Street Fighter 2: Champion Edition/FAQ

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< Street Fighter 2: Champion Edition
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Tier List

Noryangjin Jungin Tier list

Tier S: Guile, M.Bison(Dictator)

Tier A+: Sagat, Vega(Claw), Ryu

Tier A: Dhalsim, Ken

Tier B: Blanka

Tier C: E.Honda

Tier D: Chun-Li, Zangief

Tier F: Balrog(Boxer)

1992 Japan Historical Tier List

XMania 1 and Gamest Mook

  1. Dictator
  2. Guile
  3. Sagat
  4. Claw
  5. Dhalsim
  6. Blanka
  7. Ryu
  8. Honda
  9. Boxer
  10. Ken
  11. Chun Li
  12. Zangief

General Tier List

As in every fighting game, there are chars that are better than others or even chars more suitable to defeat certain opponents than others. Some are better overall because they have a good mix of speed, strength and moves and some are worse due to the lack of these features. Tier lists are somewhat a personal thing but in old games like CE there is a certain consensus about who are the top/bottom chars.

Top Tier Mid Tier Low Tier

Guile

M Bison (Dictador)

Ryu

Sagat

Blanka

Dhalsim

Ken

Vega (Claw)

Balrog (Boxer)

Chun Li

E Honda

Zangief



As said, tier lists are very personal. A more detailed list can be found in the old documents from Jonathan Deitch, based on knowledge found in alt.games.sf2 boards. This info, altough early OG treatments about the game's nature, reflects an incredibly accurate representation of SF2CE match ups, still to this day. This list will be adopted for further char-specific match up discussion.

SF2CE tier list


Secrets

  • Golden Hadouken: a fiery Hadouken that sometimes comes out in place of the normal blue/white ones. It happens randomly with both Ryu and Ken and has the same effect as a normal fireball. Considered a bug for years, a recent statement from Akira Nishitani (main SF2 developer) said it was intentionally implemented in the game as an easter egg. In Super Street Fighter II onwards, it was converted in a command move exclusive to Ryu and, different from the normal Hadouken, sets the opponent on fire if not blocked.
  • Beating the game without lose a single round: after the char ending, you'll get a demo mode when each fighter destroys a crate or an oil drum using one of his/her signature moves, along with aliases and caricatures of the game devs.
  • Konami Code: strangely enough, the Konami Code can be used in the arcade version of SF2CE. If you pull the sequence up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right and press MP then LP on controller 2 during the attract mode, you'll get screen info like: number of coins deposited, number of times a certain char was used, etc. Here's the video.

Bugs

SF2CE known bugs include:

  • Bonus Stage infinite hits: This bug freezes the game. Here you can see Honda, Blanka and Vega doing it intentionally. However, if you're on a 2-player game, the other player remains fully operational, and can cancel the bug just hitting the frozen opponent.
  • Vega backflip bug: an old known bug occurs whenever Vega does his backflip move underneath the oil drums at the third bonus stage. It doesn't interfere in the game. Video.
  • Corner bug: when one of the players is cornered, the game messes the controllers up whenever the opponent jump at him turning a reversal attack or even a simple blocking into a guessing game. In this video, an unscrupulous player takes advantage of the bug to punish his opponent, who did the Shoryuken command facing left but the attack cames out facing right. The japanese version doesn't have this bug.

Game Versions

CPS1 (arcade)
This is the original release of Champion Edition.

  • 920313

U.S.A. and World

  • 920322

Japan

  • 920513

Universal One

  • 920803

Final Revision of U.S.A. and Japan


Differences between U.S.A./World and Japan versions

There are some U.S.A. first revision and Japan first revision technical differences. The japanese version has bug corrections, balance tweaks, a higher damage rate and a somewhat smarter AI.

Some of these differences are further explained below:

Ken Zangief Balrog(M.Bison) a.k.a Boxer Vega(Balrog) a.k.a Claw Sagat M.Bison(Vega) a.k.a Dictador
USA "Egg Roller" Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku after knockdown Needs 4 SPD to defeat opponent (44) Dash Punch misses crouching characters

TAP doesn't powered up by extra charge time

Fierce Rolling Crystal Flash hits 3 times close

All 3 versions of RCF mades only one loop

Only Jab version of Tiger Uppercut makes knocksdown Psycho Crusher cause more block damage 3-6 hits
Japan Doesn't multihit after knockdown Need 3 SPD to defeat opponent (50) Dash Punch hits crouching characters

TAP can be powered up as long as charged

Fierce Rolling Crystal Flash have an extra hit close

Number of loops in RCF depends on button

All Tiger Uppercuts makes knockdown Psycho Crusher makes less block damage only 1-3 hits


Home Versions

Super Nintendo

The initial home release. Derezzed sprites/simpler graphics (very little parallax scrolling) and much weaker sound effects than the arcade release. Also some nitpicky game engine changes - CPS1 combos don't work, and the game certainly 'feels' different - probably some frame data and timing changes. Check out E.Honda's LP headbutt for instance.

