This article is about the series. For the third game in the series, see.The SNK vs.
Capcom series is a collection of by either or featuring that appear in games created by both companies. Series' terminology originates from the fact that many of these games (but not all) are.Games in this series either contain SNK vs. Capcom or Capcom vs. SNK, the first company denoting the company behind the game's development. Games in this series appear for various platforms, including the , (arcade),.
Capcom - SVC Chaos Super Plus (bootleg) File information Filename svcsplus.zip File size 41.34 Mo Category NeoGeo Language. Genre Platform Developer bootleg Year 2003 Player(s) 1 - 2 Controller Panel Media Cartridge Online since This game has been downloaded 3156 times.
Contents.History Release timeline 01SVC: Card Fighters 2 Expand EditionSVC: Card Fighters DSThe supposed origin behind this series was an issue of Arcadia in which there were articles covering both and, both of which were released at around the same time. Readers had misread the cover, which said KOF vs. SF, to mean that there was a fighting game that would pit characters from. Because of this uproar, Capcom and SNK supposedly signed a deal that would allow them to produce only two fighting games concerning both franchises in (the Card Fighters series (see below) were not fighting games and therefore were exempt from the rule).
It is highly suggested that was only made in order to fulfill the contract obligations that SNK made prior to the company filing and their eventual closing in. Also, if one company was the main creator of one game, the distributing company would gain the profits and not the company that licensed the characters for use (although SNK gave the rights to use the SNK characters to Capcom for the first Capcom vs. SNK game, SNK did not profit from the game, which did not help their financial problems). There were interviews with SNK that it would be possible to renew their contract with Capcom to make new SNK vs. Capcom games, but in another interview, both companies stated that they would not do any further collaboration with each other. Capcom: Card Fighters DS will probably be the last crossover game between both companies. However, in an interview from January 2009, Yoshinori Ono, the producer of, expressed interest in a possible third game if fans demand it.
While no new SNK vs. Capcom titles have been released since Card Fighter DS, characters from both companies have appeared together in a handful of other titles, including Akuma and Geese in 's and Mega Man, Ryu, Ken and Terry in 's.SNK-produced games. A portable fighting game developed by and released for the.
The game features three different playing rules to choose from (Single Battle, Tag Match, and Team Battle). The game also features an 'Olympic Mode' with themed minigames. Also released for the Neo Geo Pocket Color, a collectable card game featuring trading card based on SNK's and Capcom's properties. Two versions were produced; the SNK Supporter's Version and the Capcom Supporter's Version. The sequel to Card Fighters Clash, released on the Neo Geo Pocket Color in Japan and Asia only. Includes cards based on Capcom vs.
SNK 2. Released for the (both arcade and home versions) and ported to the PlayStation 2 and Xbox.
A one-on-one fighting game featuring 36 characters. A Card Fighters Clash sequel released for the.Capcom-produced games. Released for 's arcade hardware in and ported to the during the same year, the original Capcom vs.
SNK features 28 characters (evenly divided between Capcom and SNK properties), two selectable fighting styles or 'grooves' (based on the gameplay systems featured in The King of Fighters and Street Fighter Alpha series) and a ratio-based character selection system that determines the number of characters in a player's team based on their strength. An updated version titled Capcom vs. SNK Pro, released for the arcades and Dreamcast in Japan and ported to the PlayStation in 2001, which adds and to the character roster (they originally appeared only in the ending sequence of the original game).
The Dreamcast version of the game also discards the shop option to earn extra characters and colors, having all of them available by default. Titled Capcom vs. SNK 2: Millionaire Fighting 2001 in Japan. Released for the NAOMI hardware in and ported to the Dreamcast (in Japan only) and during the same year. The game expands on the 'Groove' system from the previous game by featuring six different fighting styles or 'Grooves' and adds twelve new characters in addition to the ones featured in Capcom vs.
SNK Pro. The Nintendo GameCube and Xbox versions were released under the title of Capcom vs.
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