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Double Dragon II - The Revenge (USA)

NES / Famicom
🇬🇧
Reviewed in
1991
86
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✪ Reviewed on January 16, 2026
80

The sequel improves everything: controls, levels, variety. One of the best beat'em ups on NES. The attack direction system is far more intuitive. Essential for genre fans.

Your verdict
Category
Beat-'Em-Up 2 players 12+ Co-op
Description
Double Dragon sequel with a more epic scenario and the finest combat mechanics in the series. Published by Acclaim, released in the USA in 1990. Billy and Jimmy with new techniques including the cyclone kick, varied enemies and imposing bosses. Second and finest Double Dragon on NES.

Double Dragon II - The Revenge review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
4/5
Music
"Excellent"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Short"
Technical info
💾0,14 MB 📅01/01/1991
Published by Acclaim

Double Dragon II - The Revenge (NES) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

The US NTSC NES edition of the Technos beat'em up, the console's flagship market. Widely distributed at the time, the title turns up easily loose, with value concentrated in clean CIB and an uncreased cardboard box, fragile by nature on US releases. Desirability rests on the game's standing with nostalgic American players, who often met it before the original, rather than on print scarcity.

Better with friends

A two-player street beat-'em-up where the twin brothers pummel gangs that come in numbers, side by side, with grabs and spinning kicks. Cooperation is straightforward, but friendly fire adds a pinch of teasing chaos when a misplaced blow drops your buddy. Snappy and a touch demanding, it bonds duos who learn to sync up, and clearing a level together instantly calls for the next.

Is Double Dragon II - The Revenge still worth playing in 2026?

Double Dragon II - The Revenge improves everything over the first entry: more intuitive controls, more varied levels and a directional attack system that genuinely revolutionises the experience. The Lee brothers chain techniques with new precision, and the cooperative mode finally becomes fully enjoyable. The difficulty stays high but fair, the soundtrack memorable. Today one of the NES's best beat 'em ups, especially shining in two-player. A must for retro Technos lovers.

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