The Japanese version of Streets of Rage 3, with more content and better balancing than the Western edition. A cult beat'em up that genuinely deserves this treatment.
Your verdict
Category
Beat-'Em-Up1 player12+
Description
Axel, Blaze and Zan battle Mr. X and his new syndicate in this third Sega Streets of Rage for Mega Drive. Published by Sega, released in Asia in September 1994. Beat'em up with five playable characters, advanced combos and music by Motohiro Kawashima and Yuzo Koshiro.
Streets of Rage 3 review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
3/5
Story
★★★★★
"Solid"
More experimental and frantic, the music of Yuzo Koshiro and Motohiro Kawashima pushes techno into its most abrasive and unpredictable corners. Chopped rhythms and disorienting sonorities make the adventure a radical sonic experience. This daring, long misunderstood, is now celebrated as avant-garde.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Sega's urban beat-'em-up reaches its fastest, densest form here: special moves on demand, dashes, rolls and a deluge of enemies to floor. The heightened edge and two-player co-op turn every street into a gleeful blow-off. Raw, stylish and packed with content, a peak of the genre that hasn't lost a drop of its fire.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Pressing forward street after street while hammering combos, snatching a weapon and clearing a stage constantly fuels the urge to see the next one. Branching story paths, hidden characters and a score to inflate string together short goals and rewards. The genre's inherent repetition eventually creeps in, but the nervy pace and the joy of two-player brawling keep an untouched pull.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Beyond its muscular run, this beat'em up multiplies playable characters, branching paths and alternate endings that invite a full replay. The raised difficulty, the co-op mode and the scattered secrets stretch the fun considerably. That replay richness, rare for the genre, explains the lasting attachment of side-scrolling brawler fans.
The Asian edition of Streets of Rage 3 is the regional pressing of Sega's game, distributed in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore.
Is Streets of Rage 3 still worth playing in 2026?
The Japanese version of the famous Streets of Rage 3, Bare Knuckle III offers a particularly rich urban beat'em up with multiple paths, alternate endings based on choices and an experimental techno soundtrack by Yuzo Koshiro. The Japanese version stands out with better balanced difficulty and a more coherent storyline than the western release. For anyone fond of classic demanding beat'em ups and wishing to discover the hidden peak of the Streets of Rage saga, an absolutely essential recommendation on Japanese Mega Drive today still here truly.