Astral Bout
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Astral Bout | |
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Genre(s) | Fighting |
Developer(s) | A-Wave |
Publisher(s) | King Records |
Platform(s) | Super Famicom |
First release | Sougou Kakutougi: Astral Bout 1992 |
Latest release | Sougou Kakutougi Rings: Astral Bout 3 |
Sougou Kakutougi: Astral Bout
[edit]Sougou Kakutougi: Astral Bout | |
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Developer(s) | A-Wave |
Publisher(s) | King Records |
Composer(s) | Takuo Uchida Yukiyoshi Hujimoto Jun Ōtsuki[1] |
Platform(s) | Super Famicom |
Release |
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Genre(s) | Sports, fighting |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer (up to two players) |
Sougou Kakutougi: Astral Bout (アストラル バウト 総合格闘技) is a Super Famicom video game based on various forms of fighting styles found in the Japanese combat sport promotion Fighting Network Rings.
Gameplay
[edit]This video game was the predecessor to mixed martial arts promotion companies and pay-per-view tournaments like the Ultimate Fighting Championship that are popular with today's young people.
There are nine different styles of fighting to adopt: professional wrestling, boxing, karate, sambo, muay thai, kung-fu, judo, kickboxing and lucha libre, and the basic set of martial arts. Like in an arcade fighting game, each player has a limited amount of continues that eventually lead to a "game over" if they all are allowed to expire. Three different modes to this game; standard one-player, two-player, or a "player vs. CPU" sparring session. All competitors have health meters that are divided into three between rounds to keep track of the strength in the arms, legs, and the rest of the body. The difficulty level can be set for either low, medium, or high.
Rope breaks are possible to pull off; like in professional wrestling. However, all matches end in a 10-count fall instead of pinning the opponent for a 3-count. There are a certain number of rounds with a pre-determined time limit (ranging from one-minute fights to endurance events).
Fighters
[edit]There are nine fighters in the game with different fighting styles:
- Barnov Gainer, a sambo grappler from Russia
- Somchai Pet Noi, a Muay Thai fighter from Thailand
- Akira Maeda, a professional wrestler from Japan
- Kenji Takezawa, a karate expert from Japan
- Shiro Kimura, a judo expert from Japan
- James Taylor, a heavyweight boxing champion from America
- Lee Wang-Yu, a kung-fu master from China
- Billy J. Gibson, a kickboxing champion from America
- Spell Falcon, a Lucha Libre star from Mexico
Sougou Kakutougi Rings: Astral Bout 3
[edit]Reception
[edit]On release, Famicom Tsūshin scored the game a 21 out of 40.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Composer information for Sougou Kakutougi: Astral Bout at SNES Music
- ^ NEW GAMES CROSS REVIEW: 総合格闘技RINGS ~アストラルバウト3~. Weekly Famicom Tsūshin. No.358. Pg.29. 27 October 1995.
External links
[edit]- Sougou Kakutougi: Astral Bout at MobyGames
- Sougou Kakutougi: Astral Bout at GameFAQs
- Sougou Kakutougi: Astral Bout at SuperFamicom.org
- 1992 video games
- Fighting games
- Japan-exclusive video games
- Side-scrolling video games
- Super Nintendo Entertainment System games
- Super Nintendo Entertainment System-only games
- Video game franchises introduced in 1992
- Multiplayer and single-player video games
- Video games developed in Japan
- Fighting game stubs