Vampire Savior: The Lord of Vampire (1997) Street Fighter III: New Generation (1997) The seven games feature over 90 Capcom characters from over a dozen franchises, making Capcom perhaps the most self-indulgent participant in what is already one of gaming’s most self-indulgent fads. There is also the novel Namco X Capcom (2005), which is basically a tactical role-playing game with some fighting game elements. Capcom: Cross Generation of Heroes (2008). SNK2: Mark of the Millennium, and then finally Tatsunoko vs. SNK: Millennium Fight followed by its 2001 sequel Capcom vs. The year 2000 saw the release of Capcom vs. Capcom 2: Age of New Heroes (2000) and Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes (1998), followed by two Marvel-themed sequels, Marvel Vs.
Starting in 1998, the Capcom corporation produced a series of fighting games in which heroes from their various video game franchises went to war with characters from various other entertainment franchises, both American and Japanese. So far, only Bentley Bear has been positively identified. To this day, no one is really sure if the various characters of Atari Karts actually come from the over 100 games Atari published prior to 1995, or whether they were just made up.
Atari - Atari Karts (1995)Ītari Karts(1995), a highly forgettable (and now highly obscure) racing game for Atari’s short-lived Jaguar system is usually recognized as the first video game to boast an assembled cast of assorted franchise characters from a single corporation. Of Japan’s “big six” video game firms - Nintendo, Sony, Capcom, Konami, Sega, Namco, and Square -every single one has released at least one medley character mash-up game to date. They’d gather up a bunch of their most beloved characters from their reasonably popular past hits, stick them together in a single tile, and hope customers would be too giddy to notice the resulting game - usually a tournament fighter or kart racer of some sort - had little else to offer. Beginning in the late 1990s, it became fashionable for Japanese game companies to churn out titles whose dominant theme was simply self-aggrandizing nostalgia.