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Street Fighter Amstrad CPC

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Score: N/A
Publisher:Go!
Year:1988
Languages:English
Developer:Tiertex Ltd - (John Prince, Duncan Campbell & Martin Wakeley), Blue Turtle - (Leigh Christian)
Players:1-2 (2 simultaneous)
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Both compelling and addictive, Street Fighter is one of the most  outstanding martial arts combat games yet devised. The action is  intense as you travel across 5 colourful locations, to combat 10 of  the toughest and meanest adversaries you'll ever meet. Japan, China,  U.S.A., Thailand and England provide the backdrop for this thrilling  spectacle that will test your combat skills and endurance to the  limit.

...LET NOTHING STAND IN YOUR WAY — Cassette cover

Street Fighter is a 1987 arcade game developed by Capcom. It is the first competitive fighting game produced by the company and the inaugural game in the Street Fighter series. Although it did not achieve the same worldwide popularity as its sequel Street Fighter II when it was first released, the original Street Fighter introduced some of the conventions made standard in later games, such as the six button controls and the use of command based special techniques.

A port for the PC Engine/TurboGrafx CD console was released under the title Fighting Street in 1988.

This same version was later re-released for the Wii's Virtual Console in North America on November 2, 2009, and in the PAL region on November 5, 2009.

Versions of Street Fighter for the Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, DOS, Amiga and Atari ST were published by U.S. Gold in 1988 in Europe. These ports were developed by Tiertex. The Commodore 64 actually got two versions, published on the same tape/disk - the NTSC (US) version developed by Capcom USA, and the PAL (UK) version by Tiertex. Shortly afterward, Tiertex developed their own unofficial sequel titled Human Killing Machine, which was entirely unrelated to the subsequent official sequel or indeed any other game in the series. This edition of Street Fighter was featured in two compilations: Arcade Muscle and Multimixx 3, both of which featured other U.S. Gold-published ports of Capcom games such as Bionic Commando and 1943: The Battle of Midway.

Source:Wikipedia