WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling

WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling

Cover art featuring Ric Flair, Sting and Vader
Developer(s) Beam Software[1]
Publisher(s) FCI, Inc.[1]
Producer(s) Steve French
Designer(s) Steve French
Programmer(s) Jason Bell
Andrew Davie
David Pentecost
Graeme Scott
Artist(s) Steve French
Peter Commins
Justin Muir
Composer(s) Marshall Parker[2]
Platform(s) Super NES[1]
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Fighting, Sports
Mode(s) Single-player
Multiplayer

WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling is a wrestling video game released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1994. The third World Championship Wrestling (WCW) video game, it is named after the pay-per-view SuperBrawl. It was the only WCW game to be released on the Super NES, and the last to be produced by FCI.

Roster

The roster consists of the top WCW superstars of that time each with his own signature move. The lineup includes:

Barry Windham
"Flyin" Brian Pillman
"The Natural" Dustin Rhodes
Johnny B. Badd
"Nature Boy" Ric Flair
Rick Rude
Rick Steiner
Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat
"All American" Ron Simmons
Scott Steiner
Sting
Vader

Gameplay

Rick Rude wrestles Vader. Tony Schiavone appears in the bottom right corner to provide commentary.

The gameplay takes place from a ¾ overhead perspective.[3] Each wrestler shares a moveset in the game, with the exception of their signature moves. Every character performs a variety of suplexes, a backbreaker, a tombstone piledriver, an atomic drop, various diving attacks, and a variety of kicks, punches, elbow, and forearm shots.[3] Several finishing moves have a similar appearance to "weak" moves that are done in the beginning of a wrestling match; like Dustin Rhodes' Bulldog and Johnny B. Badd's basic left hook.

Modes of play include singles, tag team, an eight-man singles tournament, a tag team tournament between four teams, and the "Ultimate Challenge," where a player must defeat every other wrestler in the game. Different stipulations can be selected for matches; bouts can either be contested under one fall, first to three falls, or a time limit of differing lengths where the most falls within the time limit wins the match. During the course of a match, boxes pop up showing the referee counting, Tony Schiavone providing minimal commentary, and wrestlers saying a catchphrase after performing their signature move.[3] The wrestlers will also pop out and say their catchphrase on the wrestler select menu.

Reception

GamePro gave the game a generally negative review. They remarked that while the game has a good number of features and excellent licensing tie-ins such as digitized images and sound bites of popular wrestlers, "stiff animation and mediocre game play make the experience strictly second rate." They particularly noted that the stiff animations make it difficult to line a wrestler up in order to execute a move.[4] Allgame gave the game a score of 2 stars out of a possible 5.[5] The Allgame website noted the similarity of WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling to its rival games WWF Raw and WWF Royal Rumble, which featured WCW's main rival, the WWF.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling release information at GameFAQs
  2. WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling composer information at SNES Music
  3. 1 2 3 WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling at MobyGames
  4. "ProReview: WCW Superbrawl Wrestling". GamePro (64). IDG. November 1994. p. 160.
  5. Rating of WCW SuperBrawl Wrestling at allgame
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