Fighting Bujutsu

1997 video game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fighting Bujutsu, known in Japan as Fighting Wu-Shu (FIGHTING武術 (ファイティングうーしゅ), lit. "Martial Fighting"), is a 1997 3D fighting arcade game developed and published by Konami, released on their Konami Cobra arcade board. It is Konami's second attempt in the 3D fighting game market, after their Lightning Legend: Daigo no Daibouken in 1996, and was released only in arcades.

PublisherKonami
DirectorKazuya Takahashi
ProducerHiroyasu Machiguchi
Quick facts Developer, Publisher ...
Fighting Bujutsu
North American arcade flyer
DeveloperKonami
PublisherKonami
DirectorKazuya Takahashi
ProducerHiroyasu Machiguchi
ComposersMutsuhiko Izumi
Naoki Maeda
PlatformArcade
ReleaseAugust 1997
GenreFighting
ModesSingle player, multiplayer
Arcade systemKonami Cobra
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Gameplay

Much like Sega's Virtua Fighter 2, Fighting Bujutsu utilizes a control scheme consisting of a control stick and three buttons: Punch, Kick, and Guard.[1] A Beginner Mode maps combo techniques to individual buttons.[2]

Development and release

Fighting Bujutsu was unveiled as one of the first games powered by the Konami Cobra System Hardware (the other being Racing Jam) in a 10-minute videotape shown at the 1997 ASI arcade show. At this point it had no working title, and was referred to only by the codename "PF 573".[3][4] It was shown again at that year's JAMMA show, by which time it was named Fighting Wu-Shu.[5][1][6] According to Next Generation, there was "some question of how (or if) to present [Fighting Wu-Shu] to the U.S. market."[7] The game made its U.S. debut, now under the title Fighting Bujutsu, at the AMOA Expo in Atlanta in October 1997.[8] It first appeared in the UK at the January 1998 Amusement Trades Exhibition International in London.[9][10]

On January 21, 1998, an official soundtrack of Fighting Bujutsu's background music was published by Konami and distributed by King Records exclusively in Japan as Fighting Wu-Shu Original Game Soundtrack (FIGHTING武術 オリジナル・ゲーム・サントラ).[11]

Reception

In Japan, Game Machine listed Fighting Bujutsu on their November 15, 1997 issue as being the eighth most-successful dedicated arcade game of the month.[12]

References

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