*** Welcome to piglix ***

Mortal Kombat Trilogy

Mortal Kombat Trilogy
MKTBox.jpg
Cover art
Developer(s) Avalanche Software (PlayStation)
Midway Games (N64)
Point of View, Inc. (PC, Saturn)
Publisher(s) Williams Entertainment
(1996 releases)
Midway Games
(1997 and onwards releases)
GT Interactive
(PC and European releases)
SoftBank (Japanese release)
Gradiente, Tectoy (BR)
Designer(s) Ed Boon and John Tobias
Composer(s) Dan Forden
Series Mortal Kombat
Platform(s) Nintendo 64, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows, Game.com, R-Zone
Release PlayStation
  • NA: October 10, 1996
  • BR: December 1996
  • PAL: December 6, 1996
  • JP: April 2, 1998
(KOR, 1998)
R-Zone
  • NA: 1996
Nintendo 64
  • NA: November 11, 1996
  • PAL: March 14, 1997
  • BR: 1997
Sega Saturn
  • NA: August 8, 1997
  • BR: 1998

MS-DOS, Windows
  • NA: August 31, 1997
  • EU: 1997
Game.com
  • NA: January 1, 1998
Genre(s) Fighting
Mode(s) Up to 2 players simultaneously (8 on N64)
Aggregate score
Aggregator Score
GameRankings 75.00% (Saturn)
66.50% (PlayStation)
51.90% (N64)
50% (PC)
Review scores
Publication Score
Game Informer 8.75/10 (Saturn)
GameSpot 5.8/10 (N64)
8.6/10 (PlayStation)
6.0/10 (Saturn)
IGN 6/10 (PlayStation)
4.1/10 (N64)

Mortal Kombat Trilogy is a fighting video game released by Midway in 1996 as an update to Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. Unlike the previous title, it was not released in arcades (except for prototypes), but was instead released for the PlayStation, Nintendo 64, Sega Saturn and PCs. Further versions were also released for the Game.com and R-Zone.

Mortal Kombat Trilogy features the same gameplay and story as Mortal Kombat 3, but adds characters and stages from the other three arcade games, including Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. Some completely new characters were also introduced. New additions to the game included the "Aggressor" bar, a meter that fills during the course of the match and temporarily makes a player character faster and stronger. It also features a new finishing move called Brutality, a long combination of attacks that ends with the opponent exploding.

The game was met with mixed reviews. The hardest criticism was directed at the Nintendo 64 version, which did not have all the content of the other versions due to limited storage space on the cartridge.

Mortal Kombat Trilogy introduces the Aggressor bar, which fills as the combatants fight (twice as much if the opponent is blocking). Once the bar is filled, it can be activated, which makes the character move much faster and deal heavy damage for a short period of time.

A finishing move in the game known as a Brutality requires the player to perform an 11-button combo which causes their opponent to explode. (Brutalities were also added to the Mega Drive/Genesis and SNES ports of UMK3.) All of the arenas that featured a Stage Fatality are featured in this game with their respective Fatality finishing moves except the Pit II. This arena's Stage Fatality had to be omitted as no MK3 characters had the unique sprites for falling off the bridge.


...
Wikipedia

...