/ @cartridgeblow
Let’s get this straight—Street Fighter II didn’t just enter the arcade scene; it drop-kicked it into a new era. It wasn’t the first fighting game, but it was the one that changed everything. This was the game that made us crowd around sweaty cabinets in the back of fish and chip shops, desperate to pull off a Hadouken before someone’s mum shouted, “Time to go!”
You pick from a cast of eight fighters, each hailing from a different country with their own signature moves, stages, and fighting styles. From Ryu’s disciplined Shotokan strikes to Blanka’s electric chaos, everyone had a favourite. (And let’s be honest—if you didn’t have a Chun-Li phase, were you even there?)
The characters were more than sprites—they were icons. Guile with his flat-top and Sonic Boom, Dhalsim with his stretchy limbs and yoga fire… this was the start of fighting game fandoms, cosplay, and playground debates that ended in actual headlocks.
Street Fighter II is all about precision, timing, and knowing when to bait your opponent into a dragon punch to the face. The controls were tight, with six buttons for punches and kicks—light, medium, heavy—and every combo you landed felt earned. And yes, the AI could be cheap (looking at you, M. Bison), but it made victory taste even sweeter.
The special move system changed the game. Discovering how to pull off Ryu’s fireball or Zangief’s spinning piledriver felt like unlocking a secret martial arts scroll.
Street Fighter II didn’t just become a franchise—it became a genre blueprint. It inspired every fighting game that followed, spawned a dozen upgraded versions (Turbo, Hyper, Super, Rainbow if you were that kid), and basically created the competitive fighting game community.
This game paved the way for esports. For EVO. For trash talk that ends in friendship. Without SFII, there is no Mortal Kombat, Tekken, or Smash Bros.
Street Fighter II is one of the most important games of all time—full stop. It’s still fun, still competitive, and still capable of making you jump out of your seat when you land that perfect combo. Whether you're a button-masher or a frame-counting pro, it deserves your respect.
#streetfighter #streetfighter2 #cartridgeblow
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