double impact vs. 3rd strike
double impact vs. 3rd strike
I kind of prefer the former for graphical and musical reasons, though I dunno the specific gameplay differences...I recall reading Ibuki had been unbalanced in DI and was toned down in 3rd strike...is this true? Anything else major which might make 3rd strike the better game gameplay wise?
At any rate I'll be spending a lot of time with DI due to the parrying practice mode, which is a lot better for a n00b to SF3 like myself than 3rd strike's 'recording' I find.
At any rate I'll be spending a lot of time with DI due to the parrying practice mode, which is a lot better for a n00b to SF3 like myself than 3rd strike's 'recording' I find.
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SheSaidDutch
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Double Impact: Better backgrounds, better music, fair selection of characters, good gameplay, Ibuki and Sean own in this game.
3rd Strike: Sean and Ibuki severely toned down from the last game, not dominating characters like before. More characters, more overpowering parry system. Includes Chun-li and Makato, the only two relevant new characters in the game. Adds the leap attack and grade judge system, can only choose one super but there's also the EX move. Lets you customise the game engine overall. Gill, the most fucking annoying boss in streetfighter history!
Even with less supers, and a less powerful Ibuki (who I don't even bother play with in Third strike, but is one of my best characters in DI), I still prefer TS gameplay wise, it's definatly more balanced.
Makato is one of the best new additions to the game without doubt, and for once Chun-li is actually one of the strongest characters in the game!
Seriously, they really made her good in this one, I killed players with her and I've seen some terrible combo vids of people using her, sheesh incredible!
The Parry system is a gold mind in this game IF you know how to use it, although I agree it is a bit too overpowered in TS.
I like DI alot but when it comes to serious gameplay, TS is the best in this series for fighting.
3rd Strike: Sean and Ibuki severely toned down from the last game, not dominating characters like before. More characters, more overpowering parry system. Includes Chun-li and Makato, the only two relevant new characters in the game. Adds the leap attack and grade judge system, can only choose one super but there's also the EX move. Lets you customise the game engine overall. Gill, the most fucking annoying boss in streetfighter history!
Even with less supers, and a less powerful Ibuki (who I don't even bother play with in Third strike, but is one of my best characters in DI), I still prefer TS gameplay wise, it's definatly more balanced.
Makato is one of the best new additions to the game without doubt, and for once Chun-li is actually one of the strongest characters in the game!
Seriously, they really made her good in this one, I killed players with her and I've seen some terrible combo vids of people using her, sheesh incredible!
The Parry system is a gold mind in this game IF you know how to use it, although I agree it is a bit too overpowered in TS.
I like DI alot but when it comes to serious gameplay, TS is the best in this series for fighting.
Just a few minor quibbles:
The actual name of the second street fighter installment was SECOND IMPACT: GIANT ATTACK. It was never named Double Impact; that's just a convention created by the DC port which named the whole pack 'Double Impact' because it paired the first two SF3 games.) Still, who am I to not go along with convention...
Personally, I like the music to TS better than DI, TS is also much less traditional for a street fighter.
I don't know how it is for 'pro' players, but I think Ibuki is too toned down. She does VERY LITTLE damage now, and dies easily. Ryu and Chun-Li are gods, so I'm not sure if the balance is perfect, but it is still more balanced than most fighters.
The customization menu in my mind makes TS the best fighter ever. Capcom vs. SNK tried to do this with the customizable groove thing, but it still isn't as cool as what you can do in TS. You can make the game play like dark stalkers if you want to (air blocking, chain combos)! Some of the crazy cancels you can put in are great too--cancelling out of an uppercut into an aerial hurricane kick and so forth. The best stuff though are subtle things, like slightly toning down the cost of EX moves so you can more thoroughly integrate them into game play. Awesome stuff!
The actual name of the second street fighter installment was SECOND IMPACT: GIANT ATTACK. It was never named Double Impact; that's just a convention created by the DC port which named the whole pack 'Double Impact' because it paired the first two SF3 games.) Still, who am I to not go along with convention...
Personally, I like the music to TS better than DI, TS is also much less traditional for a street fighter.
I don't know how it is for 'pro' players, but I think Ibuki is too toned down. She does VERY LITTLE damage now, and dies easily. Ryu and Chun-Li are gods, so I'm not sure if the balance is perfect, but it is still more balanced than most fighters.
The customization menu in my mind makes TS the best fighter ever. Capcom vs. SNK tried to do this with the customizable groove thing, but it still isn't as cool as what you can do in TS. You can make the game play like dark stalkers if you want to (air blocking, chain combos)! Some of the crazy cancels you can put in are great too--cancelling out of an uppercut into an aerial hurricane kick and so forth. The best stuff though are subtle things, like slightly toning down the cost of EX moves so you can more thoroughly integrate them into game play. Awesome stuff!
SHMUP sale page.Randorama wrote:ban CMoon for being a closet Jerry Falwell cockmonster/Ann Coulter fan, Nijska a bronie (ack! The horror!), and Ed Oscuro being unable to post 100-word arguments without writing 3-pages posts.
