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Final Fight One (USA)

Game Boy Advance
🇬🇧
Reviewed in
2001
78
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✪ Reviewed on December 5, 2024
72

Final Fight One on GBA, an honorable port of Capcom's beat'em up. Metro City in the palm of your hand. Less visually impressive than the original but gameplay remains intact and satisfying.

Your verdict
Category
Beat-'Em-Up 4 players 12+ Co-op
Description
GBA port of Capcom's arcade beat-em-up Final Fight, published in the United States in June 2001. Mayor Mike Haggar, Cody and Guy traverse the six districts of Metro City to rescue Jessica from the Mad Gear gang. Memorable bosses including Sodom, Edi E. and Abigail, recoverable ground weapons and recurring enemies including Poison and Andore. Three playable characters with distinct styles, two-player link cable mode to fight Mad Gear together and two selectable difficulty levels.

Final Fight One review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
4/5
Music
"Excellent"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Short"
Technical info
💾2,3 MB 📅11/06/2001
Published by Capcom

Final Fight One (GBA) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

The US version of Final Fight One was the first launched worldwide, on 11 June 2001, and remains the most widely distributed of the Capcom port. Its English NTSC box is the most common in loose and CIB form, making it the most accessible entry point for experiencing Metro City on GBA. Desirability concentrates on factory-sealed copies, whose value matches the other versions, while complete copies stay affordable. A logical pick for North American collectors attached to the original genre release.

Is Final Fight One still worth playing in 2026?

A GBA port of Capcom's Final Fight, Final Fight One brings back the benchmark beat them up that defined the genre in arcades, with Haggar, Cody and Guy clearing the streets of Metro City. The conversion is surprisingly faithful, restoring the impact of blows, the level breakdown and the readability despite the format's constraints. The smaller screen and the lack of two player co-op weigh a little, but the pleasure of pummelling stays intact. For a retro beat them up fan or someone curious about a genre classic on handheld, the title keeps a raw, gratifying effectiveness.

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