

Maybe that’s why, although initially it seems completely unthinkable, Street Fighter x Tekken is really being done and the two great universes are finally going to settle accounts.Īfter the initial trailer in which we learned of the existence of the game and the partnership between Capcom and Namco Bandai, and of course the relationship between Yoshinori Ono from Street Fighter and Katsuhiro Harada from Tekken, with the arrival of Captivate ’11 at Capcom revealed a new trailer in which we introduced a new range of characters from both series and other news related to the gameplay and the way Capcom is treating the combination of the two game styles. While it seemed more like Street Fighter was a pearl more dedicated to players who were getting older, Tekken became a fascination for the younger strata, but in fact despite all their differences, they both share a core value that is central in experience, a high and profound sense of balance. In 2D fights, the Street Fighter series has always enjoyed a unique role, but at some point, the fascination of the nineties for fighting games in two dimensions began to be lost to give way to a new furor sponsored by the arrival of 3D. For some time now, the general feeling among the fighting game community was that of two completely different series that governed in their own spaces, each with its prominence among the competitors.