Also, no intro movie! OMG!


PC Engine/Turbografx16

Japan exclusive home release, have tuned down sprites, not darktune colored as Mega Drive but isn't light as Super Nintendo.


Sega Genesis/Mega Drive

Titled "Street Fighter 2' Special Champion Edition" in the West, and "Street Fighter 2' Plus" in the East.

Quite similar to the Super Nintendo release, although the Genesis version has an extra tournament mode and match play over the Super Nintendo release. Also, more speed options are available by default. Worse sound though (especially the voices), and slightly poorer colours. It does have the original intro movie though. Also, CPS1 chains work - which make this probably a more accurate port!

Amusing to note that these ancient 16-bit ports even have the 'good' button configs - thanks, 90s Capcom!


Playstation

Part of Capcom Generation 5. Direct-to-Arcade alike, but not perfect.


Sega Saturn

Part of Capcom Generation 5. Direct-to-Arcade alike, but not perfect.


Playstation 2

Part of Capcom Classics Collection Vol. 1.


Xbox

Part of Capcom Classics Collection Vol. 1.

Bootleg Versions

SF2CE success started a bootleg craze, which gave origin to adulterated versions of the game. These versions allowed "enhanced" moves like aerial special attacks, increased speed, twisted physics, teleporting, multiple fireball shots, in-game Shang Tsung-esque char selection, and many other things. This prompted Capcom to incorporate some of these ideas into the game's next version and tweaking them on subsequent SF iterations.

These versions vary from slightly different from the original to nearly unplayable. Some of the most famous ones are:

Regional Differences

Boss Names

Besides the technical differences between both american/world and japanese CE versions mentioned above, and like in the WW case, the boss names where interchanged for some reasons, being the most known one the fear of legal troubles in USA (M. Bison vs Mike Tyson). Also, it seems that americans considered "Vega" a dumb last-boss-evil-dictator-vilain-of-all-times name so the changes took place and persist to these Street Fighter V days.

American Version
Japanese Version
Boxer character = Balrog Boxer character = M.Bison
Claw character = Vega Claw character = Balrog
Dictator character = M.Bison Dictator character = Vega

Win Quotes

Unlike USA and World versions, the japanese SF2CE has different and gender specific winning quotes for each fighter. A compilation of these quotes and their respective translations can be found in the External Links section below.

Game Tips

Again, unlike USA and World versions, the japanese SF2CE gives gameplay tips and advices during the continue screen, including instructions for performing special moves and even motivational phrases.

References

Port Comparisons

Technical Details

SF2 Dizzies
Dizzy durations and limits and update
SF2 Hitboxes
SF2 Throwboxes
SF2 Random damage
Cheat codes & findings

External links

  • SRK Fighting Game Glossary, fighting games jargon and definitions.
  • SF2CE Wikipedia Page. English SF2CE Wikipedia entry.
  • SF2 oral history, interesting facts about SF2 development revealed by the devs themselves.
  • Mugenguild Thread, Akira Nishitani's tweets compilation covering SF2 and Final Fight development with links and translation.
  • Sonichurricane.com, relevant information about SF2 undocumented features.
  • T.Akiba's site, japanese site with technical info about SF2.
  • tcrf.net, hidden game elements and unused graphics found in the SF2 rom.
  • alt.games.sf2, old SF2 boards. (still active!)
  • Win quotes, SF2 japanese win quotes translated.
  • FightCade by Pof, to play CE online. Based on Final Burn Alpha/GGPO emulator.
  • Arclive/Suparc, a chinese emulator with suport to most old school arcade games (english and spanish versions available).
  • SF2CE channel, tons of korean CE videos and daily live streams from real arcade matches.

Game Navigation

General
Controls
Notation
HUD
Glossary
System
FAQ
Characters
Balrog (boxer)
Blanka
Chun-li
Dhalsim
E Honda
Guile
Ken
M. Bison (dictator)
Ryu
Sagat
Vega (claw)
Zangief