OK, so I've been on this for a while, but after several Google sessions I still can't find my favorite fighter character (and hence the exact game he was featured in).
This is what is known (from memory, so some of this could be biased):
- The game was a 2p, fighting game on an arcade coin-op, mid-to-late 90's.
- Graphics quality very similar to Virtua Fighter 2 level, it was 3D, camera could pan and rotate around the action.
- The character was an old dude, similar to Shun Di but dressed in all blue (?) or at least single color uniform, traditional Chinese style, if I'm not mistaken with longer coat/tunic than Shun Di and no belt.
- He had lot's of defensive moves, like intercepting fist strikes, grabbing the striking arm and off-ballancing/pushing/throwing aikido style.
- One of his power move/strong attack was a double (or single?) hammerfist attack from standing position, if it hit, the opponent would be smashed face first to the ground (looked ridiculously good).
There is a chance that the game was from an unknown/rip-off series, and not from the big names (Virtua/Kingof/Street/etc) because in Hungary most of these machines were probably unlicensed "pirated" machines.
That's about it. I'm pretty certain that once I'd see it with some moves I could tell. Any fighting flick experts out there can nail this?
This is what is known (from memory, so some of this could be biased):
- The game was a 2p, fighting game on an arcade coin-op, mid-to-late 90's.
- Graphics quality very similar to Virtua Fighter 2 level, it was 3D, camera could pan and rotate around the action.
- The character was an old dude, similar to Shun Di but dressed in all blue (?) or at least single color uniform, traditional Chinese style, if I'm not mistaken with longer coat/tunic than Shun Di and no belt.
- He had lot's of defensive moves, like intercepting fist strikes, grabbing the striking arm and off-ballancing/pushing/throwing aikido style.
- One of his power move/strong attack was a double (or single?) hammerfist attack from standing position, if it hit, the opponent would be smashed face first to the ground (looked ridiculously good).
There is a chance that the game was from an unknown/rip-off series, and not from the big names (Virtua/Kingof/Street/etc) because in Hungary most of these machines were probably unlicensed "pirated" machines.
That's about it. I'm pretty certain that once I'd see it with some moves I could tell. Any fighting flick experts out there can nail this?