Eugenics: you know it's right!
SFIII2I > SFIII3S
SFIII2I is better than SFIII3S in almost every way. Better portrait artwork, better balance (by far), better music, and better stages. SFIII2I takes skill to play, while SFIII3S is an unbalanced mess; watch in despair as Yun and Urien keep you in the air/corner for nearly a whole match. Then there's Makoto's complete ground combo dominance with insane damage; you get caught once, it's over. And for no reason whatsoever, Sean and Ibuki were toned-down so much in SFIII3S that they can barely compete; try fighting against Urien, Yun, Makoto, Ryu, or Chun-Li with them...it's a bloodbath. And just like in the previous two, in SFIII3S Ryu is overpowered and cheap; I guess Capcom feels the need to make him so good because he's the series' flagship character...
Sure, you'll hear that SFIII3S is better from many who play in tournaments, but they only like the game because it's unbalanced; a lot of them think that SFIII2I is "boring" because it's a more balanced game. It's just so much easier to make prize money when there are bugs/glitches to exploit. SFIII3S wouldn't be nearly as popular if shit like Kara Throwing wasn't in the game...
Sure, you'll hear that SFIII3S is better from many who play in tournaments, but they only like the game because it's unbalanced; a lot of them think that SFIII2I is "boring" because it's a more balanced game. It's just so much easier to make prize money when there are bugs/glitches to exploit. SFIII3S wouldn't be nearly as popular if shit like Kara Throwing wasn't in the game...
Re: SFIII2I > SFIII3S
Ehh, never really got into SFIII until 3S sad to say. I was always under the impression that SFIII sucked until the DC version was available for me to try out.
Makoto's tough but it's still a guessing game (albeit a very risky one). She can't kill anybody in one combo nor even come close without meter. I find that few people actually use her to the skill you mention.
Ryu is not overpowered at all. Despite his higher vitality, he has no threatening attacks to pull off at will, no combos to easily initiate. Shin Shoryuken, while damaging, has like the longest meter in the game and limited comboability off c.LK x2, which make him quite fair. I'm assuming you're talking about Ken instead? Along with his basic kara MP->HP->Shoryuken and Shoryuken->kara Shoryuken combos, his c.MK->SA3 easily dominates.
I've gotta disagree some of these comments. While Yun can easily pressure you enough to hit you in Genei Jin, not even the best Uriens in the world have failproof unblockable setups to always nail you into the corner.BAD wrote:watch in despair as Yun and Urien keep you in the air/corner for nearly a whole match. Then there's Makoto's complete ground combo dominance with insane damage; you get caught once, it's over. And for no reason whatsoever, Sean and Ibuki were toned-down so much in SFIII3S that they can barely compete; try fighting against Urien, Yun, Makoto, Ryu, or Chun-Li with them...it's a bloodbath. And just like in the previous two, in SFIII3S Ryu is overpowered and cheap
Makoto's tough but it's still a guessing game (albeit a very risky one). She can't kill anybody in one combo nor even come close without meter. I find that few people actually use her to the skill you mention.
Ryu is not overpowered at all. Despite his higher vitality, he has no threatening attacks to pull off at will, no combos to easily initiate. Shin Shoryuken, while damaging, has like the longest meter in the game and limited comboability off c.LK x2, which make him quite fair. I'm assuming you're talking about Ken instead? Along with his basic kara MP->HP->Shoryuken and Shoryuken->kara Shoryuken combos, his c.MK->SA3 easily dominates.
What's wrong with kara throwing, kara cancelling, or superjump canceling? They're not especially hard to do or anything. They're just other things to learn in the game, undocumented tricks to get an edge up so to say.SFIII3S wouldn't be nearly as popular if shit like Kara Throwing wasn't in the game...
truth, caracancelling isnt near the same garbage as sf2 throws.
every fighting game under the sun is unbalanced, even those that had many revision like reload or vf4evo, saying X game sucks because this and that char is top tier doesnt make sense.
now, if anybody damn played sf3 before 3S, im sure there would be a lot of broken shit known in the early games too, and im sure there is, just that no one bothers with those games since 3S is well...out.
and 3S music is one of the best found in a fighting game.
every fighting game under the sun is unbalanced, even those that had many revision like reload or vf4evo, saying X game sucks because this and that char is top tier doesnt make sense.
now, if anybody damn played sf3 before 3S, im sure there would be a lot of broken shit known in the early games too, and im sure there is, just that no one bothers with those games since 3S is well...out.
and 3S music is one of the best found in a fighting game.
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Shatterhand
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[quote="The vagrant"
every fighting game under the sun is unbalanced, even those that had many revision like reload or vf4evo, saying X game sucks because this and that char is top tier doesnt make sense.
[/quote]
I Dunno... Bloody Roar 2? Of course, I haven't seen PRO players playing it, but for me and my friends it feels incredibly balanced...
every fighting game under the sun is unbalanced, even those that had many revision like reload or vf4evo, saying X game sucks because this and that char is top tier doesnt make sense.
