This version of the third series marks the return of Chun Li along with the Bonus Rounds.
Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike was produced by Capcom in 1999.
Capcom released 229 machines in our database under this trade name, starting in 1984. Capcom was based in Japan.
Other machines made by Capcom during the time period Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike was produced include: Magical Tetris Challenge Featuring Mickey, Jojo's Venture, Jojo No Kimyou Na Bouken, Marvel Vs. Capcom, 1945, Final Fight Revenge, Giga Wing, Strider 2, Street Fighter EX2 Plus, and Power Stone
Name | Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike |
---|---|
Developer | Capcom (Japan) |
Year | 1999 |
Type | Videogame |
KLOV/MOG # | 9822 |
Class | Wide Release |
Genre | Fighting |
Monitor |
|
Conversion Class | Capcom CPS III JAMMA |
External Device | CDR |
# Simultaneous Players | 2 |
# Maximum Players | 2 |
Game Play | Competitive |
Control Panel Layout | Multiple Player |
Controls |
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Sound | Capcom Q-Sound - Amplified Stereo |
Cabinet Styles |
|
Control Panel | Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike Control Panel Image |
PCB | Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike PCB Image |
This version of Street Fighter III adds five new characters (six, if you count Gouki/Akuma, who was a hidden character in Street Fighter III 2nd Impact - Giant Attack) to the rosters such as Chun Li (from Street Fighter II), Makoto (a judo expert), Twelve (another Gill clone), Q (who resembles a Japanese superhero similar to Tetsujin 28) and Remy (a Guile/Nash clone). This game also marks the return of bonus rounds which were last present in Super Street Fighter II.
Taken from "Gouki's Page of Whatever" (http://www.gpow.com/):After choosing a Super Art in a 1-Player game, you'll then be given a choice of 2 stages to proceed to. As mentioned, earlier, for each stage except the last 2 stages, you have a choice, out of 2 opponents to fight with. Once you've selected who you'll be fighting, the announcer (or someone) will give some speech remarks (either "That's what I expect" or something else. It's random), and then you'll proceed to fighting the opponents. If you continue, you'll still have the same choice of 2 opponents, but you can re-select who to fight. So, if you think Opponent 1 is hard to win, you can then go for Opponent 2.
On choice of selecting your opponent, the opponents in the choice's pictures are shown. Next to the pic, the country's name of the stage, the exact location and the time of the fight is taking place is shown. There is also a small imprint stating something like "A true warrior never fear his opponents..." or something for both characters.
In the 1-Player game, you have a course of 10 opponents to fight against in order to complete the game. Due to constant VS matches, no one had the chance to reach that far (I reached Stage 7 before the long VS matches began). However, as mentioned earlier, in Stages 9 and 10, you would not have a choice of opponents (i.e. fixed opponent depending on your character in Stage 9), and Stage 10 should be Gill for every character. Your character will have some dialogue with your Stage 9 opponent.
After Stage three and Stage six, you will be given the chance to try out the Bonus Stages. After Stage three is the "Crush the Car" Bonus Stage, while after Stage 6 is the "Parry the Ball" Bonus Stage. Before the car Bonus Stage, the VS screen will show you VS SUV (the name of the van and a picture of it). Then it goes like in the SF2 games. However, you don't need to switch sides, as the whole car can be destroyed by only 1 side, and you CAN use Super Moves. Although the Super Meter is not shown, but it's still accumulated as you do moves. Unfortunately, you CAN'T have 2-Player Bonus Stages as in the SF2 games. When another player joins in, it just goes straight to the fight.
The Parry the Ball Bonus Stage (shown as you VS Basketball at the VS screen, with Sean's picture holding a Basketball) works something like the one if SF3:2I. There are still different levels of it, depending on your performance before you reach it. However, there are slight differences. For one, it gets it very own background, instead of reusing one of the character backgrounds, and you're not just limited to one screen. The background can scroll when you move too far away from Sean. Other than that, it works the same, and you have 20 balls to parry.
The Grade Judgment System is applied throughout the game. For each stage, you'll receive a grade, depending on your performance (mostly stuff like don't lose a round, do Super Cancels, do long combos, win with Super Arts, etc. will give you a higher grade). And the grade you've obtained for each stage is keep track and shown on the list of characters that you've defeated before each stage. At the very end (when you don't continue or win), a chart will be shown for all the stages and the grades you've obtained for them. Below the grades, there's a bar labelled as "SP" and for certain stages, you have a dot on this bar (I suppose SP means Super?). There's a high chance that this Grade Judgment System and the SP should be a key in unlocking some secret boss...
In 2-Player battles, you have a separate set of grades. For the player that has at least 1 win, the highest grade he/she has obtained will be shown below their wins. The more wins they have, the more chances for them to obtain higher grades for that match. Once they lose, the grade disappears.
Parries... It's still in the game, but there are only three versions of it now. F on the ground for a high parry, D on the ground for a low parry, and F in the air for an air parry (i.e. no D air parry that makes you bounce). Parries still work like in the previous versions, but the freeze-time after a parry has been shortened slightly. This causes a few changes. One, most players would need to relearn parry rhythms for a string of parries (i.e. parrying multi-hit moves), and two, you have less time to connect a Super Move after a parry.
Throws have been changed to LP LK and you have miss animation frames, although it's very fast (as fast as a LP), universal overhead attacks (previously D, D ANY BUTTON in SF3 and SF3:2I) are now MP MK, while taunts are still HP HK. Throws need to be re-learned once again. Depending on the character, you can have several different throws, depending on whether you press LP LK when you're holding B, F or NEUTRAL. MP MK for universal overhead attacks still works the same way, and the taunt is still the same. The characters still have dashes(F, F or B, B), high jumps (D, U), long jumps (DB, UF), quick stand (D when hitting the floor), and Super Cancels.
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UPDATE OF IStreet Fighter III The New GenerationI, IStreet Fighter III 2nd Impact Giant AttackI.
There are 15,264 members of the Video Arcade Preservation Society / Vintage Arcade Preservation Society, 9,669 whom participate in our arcade census project of games owned, wanted, or for sale. Census data currently includes 166,973 machines (7,000 unique titles).
Very Common - There are 97 known instances of this machine owned by Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike collectors who are active members. Of these, 22 of them are original dedicated machines. 21 of them are conversions in which game circuit boards (and possibly cabinet graphics) have been placed in (and on) another game cabinet. 53 of them are only circuit boards which a collector could put into a generic case if desired.
For Sale - There are 4 active VAPS members with a Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike machines for sale. There is one active VAPS member with an extra Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike circuit board for sale.
Wanted - There are 3 active VAPS members currently looking for Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike. There are 7 active VAPS members looking for Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike boards sets.
This game ranks a 15 on a scale out of 100 (100 = most often seen, 1=least common) in popularity based on census ownership records.
This game ranks a 17 on a scale out of 100 (100 = most often seen, 1=least common) in popularity based on census want list records.
Rarity and Popularity independently are not necessarily indications of value. [More Information]
This game runs on the CPSIII system just like the previous versions of IStreet Fighter IIII.
Our members have reported that Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike is playable at 1 locations:
Name | Location | State | Country | Details | Check-ins |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Greta Bar | 213 10 Ave SW, Calgary | Alberta | Canada | Arcade | 2 |
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Year | Count | Median $ | Average $ |
---|---|---|---|
2015 | 6 | 517.50 | 503.13 |
2016 | 3 | 287.50 | 383.33 |
2017 | 4 | 466.00 | 406.25 |
All Years | 13 | 460.00 | 445.67 |