Final Fight (video game)

Final Fight
Arcade flyer
DeveloperCapcom
Publishers
Capcom
  • Arcade
    • WW: Capcom
    • AU: Leisure & Allied Industries
    Home computers
    U.S. Gold
    Sega CD
    Sega
ProducerYoshiki Okamoto
DesignersAkira Nishitani
Akira Yasuda
ArtistAkira Yasuda
ComposersManami Matsumae
Yoshihiro Sakaguchi
Yasuaki Fujita
Hiromitsu Takaoka
Yoko Shimomura
Junko Tamiya
Harumi Fujita
SeriesFinal Fight
Platform
Release
November 25, 1989
  • Arcade
    • JP: November 25, 1989
    • NA: January 1990
    Super NES
    • JP: December 21, 1990
    • NA: November 10, 1991
    • PAL: December 10, 1992
    Final Fight Guy
    • JP: March 20, 1992
    • NA: June 1994
    Home computers
    X68000
    • JP: July 17, 1992
    Sega CD
    • JP: March 26, 1993
    • NA: April 1993
    • PAL: July 1993
    CPS Changer
    Game Boy Advance
    • JP: May 25, 2001
    • NA: September 26, 2001
    • PAL: September 28, 2001
GenreBeat 'em up
ModesSingle-player, multiplayer
Arcade systemCP System

Final Fight is a 1989 beat 'em up game developed and published by Capcom for arcades. It is the seventh title released for the CP System hardware. Set in the fictional Metro City, the player controls one of three street fighters: former pro wrestler and city mayor Mike Haggar, expert brawler Cody Travers, and modern-day ninja Guy. The trio set out to rescue Jessica (Haggar's daughter and Cody's girlfriend) when she is kidnapped by the Mad Gear Gang.

The game began development as a sequel to the original Street Fighter released in 1987, under the working title Street Fighter '89. However, its genre was switched from a fighting game to a beat 'em up, and the title was changed to Final Fight following the success of Technōs Japan's Double Dragon. Final Fight was ported to various home computers and consoles, including the ZX Spectrum, Super NES and Sega CD.

It became a major commercial success in arcades, selling 30,000 arcade units worldwide while becoming the highest-grossing arcade game of 1990 in Japan and the year's highest-grossing arcade conversion kit in the United States. The Super NES version also sold 1.5 million cartridges worldwide. Now considered one of the greatest video games of all time, it spawned the Final Fight sub-series from the Street Fighter series, followed by several sequels. Its development team later worked on the original Street Fighter II, and some of the characters from Final Fight later appeared as playable fighters in other entries of the franchise, such as the Street Fighter Alpha sub-series.