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  2. Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatal_Fury:_Wild_Ambition

    Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition (餓狼伝説 ワイルドアンビション, Garō Densetsu Wairudo Anbishon, "Legend of the Hungry Wolf: Wild Ambition") is a 3D fighting video game produced by SNK and is a spin-off of the Fatal Fury series of fighting games. The game was released in Japanese arcades on January 28, 1999.

  3. Fatal Fury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatal_Fury

    The original Fatal Fury is known for the two-plane system. Characters fight from two different planes. By stepping between the planes, attacks can be dodged with ease. Later games have dropped the two-plane system, replacing it with a complex system of dodging, including simple half second dodges into the background and a three plane s

  4. Characters of the Fatal Fury series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Characters_of_the_Fatal...

    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] By the time of City of the Wolves, Billy has assumed control of the Howard Connection after Geese's death, though he still seeks revenge on Terry for killing Geese.

  5. Hyper Neo Geo 64 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyper_Neo_Geo_64

    The system never managed to match the huge success of the 16-bit Neo Geo. [1] Only seven games were produced, none of which proved particularly popular, [2] and only one of them, Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition, has been ported to home systems. A home console version was rumored to be in development but was never confirmed by SNK.

  6. KOF: Maximum Impact - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KOF:_Maximum_Impact

    Marketed as a spin-off of SNK's major fighting series The King of Fighters (KOF), whence many of its characters originate, Maximum Impact also contains elements of the Fatal Fury and Art of Fighting series. Maximum Impact is the first 3D fighter made by SNK since 1999's Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition and Samurai Shodown: Warriors Rage. [5]

  7. Category:Fatal Fury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Fatal_Fury

    Fatal Fury 2; Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle; Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory; Fatal Fury Special; Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves; Fatal Fury: King of Fighters; Fatal Fury: Legend of the Hungry Wolf; Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture; Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition

  8. Fatal Fury: King of Fighters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatal_Fury:_King_of_Fighters

    Its IP and Art of Fighting share the same continuity by placing a younger Geese in the second installment, Art of Fighting 2 whereas Art of Fighting lead Ryo Sakazaki would return in the remake Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition. Both Fatal Fury and Art of Fighting became the basis for the later The King of Fighters games by SNK where Terry, Ryo and ...

  9. Art of Fighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_of_Fighting

    In the same way that Geese Howard appears as a secret boss in Art of Fighting 2, Ryo Sakazaki appears as a secret boss in Fatal Fury Special and Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition. Unlike the battle against Geese in Art of Fighting 2, the battles against Ryo in both games are depicted as "dream matches" and are not canonical to either series' storyline.