Fight’n Rage may have drank in a little too much nostalgia, but its heart is in the right place. It begins with a fake CPS2 boot screen, so from the jump you immediately understand what its aiming for. Fair enough, since Fight’n Rage nails it, replicating the tense, high speed style of action seen in titles like Capcom’s Battle Circuit and Alien vs. Predator.
There’s a solid range of moves from the start, with a satisfying number of combos and attack variants you uncover along the way. Supporting this is a system lifted from Streets of Rage 3, which gives you free uses of your powerful, otherwise life-draining specials, provided you can hold out while they recharge. It encourages frequent, but considered use of these powerful, crowd clearing specials, allowing you to perform big combos and devastate bosses when they’re opened up.
As the game progresses more layers are revealed, from new combos routes to enemy weaknesses and other small nuances. One boss took me over an hour, until I finally dialed in the timing of the Street Fighter III style parries and learned how to tech his powerful throws. Every attack became an opportunity to reverse the outcome, providing wild momentum shifts and unstoppable aggression.
And that’s the core of Fight’n Rage--a high difficulty that keeps up the tension and vulnerability, but rewards space control and good observation with the chance to crash through the arena like a runaway train. It’s a bit garish at times, with overdone retro filters and writing that flits between assorted cliches and melodrama, but the music and animation set up powerful vibes that the action follows through to an explosive conclusion.
One of the best brawlers of recent memory, and I don’t say that lightly.
Pros: This In My Opinion Is Current Measuring Stick For Modern/Retro Side-Scrolling Beatemups, Manages To Fondly And Expertly Call To Mind Classics Such As Final Fight Arcade, Streets Of Rage 2 and Turtles In Time Among Others, Yet Is Unique Enough To Stand Out And Stand Among Those Treasured Classics, One Of The Best Side-Scrolling Beatemups I’ve Ever Played, Fluid Controls And Snappy Combo Based Combat, Excellent Music, Spot On Visuals.
Cons: This Is Truly An All-Time Highlight For The Genre Which Will Be Largely Ignored For Being Digital, On Steam, (An Affliction To Which Gamers Seem Allergic) Its 2D And Not A “Triple A” Title. It Would Have Already Been Lapped Up Like Ice Cream By Retro Gamers If Limited Run Got A Hold Of It Or If It Was Released On The Switch E-Shop. It Has Arcade Quality, Quarter-Munching Difficulty.