![]() Fei Long’s Hong Kong stage is as static as ever and Dhalsim’s trumpeting elephants are quite possibly even more annoying than before.Īs it should be though, the characters steal the HD show. Chun-Li’s China stage, complete with chicken wringing bloke, stands out, and Sagat’s Thailand stage looks like a work of art, but there are one or two missed opportunities. Anyone who’s been paying attention to Capcom’s drip-feed of assets will know what to expect – dark outlines, stark colours, beefy limbs, gorgeous backgrounds, revised, canon correct endings – Udon hasn’t just given Super Street Fighter II Turbo an HD anime lick of paint, but chucked the whole pot on.Ĭammie’s England stage, with Northern Lights intact, is a highlight. The question is, has the long, long wait been worth Backbone, Udon, OverClocked ReMix, producer David Sirlin and Capcom’s time?Īt first glance, the answer is a whole-hearted yes, and that’s because the graphical upgrade is so striking, so shiny and crisp that you can’t help but admire Udon’s comic-book-style redrawn art. In all honestly, Capcom could fart out a Street Fighter II game and we’d dive under the covers and take a big sniff. It’s yet another refinement of the Super Street Fighter II fighting engine, perhaps the greatest fighting engine ever created. Of course Super Street Fighter II Turbo HD Remix is stupendously brilliant.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |