Street Fighter X Tekken for Vita marks another great fighting game port for the handheld from Capcom, and while I wish their support for the Vita was a bit more substantial, at least they?re able to get these ports done right. I was a pretty big fan of the original release on Xbox 360 and PS3, and while I do fall into the camp that has found the gem business a bit tiring, overall I?m extremely pleased with how well this port has shaped up.
Like I mentioned in my original review for the game, seeing the worlds of Street Fighter and Tekken meshed together like this is pretty much a fanboy dream come true. My 13 year old self would have fallen out of his seat when the announcement was made that a collaboration would occur between these two fighting game giants, and even as an adult I found myself giddy with expectation. And the end result, at least on the Capcom side of the fence, has left me pretty satisfied and happy.
From a control perspective the game works about as well as it does on a standard DualShock controller, so if you?re at all familiar with fighters on a PS3 or PS2, you should feel right home here. The touch screen controls, at least the ability to map three punches and three kicks, can be useful, but you?ll find yourself accidentally hitting the rear touchpad quite a bit, so much so that you?ll most likely need to turn that option off, which you can do without disabling everything.
Visually the game is no slouch either, and while it might not be on par with the PS3 version of the game, I think you?ll still find yourself surprised with how close the developers manage to get here. Without sacrificing FPS and without much loss in the texture department, the environments and characters modeled here really look great.
Street Fighter X Tekken on the Vita is certainly worth picking up if you?re a Vita owner and a fighting game fan, and continues the excellent port work put forth by Capcom with their Marvel vs. Capcom 3 release when the Vita launched. It?s still a really fun fighter in its own right, and while I could certainly do with them ditching the tedious and unbalanced gem system, the rest of the package is a fun romp through two fighting game worlds.
You’ll also get a peek at the stage set in the futuristic city of Birnin…
If you like the taste that you got, pre-orders for the full title are also…
At least these retro reproductions are properly labeled…
It’s a damn shame that even Lillymo has abandoned the PlayStation Vita as a platform.
Sometimes it’s nice to hold things in your hands.
VF5 is getting dangerously close to having the same number of iterations as Street Fighter…
This website uses cookies.