Mortal Kombat Music Evil Monastery
The original three games and their updates, Mortal Kombat (1992), Mortal Kombat II (1993), Mortal Kombat 3 (1995), Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 (1995), and Mortal Kombat Trilogy (1996), are 2D fighting games. The arcade cabinet versions of the first two used a joystick and five buttons: high punch, low punch, high kick, low kick, and block; Mortal Kombat 3 and its updates added a sixth "run" button.[1] Characters in the early Mortal Kombat games play virtually identically to one another, with the only major differences being their special moves.[2] Through the 1990s, the developer and publisher Midway Games kept their single-styled fighting moves with four attack buttons for a different array of punches, kicks and blocks. Mortal Kombat 4 was the first Mortal Kombat game in which the characters could move in three dimensions and the first to use 3D computer graphics. From Deadly Alliance to Mortal Kombat: Deception, characters had three fighting styles per character: two unarmed styles, and one weapon style.[3] While most of the styles used in the series are based on real martial arts, some are fictitious.[4] Goro's fighting styles, for example, are designed to take advantage of the fact that he has four arms. For Armageddon, fighting styles were reduced to a maximum of two per character (generally one hand-to-hand combat style and one weapon style) due to the sheer number of playable characters.[5] Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe dropped multiple fighting styles for most characters in favor of giving each character a wider variety of special moves[6][7] 2011's Mortal Kombat returned to a single 2D fighting plane, although characters are rendered in 3D;[8] unlike previous Mortal Kombat games, each of the controller's four attack buttons corresponds to one of the character's limbs, the buttons thus becoming front punch, back punch, front kick and back kick ("front" indicates the limb that is closer to the opponent, and "back" indicates the limb that is farther away from the opponent).
Mortal Kombat: Deception and Mortal Kombat: Armageddon feature "Konquest", a free-roaming action-adventure mode. Both games include distinct minigame modes such as "Chess Kombat", an action-strategy game. Two other bonus minigames, "Puzzle Kombat" inspired by Puzzle Fighter and "Motor Kombat" inspired by Mario Kart, feature super deformed versions of Mortal Kombat characters.[1] The games contain various unlockable content and hidden
Other Videos By Nintendoguy2022
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music The Cathedral |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music The Bell Tower |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music The Armory |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music Shao Khan's Throne Room |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music Shang Tsung's Garden |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music Shang Tsung's Courtyard |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music Goro's Lair |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music Scorpion's Lair |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music Living Fores |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music Khan's Colosseum |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music Evil Monastery |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music The Graveyard |
2024-02-26 | Mortal Kombat Music The Flesh Pits |
2024-02-25 | The sewer is backed up |
2024-02-25 | Super Mario Bros Wonder FULL OST |
2024-02-24 | Soul Calibur 3 OST 231 peaceful days piano version |
2024-02-24 | Soul Calibur 3 OST 216 armed with valor |
2024-02-24 | Soul Calibur 3 OST 233 healing winds reprise |
2024-02-24 | Soul Calibur 3 OST 222 approaching tempest |
2024-02-24 | Soul Calibur 3 OST 221 the die is cast |
2024-02-24 | Soul Calibur 3 OST 220 the lost chronicle |
Other Statistics
Mortal Kombat Statistics For Nintendoguy2022
Nintendoguy2022 currently has 158 views spread across 20 videos for Mortal Kombat. Less than an hour worth of Mortal Kombat videos were uploaded to his channel, less than 0.59% of the total video content that Nintendoguy2022 has uploaded to YouTube.