Games Like Fatal Fury Special

12 games similar to Fatal Fury Special — handpicked for fans of Fighting games.

Games Like Fatal Fury Special

to be added

Top Games Similar to Fatal Fury Special

Feature PlatformYearScoreGenre
Garou: Mark of the Wolves NEO-GEO19999.4Fighting
Art of Fighting NEO-GEO19928.2Fighting
The King of Fighters '98 NEO-GEO19989Fighting
Samurai Shodown II NEO-GEO19949Fighting
The Last Blade NEO-GEO19979.1Fighting
Killer Instinct SNES19958.5Fighting

All 12 Games Like Fatal Fury Special

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Art of Fighting
1992
Art of Fighting box art
NEO-GEO
8.2
1992 · SNK

The Neo-Geo fighter that introduced the spirit gauge, zoom camera, and desperation moves to the genre. Art of Fighting's distinctive power-dependent gameplay created a different strategic rhythm from Street Fighter II, and its characters would later cross over into King of Fighters.

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The King of Fighters '98
1998
The King of Fighters '98 box art
NEO-GEO
9
1998 · SNK

The consensus peak of SNK's team-based fighting franchise and one of the most competitively balanced fighting games ever made. KOF '98's 38-character roster represented the best of the KOF series to that point, and its defensive mechanics — rolls, emergency escapes, and the advanced guard — created a depth of competitive play that kept the game in arcades and tournaments for years.

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Samurai Shodown II
1994
Samurai Shodown II box art
NEO-GEO
9
1994 · SNK

The weapon-based fighting game at its absolute peak. Samurai Shodown II's katana duels operate under constant tension — a single successful slash can remove massive health, and the Rage Gauge adds explosive comeback potential. The refined character roster and introduction of Genjuro Kibagami created the definitive weapon fighter of the 16-bit era.

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The Last Blade
1997
The Last Blade box art
NEO-GEO
9.1
1997 · SNK

SNK's feudal Japan weapon-fighting game set during the Bakumatsu period — a direct competitor to Samurai Shodown with its own distinct speed system, Slash and Power modes, and one of the most beautiful spritework ever rendered on the Neo-Geo hardware. The Last Blade's atmosphere, parry mechanics, and depth cement it as one of SNK's finest.

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Killer Instinct
1995
Killer Instinct box art
SNES
8.5
1995 · Rare

Rare's technically audacious port of the arcade fighter brings pre-rendered 3D character graphics and the signature Combo Breaker system to the SNES in a package that defied expectations for what 16-bit hardware could deliver. The game's roster of outlandish fighters — skeleton warriors, cyborgs, and a two-ton dinosaur — and its lengthy auto-combo chains gave it a distinct identity that set it apart from Street Fighter and Mortal Kombat contemporaries.

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Marvel vs. Capcom 2
2000
Marvel vs. Capcom 2 box art
DREAMCAST
9.2
2000 · Capcom

The crossover fighting game with 56 characters — drawn from across Marvel's comic universe and Capcom's entire fighting game history — three-on-three team mechanics, and the DHC combo system that defined competitive tag fighting games for a generation. Marvel vs. Capcom 2's Dreamcast version remains the definitive home release of one of the most technically demanding and strategically rich fighting games ever produced, a game whose competitive scene remained active for over two decades after its release.

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Mortal Kombat 3
1995
Mortal Kombat 3 box art
SNES
8.3
1995 · Sculptured Software

The controversial third MK brought a new armageddon story, run button, and combo system while controversially removing fan-favorites like Scorpion. The SNES version featured the updated Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 content with the complete roster — making it the most complete home version available before 32-bit hardware arrived.

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Mortal Kombat
1993
Mortal Kombat box art
SNES
8
1993 · Sculptured Software

The SNES port of Midway's blood-soaked arcade sensation sparked a cultural firestorm and directly triggered the creation of the ESRB ratings system — Nintendo's decision to replace blood with sweat and alter fatalities made this version the censored alternative to the Genesis port, but the underlying fighting game is a tense, strategic one-on-one brawler with a roster of digitized fighters that remains iconic. The controversy only amplified public fascination, and the game became one of the best-selling SNES titles of its era.

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Power Stone
1999
Power Stone box art
DREAMCAST
8.5
1999 · Capcom

Capcom's arena fighter built around collecting three Power Stones to trigger dramatic mid-fight character transformations — shifting the entire power dynamic in seconds — across dynamic 3D arenas with destructible environments and item-based combat that were meaningfully ahead of their time. Power Stone's accessible controls masked genuine mechanical depth, and its design philosophy of environmental interaction as a combat resource would take the broader fighting game genre another decade to fully absorb.

Soul Blade
1996
Soul Blade box art
PLAYSTATION
8.7
1996 · Project Soul

The PS1 predecessor to Soulcalibur that introduced weapon-based 3D fighting to PlayStation owners. Soul Blade's Edge Master Mode was an early story-driven fighting game experience that gave each character distinct narrative chapters, and the weapon degradation system added strategic tension to every fight. Released as Soul Edge in Japan.

FAQ: Games Similar to Fatal Fury Special

What are the best games like Fatal Fury Special?
The best games similar to Fatal Fury Special include Garou: Mark of the Wolves, Art of Fighting, The King of Fighters '98, and others that share its Fighting gameplay style.
What makes Fatal Fury Special unique compared to similar games?
Fatal Fury Special stands out for its combination of Fighting elements developed by SNK in 1993.
Are there modern games similar to Fatal Fury Special?
Yes, many modern games draw inspiration from Fatal Fury Special. The Fighting genres it helped define continue to influence games today.