Super Street Fighter II adds four new fighters and polishes balance. The 16 bit versus peak, essential for Capcom fans.
Your verdict
Category
Fighting2 players12+
Description
Enriched version of Street Fighter II featuring four new challengers and new moves. Published by Capcom, released in North America in 1994. Sixteen characters including Dee Jay, Fei Long, Cammy and T. Hawk, new animations and tournament and versus modes. North American NTSC release.
Super Street Fighter II review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
Colourful sprites in dynamic poses, backgrounds teeming with life and lively animation: Capcom's pixel art reaches a jubilant vivacity. Every fighter overflows with character in an explosion of hues. This graphic energy, warm and precise, celebrates the golden age of 2D fighting.
Enriching the experience with new fighters, the Super version reworks and fleshes out the series' cult themes, giving each character a strong musical identity. The music matches the rhythm of the duels with a galvanising energy. This sonic generosity confirms Street Fighter II as an absolute benchmark of the genre.
Gameplay
"Masterful"
Four new fighters and a refined game system broaden an already legendary versus without betraying its balance. The handling, firm and legible, makes every distance and every special move decisive. More complete and more colorful than its forerunners, this chapter retains a depth of dueling that still wins over fans of 2D fighting.
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Four new fighters, reworked backdrops and a refined balance enrich the versus monument without betraying its essence. Pulling off a super combo, reading your opponent and finishing a close round delivers instant satisfaction. The depth rewards hours of practice without ever putting off the curious. Snappy, complete and timeless, one of the most generous versions of the legend.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Four new fighters and a refined system broaden the legendary duel without betraying its snappiness. Mastering a character, reading your opponent or stringing together wins fuels endless motivation, solo or for two. Close to its predecessors, this refinement keeps a competitive hook that time hasn't dulled.
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Clearing the sixteen-strong roster in arcade mode is only the doorway: truly learning each fighter, their combos and the fresh moves takes dozens of hours, while two-player versus reignites the loop endlessly. The tournament mode and the hunt for frame-perfect timing keep you coming back. That competitive depth still earns it a reputation as a bottomless versus-fighting staple.
Technical info
💾2,7 MB📅25/08/1994
Published by Capcom
Super Street Fighter II (SNES) price, value & rarity
The North American NTSC SNES edition of Capcom's Super Street Fighter II from 1994, an expanded four-fighter version released on a US market where the franchise was a phenomenon. A ubiquitous hit, its cart stays extremely common in NTSC and collector interest is limited: value concentrates almost entirely on graded sealed and first prints, the loose version remaining a mass-market commodity. A closing slot in an NTSC Street Fighter II trilogy for completists.
Better with friends
An enriched edition of the legendary 2D fighter, with its newcomers and refined balance broadening the duel palette. The competition banks on fundamentals mastered to perfection, where positioning, anti-airs and jump reads decide the face-offs. In a group you happily take turns, and the "winner stays on" rule sets up a healthy rivalry where everyone wants to seize the throne, round after round.
Is Super Street Fighter II still worth playing in 2026?
Super Street Fighter II - The New Challengers expands SF II Turbo by adding four new fighters, namely Cammy, Dee Jay, Fei Long and T. Hawk, and a combo rating system that foreshadows the Alpha series. The SNES port stands up remarkably well to the arcade board, and the handling stays precise. The overall pace is a notch calmer than SF II Turbo, which may divide. Recommended to Street Fighter II fans wanting the most complete 16 bit roster and a fresh technical breath.