King of Fighters Collection- The Orochi Saga
- The most extensive KOF pool ever containing 5 complete sports meeting
- Includes the Orochi Saga trilogy (95-97)
- Unlockable bonus make pleased materials
Product Description
The first ever pool of THE KING OF FIGHTERS, consisting of 5 complete sports meeting. KOF 94, 95, 96, 97, 98
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This sports meeting emulator cheap from computer look the social class not same the original NeoGeo sports meeting…
Rating: 2 / 5
First of all, I’ve been a huge fan of the King of Fighters franchise for nearly a decade (with KOF ‘98, 2000 and XI being my personal favorites). When I heard that the King of Fighters ‘95-’97 pool was coming to the PS2, I was expecting a near-exact port of the Japanese version. Boy, was I incorrect.
Sure, you get King of Fighters ‘94-’98, but do you know what else you get? Long loading times, blurred sprites, disrupted music, off-key sound effects and a completely-unnecessary Challenge mode. But wait, there’s less! You also don’t get to play any arranged soundtracks within the game and no indivial menus for each selected game.
Who’s the guilty party responsible for this travesty of a port? Why, it’s none other than Terminal Reality, the same lackluster conversion responsible for the hideously-dreadful SNK Classics v. 1 for the PS2 and PSP. Once again, they did a terrible job emulating the game, then shoehorning in a bunch of stuff that didn’t belong in the first place (like an original and arranged sound track that has to be unlocked one piece at a time owing to repetitive challenge missions).
The lesson here? If the conversion’s been done by Terminal Reality, throw it back. Demand that SNK Playmore USA release a U.S. version of the King of Fighters ‘95-’97 version that came out in Japan a couple years ago. I write this not as a critical review, but as a warning to anyone who wants to take their chances with an inferior port. And if you really want to play KOF ‘95-’97 on your PS2, get the import version from Japan.
Once again, much like the SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters Clash DS fiasco from last year, and the SNK Classics port from earlier this year, SNK Playmore USA blaitantly ignored their fans and released another game without much play testing.
And if anyone from SNK Playmore is reading this, just release a U.S. version of the KOF ‘95-97 port next time, and stop shoving out crud like this. You have been warned.
Rating: 1 / 5
I got this when the game was on sale on one of those amazon game deal of the day thing. To be honest, I didn’t expect much from this game and it surprised me. The game is just clean fun! I brought this game to my cousin’s house and we had a blast. Not only the game is simple to control, the characters are really entertaining. We kept making fun of the way those characters look (the way they fight is just hilarious). Even though i’m a girl I beat my cousin on this fighting game lol
Rating: fun for all ages and even at party!
Rating: 5 / 5
SNK finally brought the Orochi Saga to the US, and this pool does not diappoint. This pool includes the first 5 KOFs, including the classic KOF 97. This package is defintely worth the pick up for anyone curious about the KOF series
Rating: 4 / 5
SNK Playmore has been steadily releasing some pretty excellent compilations on the PS2 for a while now, and The King of Fighters Pool isn’t all that different. The King of Fighters Pool: The Orochi Saga collects KOF’s 94-98, which are five sports meeting that really aren’t all that different from one another. Sure, there are subtle changes from version to version, but all five look and play basically the same. Still, that isn’t such a terrible thing, considering SNK’s fighting sports meeting are usually known for having some deep fighting systems, of which the King of Fighters series is no different. As far as 2-D fighters go, the KOF series is among SNK’s best franchise, but what hurts this pool is a sloppy emulation job and a lack of bonus make pleased; two flaws that are also obvious on many of the other SNK collections for the PS2. Still though, the sports meeting play as splendid as they did years ago, and with the budget price tag you really can’t go incorrect. All in all, The King of Fighters Pool: The Orochi Saga offers a lot for fighting purists, and is worth picking up if retro 2-D fighting is up your alley.
Rating: 3 / 5