The excellent Capcom Super Street Fighter II on Mega Drive, expanded with four new characters. A fighter peak on the console, essential.
Your verdict
Category
Fighting2 players12+
Description
Ryu, Chun-Li and Super Street Fighter II fighters clash in this Capcom Mega Drive port. Published by Capcom, released in the United States in September 1994. 2D fighting game with ten original and four new characters, enriched gameplay and new settings.
Super Street Fighter II review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
Carefully adapted to the FM chip, Yoko Shimomura's iconic themes — Guile's leading the way — ring out with an infectious energy. Each fighter keeps his musical identity, galvanising the duels on a hair-trigger. This successful transposition of an arcade monument remains a treat for fighting fans.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
The culmination of the saga on 16-bit, fleshed out with new World Warriors who widen an already colossal roster. Each rebalanced character opens fresh approaches, rewarding mastery of timing and chains. Versus play gains depth without shedding any of its legendary clarity. You come back to explore styles, polish your combos and savour duels of timeless richness.
The NTSC release of Super Street Fighter II is the US version of Capcom's game.
Better with friends
An evolution of the 2D fighting king, enriched with new characters and fresh moves that broaden the strategic palette. The competition gains variety without losing any of its solid foundations, where each fighter imposes their style on the duels. As readable and deep as ever, it fuels back-to-back versus nights, and the "winner stays on" queue keeps a good-natured but fierce rivalry alive.
Is Super Street Fighter II still worth playing in 2026?
A Mega Drive adaptation of the famous Capcom versus, Super Street Fighter II offers the enriched version of SFII with four new fighters (Cammy, Fei Long, T. Hawk, Dee Jay), improved animations and refined handling. The arcade faithful art direction and roster richness make it an absolute 16 bit versus reference. For anyone fond of SF2 or wanting the most complete version of the classic formula on Mega Drive, an absolutely essential recommendation today still without hesitation for fans truly here indeed for any returning newcomer.