[/quote]
I Dunno... Bloody Roar 2? Of course, I haven't seen PRO players playing it, but for me and my friends it feels incredibly balanced...
Your avatar is HOT!mannerbot wrote:..stuff...
SHMUP sale page.Randorama wrote:ban CMoon for being a closet Jerry Falwell cockmonster/Ann Coulter fan, Nijska a bronie (ack! The horror!), and Ed Oscuro being unable to post 100-word arguments without writing 3-pages posts.
Eugenics: you know it's right!
Re: SFIII2I > SFIII3S
The Vagrant:
"every fighting game under the sun is unbalanced"
Is it that there are no balanced fighters, or is it that the majority doesn't play the balanced ones? I think it's the latter.
Ganelon:
"I find that few people actually use her to the skill you mention."
As always, good arguments; seems like you play SFIII3S as well. I enjoy debating SFIII3S. Well, I've played SFIII3S a lot in Japan, so maybe that's why I think the way I do about it. The characters I mentioned are out of control in Japan. Even in the USA (I played a lot in Hawaii, too) they're difficult to fight against. If fighting against them isn't a constant, uphill nerve-shattering hellride, then we're playing against two completely different types of players. Even with Ken, Yun has so much mobility that you'll end up in the corner sooner or later, and only a few minor mistakes could cost you the match no matter how far ahead you were. You're right; Ryu's ShinRyuKen is strong; too strong. And it's bullshit. You make it seem like Makoto matches are easy; not at all. An experienced Makoto player should be feared; she is a highly versatile character with priority in just about every area. Yes, she's a guessing game...a guessing game that you'll lose if you make one minor mistake. As for Urien, maybe all of his game doesn't take place in the corner, but I dread being caught in between the Reflector juggle trap every time I take a single hit; play in Japan and you'll see what I mean. Shit, then again, you can just go to a USA tourney and everyone plays the same characters, anyway.
"They're not especially hard to do or anything. They're just other things to learn in the game, undocumented tricks to get an edge up so to say."
Undocumented? Try programming mistakes. Errors. While some aren't hard to do, the fact is that they weren't meant to be in the game. Do you think Roll-Canceling is OK to win with? Do you think E.Honda was meant to go through fireballs with his FP Pork Missile by using Roll-Canceling in CVS2? I don't think so.
Anyway, just my two cents...
"every fighting game under the sun is unbalanced"
Is it that there are no balanced fighters, or is it that the majority doesn't play the balanced ones? I think it's the latter.
Ganelon:
"I find that few people actually use her to the skill you mention."
As always, good arguments; seems like you play SFIII3S as well. I enjoy debating SFIII3S. Well, I've played SFIII3S a lot in Japan, so maybe that's why I think the way I do about it. The characters I mentioned are out of control in Japan. Even in the USA (I played a lot in Hawaii, too) they're difficult to fight against. If fighting against them isn't a constant, uphill nerve-shattering hellride, then we're playing against two completely different types of players. Even with Ken, Yun has so much mobility that you'll end up in the corner sooner or later, and only a few minor mistakes could cost you the match no matter how far ahead you were. You're right; Ryu's ShinRyuKen is strong; too strong. And it's bullshit. You make it seem like Makoto matches are easy; not at all. An experienced Makoto player should be feared; she is a highly versatile character with priority in just about every area. Yes, she's a guessing game...a guessing game that you'll lose if you make one minor mistake. As for Urien, maybe all of his game doesn't take place in the corner, but I dread being caught in between the Reflector juggle trap every time I take a single hit; play in Japan and you'll see what I mean. Shit, then again, you can just go to a USA tourney and everyone plays the same characters, anyway.
"They're not especially hard to do or anything. They're just other things to learn in the game, undocumented tricks to get an edge up so to say."
Undocumented? Try programming mistakes. Errors. While some aren't hard to do, the fact is that they weren't meant to be in the game. Do you think Roll-Canceling is OK to win with? Do you think E.Honda was meant to go through fireballs with his FP Pork Missile by using Roll-Canceling in CVS2? I don't think so.
Anyway, just my two cents...
Really nice. AFAIK it's arcade perfect in terms of frames of animation. Display-wise you get a choice between normal resolution, (which has a bit of noise on my S-Video display as the edges sort of vibrate ever so slightly) and a blurry/soft filtered mode. The normal mode seems comparable to the stock Dreamcast output, though things could vary either way with a vga display.Valgar wrote:Off topic, but is the ps2 port of third strike any good graphically speaking? I know the DC version had gameplay problems, while the PS2 one fixed these.
FULL LOCK is BOMB
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SheSaidDutch
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I've played Samurai Shodown 4 to death and I can't think of an unbalanced character.Valgar wrote:Please list these "balanced" fighters for us.
Feedback will set you free.
captpain wrote:Basically, the reason people don't like Bakraid is because they are fat and dumb