Capcom Fighting All-Stars

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Capcom Fighting All-Stars: Code Holder
Developer(s)Capcom
Publisher(s)Capcom
Director(s)Toyohisa Tanabe
Platform(s)PlayStation 2, Arcade
Release2003 (limited beta test, eventually canceled)
Genre(s)Fighting
Mode(s)Singleplayer, multiplayer (2 persons simultaneously)

Capcom Fighting All-Stars: Code Holder was a 3D fighting game planned for the arcade and PlayStation 2 that was to be developed by Capcom.[1] Like KOF: Maximum Impact, it was designed to translate a 2D fighting game series into 3D. This was done previously in the Street Fighter EX series, which Capcom co-produced with Arika. The game utilized 3D assets that were previously created for a third Capcom vs. SNK title, which had been cancelled due to SNK's financial difficulties.[2] Capcom beta-tested the game, but after negative feedback from players and more months in development, the game was canceled in August 2003.

The life system was 3-tiered: if the player lost one tier, a break moment would occur and then the fight would resume, much like the life system in Vampire Savior. However the life system was also linked to the power bar: for each tier lost, a character gained an additional level in the Super Combo gauge (at full life, a character only has single-level super combo moves). Super arts were handled in three tiers, each super costing one, two, or three levels to use them.

Many parts of the system were later used in Capcom Fighting Evolution for Ingrid's gameplay and Capcom later revisited the concept of 2D fighters in 3D with the more traditional Street Fighter IV and Tatsunoko vs. Capcom.

Characters[]

Returning characters[]

New characters[]

  • D.D. - "God of Thunder"
  • Rook - "Fallen Angel"
  • Ingrid - "Eternal Goddess"
  • Avel - "Death"

Guest characters[]

  • Kyo Kusanagi (The King of Fighters) - Kyo's inclusion comes from the game's roots starting out as a sequel to Capcom vs SNK 2. After the game was reworked to a Capcom-only crossover, the then-reformed SNK Playmore gave Capcom permission to use one of their characters due in part to the involvement of ex-SNK staff assigned to this project (including Code Holder's director Toyohisa Tanabe) [4]

Story[]

Death was running around Metro City with a bomb called Laughter Sun. Mike Haggar called all above mentioned fighters to beat Death and defuse the bomb. To disarm it, codes were needed to be input. D.D., Rook, and Ingrid were the Code Holders, they had the codes that would deactivate the bomb. D.D. was the leader, Ingrid & Rook were his teammates. Their codes were Ogre, Fallen Angel and Isis.

Legacy[]

While the game never received an official release, the idea of Capcom's own characters in a crossover game would instead be used in the 2D fighting game, Capcom Fighting Evolution; released in 2004.

An original character slated to debut in All-Stars, Ingrid, would later appear in Capcom Fighting Evolution/Jam for the PlayStation 2 and Arcades.[5] Ingrid would also appear in Street Fighter Alpha 3 MAX for the PlayStation Portable.[5] Ingrid, D.D. and Rook made a cameo appearance in the Rhythm RPG Otoranger.

Two unique ideas were used in the game. The first idea was a "break" during the matches. This was to present a logical representation for things happening between rounds. The second idea was the "finishing move," a concept derived to be similar to that of the "Fatality" in Mortal Kombat. Neither idea has seen use in any subsequent Capcom games.

In 2017, Capcom published a pair of articles about the game on their Street Fighter V website revealing previously unpublished artwork and details for the game, including the identities of its two hidden characters Akuma and Dimitri and final boss.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d Nicholas 'MajinTenshinhan' Taylor (2016-08-04). "The gem that never was - Get a glimpse of Capcom Fighting All-Stars through this promotional art, character select art, screenshots and more". EventHubs. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
  2. ^ https://www.polygon.com/platform/amp/2021/1/7/22214717/capcom-vs-snk-an-oral-history
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "PlayStation 2: conheça os jogos que foram cancelados para o console". TechTudo (in Portuguese). 2015-03-13. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
  4. ^ "Guests - Round 5: Toyohisa Tanabe". Street Fighter V: Secret File. 2019. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  5. ^ a b Nicholas 'MajinTenshinhan' Taylor (2016-09-02). "Ingrid possesses a unique power and a heavy fate - Does her untold story from Capcom Fighting All-Stars fit into the Street Fighter storyline?". EventHubs. Retrieved 2017-11-28.

External links[]

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