Knuckle Heads
Knuckle Heads | |
---|---|
Arcade flyer | |
Developer(s) | Namco |
Publisher(s) | Namco |
Designer(s) |
O. Sugi Captain Gan[1] |
Composer(s) | Takayuki Aihara[2] |
Platform(s) | Arcade, Virtual Console |
Release date(s) |
Arcade
|
Genre(s) | Two-on-two versus fighting game |
Mode(s) | Single player, Multiplayer |
Cabinet | Upright |
Arcade system | Namco NA-2 |
CPU |
1x Motorola 68000 @ 12.5 MHz, 1x Motorola M37702 @ 12.5 MHz |
Sound | 1x C219 @ 44.1 KHz |
Display | Horizontal orientation, Raster, 288 x 224 resolution, 4096 palette colors |
Knuckle Heads (ナックルヘッズ Nakkuru Hezzu) is a two-on-two fighting arcade game which was released by Namco, in 1992;[3] it runs on Namco NA-2 hardware, and represents the company's answer to Capcom's 1987 hit Street Fighter. The US version was also the fifth title from the company to show the Federal Bureau of Investigation's "Winners Don't Use Drugs" screen during its attract sequence - and it is also the only game from them where points are merely awarded as a "remaining time" bonus.
Gameplay
In the single-player tournament mode, the player's chosen character fights against his or her opponent, in best two-out-of-three matches with the CPU or against another human player; however, when both are knocked out simultaneously in the first round, one of them will win the second round. The player has a character roster of six fighters to choose from, each with their own weapons and special techniques - and after the player knocks out five different characters, the player must fight two opponents at once instead of one, for three rounds, and finally an "evil" solid-gold version of their own character, before their character's own ending sequence. The most notable features are the jump button, and multiplayer mode which allows up to four players to play simultaneously; however, the multiplayer mode does not have an ending (much like Cosmo Gang: The Puzzle, which was released earlier in 1992 and also ran on Namco's NA-1 hardware), and the closest a player can get to winning it is if they win ninety-nine times because that is when their "WIN" counter will roll over.
Characters
There are six playable characters and no bosses; all of them have their own unique statistics and special moves.
- Rob Vincent (ロブ・ビンセント Robu Binsento) (voice actor: Nobuo Tobita): Born in Honolulu, 1964, measuring 181 cm (5'11") high, and weighing 84 kg (185 lb); he uses dual tonfas, and has the catchphrase of "I am No. 1!" when he wins.
- Takeshi Fujioka (タケシ・フジオカ Takeshi Fujioka) (voice actor: Toshiyuki Morikawa): From the game home country, he was born in Kyoto in 1967, measures 175 cm (5'9") high, and weighs 75 kg (165 lb); he uses a kusarigama, and has a catchphrase of Aku wo kiru! (悪を斬るっ!) when he wins. His ending reveals himself to be an undercover investigator of the ICPO.
- Blat Vaike (ブラット・ヴェイク Buratto Vēku) (voice actor: Takashi Yanagihara (柳原孝安)): he was born in Athens in 1957, measures 158 cm (5'2") high, and weighs 70 kg (154 lb); he uses a hammer, and a catchphrase "Gyahahahaha!".
- Christine Myao (クリスティン・ミャオ Kurisitin Myao) (voice actor: Megumi Hayashibara): Born Hong Kong in 1974, she measures 168 cm (5'6") and weighs 43 kg (95 lb); she uses a quarterstaff, and has the catchphrase "Yeah!" on a win.
- Gregory Darrell (グレゴリー・ダレル Guregorī Dareru) (voice actor: Nobuo Tobita, same as Vincent): Born in Lillehammer, 1953, he measures 216 cm (8'4") high, and weighs 127 kg (280 lb); he uses dual axes and a catchphrase "Hahahaha!".
- Claudia Silva (クラウディア・シルバ Kuraudia Shiruba) (voice actor: Kotono Mitsuishi): Was born in Sao Paulo in 1969 and measures 172 cm (5'8") high, but her weight is unknown; she uses steel claws, and a catchphrase "Come On Baby!"
Virtual Console release
The game was later re-released by Namco Bandai Games (as they are now known) on the Virtual Console in Japan on August 18, 2009.
See also
References
External links
- Knuckle Heads at the Killer List of Videogames
- Knuckle Heads at arcade-history
- Knuckle Heads at Fight-A-Base
- Knuckle Heads at Fighters Front Line
- Knuckle Heads at The Large Cult Fighting Game March (Japanese)