of game preservation in general.

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The Capcom Fighting Collection includes all the games from the Darkstalkers series, Hyper Street Fighter 2: The Anniversary Edition, Super Puzzle Fighter 2 Turbo, Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix, Cyberbots: Full Metal Madness, and Red Earth, and all games include online play with rollback netcode. With all of these games included in the collection, there are plenty of things many fans may not know about them.

8 It's Not The First Darkstalkers Collection

darkstalkers collection covers

While the Capcom Fighting Collection does mark the first time all five titles in the Darkstalkers series are available in one collection outside of Japan, it is not the first collection to feature the series. Vampire: Darkstalkers Collection launched for the PlayStation 2 in 2005 exclusively in Japan and included the arcade versions of all five games.

In 2013, the digital-only collection, Darkstalkers Resurrection launched internationally for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 but included only Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge and Darkstalkers 3, since Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors had launched on PlayStation 3 via the PlayStation Network two years earlier in 2011.

7 It's The First Time Hyper Street Fighter 2 Has Been Rereleased

hyper street fighter ii 15th anniversary

Hyper Street Fighter 2 is a special version of Street Fighter 2 made for the 15th anniversary of the series that launched in Japanese and North American arcades in 2003 and 2004, respectively. Hyper Street Fighter 2 was also ported to PlayStation 2 and Xbox in Japan, North America, and Europe, although the North American Xbox version didn't launch until 2005, alongside Street Fighter 3: 3rd Strike as part of the Anniversary Collection.

Hyper Street Fighter includes a game speed option as well as five different versions of Street Fighter 2, all based on previous Street Fighter 2 releases. The console release of Hyper Street Fighter 2 also has several soundtracks players can choose from.

6 Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix Removed Some Voice Acting For The International Release

gem-fighter-character-art--cutscene-1

In Japan, Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix, previously known as Pocket Fighter in Japan and all previous console releases, had all story cutscenes feature voice acting for each character. In the international versions, the voice acting was removed from cutscenes but kept intact during gameplay instead of being dubbed over in other languages.

Since there's text to accompany the spoken dialogue in cutscenes, this seems like an unnecessary change. Still, it also doesn't change much for fans unfamiliar with the Japanese voices of the characters that appear in the game. It's not that big of an omission, but it is confusing.

5 Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix Has Several Japan-Only Spinoffs

gem fighter spinoffs

In Japan, Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix had two mobile spin-off titles, Poker Fighter and Solitaire Fighter, based on card games Poker and Solitaire, respectively, which both launched in 2003. Two years earlier, character sprites for Gem Fighter Mini Mix appeared in Fever Street Fighter 2, a pachinko machine made by SANKYO.

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Fever Street Fighter 2 also only includes characters that appeared in Street Fighter 2: The World Warrior with the exception of Akuma, despite Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix featuring characters from other Street Fighter games, as well as characters from other Capcom fighting games like Darkstalkers and Red Earth.

4 Cyberbots Is A Spin-Off Of Another Game

armored warriors cover & characters

At first glance, Cyberbots: Full Metal Madness seems like a completely standalone title, but it is actually a spin-off of the mech beat 'em up game Armored Warriors, which launched in arcades in 1994, a year before Cyberbots. Armored Warriors features an augmentation system where players can customize their mechs with different parts so that they can have a wider variety of attacks, which Cyberbots uses its own version of.

Armored Warriors was also included in the multiplatform Capcom Beat 'Em Up Bundle in 2018 and marked the first time Armored Warriors and fellow previously arcade-only title Battle Circuit launched on home consoles.

3 It's The First Console Port Release Of Cyberbots Outside Of Japan

cyberbots cover & characters

Cyberbots: Full Metal Madness originally launched in arcades in Japan, North America, and Europe in April 1995, and two years later saw a home console release for PlayStation and Sega Saturn, but only in Japan. Cyberbots didn't see a console release outside of Japan until an untranslated Japanese version launched on the PlayStation Network in September 2011.

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The inclusion of Cyberbots in the Capcom Fighting Collection marks the first time the English version of the game is officially available on both PC and consoles. The 2000 Dreamcast exclusive Capcom title Tech Romancer is also seen as a spiritual sequel to Cyberbots.

2 There Is A Cyberbots Homage In The Street Fighter Cartoon

cyberbots guldin art & homage

The second episode of the North American-produced Street Fighter animated series titled "The Strongest Woman In The World" features several robots that look similar to playable mechs from Cyberbots: Full Metal Madness, and look similar to Blodia, Gaits, and Guldin, respectively.

An original robot that appeared in the same episode was also used as the basis for Hell 3000 in Street Fighter 5, a battle armor robot developed by M. Bison, Shadaloo, and an unknown organization. Hell 3000 may have also been named after the artificial intelligence computer HAL 9000 from the 1968 science-fiction film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

1 The Dragon's Dogma Connection

red earth logo & leo

Red Earth may be one of Capcom's lesser-known fighting games, but other Capcom games still contain homages to it. In Dragon's Dogma, armor known as the "Cursed King's Belt" says in its description that it was a belt previously owned by a cursed king.

This description refers to the Red Earth character Leo; a king cursed by an invading force that caused him to become half lion and half man. Since Red Earth only launched in arcades in Japan and North America in 1996, The Capcom Fighting Collection also marks the first time Red Earth is available to play outside of arcades.

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