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Street Fighter II - The World Warrior (Japan 911210)

 
Arcade
Arcade
Platform: Capcom CPS1

Street Fighter II - The World Warrior (Japan 911210)

| 1991
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Notes:
Release type:
Developer: Capcom
Controls/Input Device: Control(joy8way), Buttons(6)
Number of Players: 2
Rating:
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SoundMix: Mono
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Mameinfo.dat entry:
0.37b10 [Yochizo]


WIP:

- 0.147u2: hap fixed clone Omega Fighter Special. The game fails to boot or finish post. After showing bad rom errors, the game resets.

- 0.147u1: Fixed maincpu rom loading.

- 0.122u7: Fixed gfx1/2/3/4/5 rom loading.

- 0.89u3: Changed Z80 CPU2 clock speed to 5MHz.

- 0.37b10: Yochizo added 'Omega Fighter' (UPL 1989) and clone Omega Fighter Special.

- 21st November 2000: Yochizo fixed some graphics bugs in the Omega Fighter / Atomic Robo-kid driver.

- 8th November 2000: Yochizo sent in a driver for Omega Fighter and Atomic Robo-kid.

- 25th April 1999: Dumped Omega Fighter Special.


LEVELS: 8 (restarts once)


Other Emulators:

* FB Alpha

* JFF

* Raine


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Star Force

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Astro Warrior (Mega-Tech)

Mission 660

Rafflesia

S.R.D. Mission

Truxton / Tatsujin

Tatsujin (Tourvision PCE bootleg)

Truxton II / Tatsujin Oh

Blast Off

Blazing Lazers

GunHed (Tourvision PCE bootleg)

The Next Space

Omega Fighter

Super Star Soldier (Tourvision PCE bootleg)

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Pollux

Strike Gunner S.T.G

Vimana

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Final Star Force

Galmedes

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GunNail

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Super-X

Gekirindan

Viper Phase 1

Fever SOS

Mars Matrix: Hyper Solid Shooting


Romset: 2016 kb / 8 files / 457.8 zip


Credits Mameinfo and Mametesters Project Robert J. Rabgno et al.
History.dat entry:
Street Fighter II - The World Warrior (c) 1991 Capcom.

Street Fighter II - The World Warrior is the legendary fighting game that defined the fighting game genre. One or two players can choose from eight selectable World Warriors and must defeat the other seven, before finally taking on four non-selectable 'boss' characters.

Each fighter is as distinctive in feel and fighting style as they are in physical appearance, with each protagonist possessing several fantastical 'special moves' (the first genuine example of such in the fighting genre) to accompany the usual array of kicks, punches and throws. These special moves, while being difficult to execute due to the complexity of the joystick and buttons combinations required, allows the fighter to inflict huge amounts of damage on their opponent.

Street Fighter II is a fighting game in the truest sense of the word, with deceptively deep and strategic gameplay ensuring that experienced players would destroy simple 'button mashers' with relative ease.

- TECHNICAL -

Runs on the "CP System" hardware.
B-Board #: 90629B

Players: Up to 2.
Control: 8-way joystick per player.
Buttons: 6 per player.
= > [1] LP (Jab), [2] MP (Strong), [3] HP (Fierce)
= > [4] LK (Short), [5] MK (Forward), [6] HK (Roundhouse)

- TRIVIA -

Street Fighter II was released in February 1991 in the Japanese arcades. It was known as the 14th video game made for the CP System.

Known re-releases:
"Street Fighter II - The World Warrior [B-Board 90629B-2]"
"Street Fighter II - The World Warrior [B-Board 90629B-3]"

SFII was the fighting game that changed the face of video-games forever. So innovative was the game, that many of the game-play elements that fighting fans now take for granted, appeared HERE first. Within just weeks of release, its place in gaming history was assured. Any fighting game that has appeared after SFII is influenced - to a greater or lesser degree - by the Capcom legend.

During the development of SFII (and before the release of Final Fight), the very first free-hand drawing was done in the fall of 1988. At this time, eight prototype characters and an Island design was drawn. Just like the world map of the final version, the island would scroll on-screen to show the next destination, culminating at the top of the island.

* With the rapid success of SFII, it was rumored that Mattel, the makers of Barbie, sued Capcom for using the name Ken - insisting that people would confuse the Street Fighter character with that of Barbie's boyfriend. To avoid further litigation Capcom gave Ken a surname.

* Fans of Street Fighter are well accustomed to the story of 'Sheng Long'. SFII was already very popular in the arcades when the April issue of Electronic Gaming Monthly (EGM) came out. The story relates to a supposed secret character in SFII; his name was Sheng Long, the 'master' of Ryu and Ken. To reach him, according to EGM, the player had to survive a number of matches against M. Bison WITHOUT actually touching him. Should you achieve this, Sheng Long would apparently appear and kill Bison, and the player would then fight him instead. His style was essentially a mix of Ryu's and Ken's styles, but was much faster and inflicted far greater damage. When the EGM issue came out, thousands of gamers spent hours pouring money into SFII machines, trying to get to this non-existent character. Capcom had neither confirmed nor denied the Sheng Long story - obviously spotting the increase in revenue the mythical character could generate - and it was only much later that EGM themselves admitted that it was just an April Fools' joke.

* There were only ever THREE official Capcom versions of SFII, at least until the switch to the CPS2 system was made. The first was "Street Fighter II - The World Warrior"; more commonly referred to as 'Street Fighter II'. The second was "Street Fighter II' - Champion Edition" (also known in Japan as "Street Fighter II Dash" because the Japanese refer to the apostrophe after the 'II' as a 'dash') and many operators from that era will probably relate to the problems that its release caused. Capcom originally made 'Champion Edition' available only in dedicated form - insisting that only a limited number of these dedicated units would be manufactured - and the game would never be produced in kit form. After everyone who could afford the machines had invested in the expensive dedicated units, Capcom, somewhat inevitably, began producing the game in kit form, claiming that they never knew how much demand there would be for the game. After the earnings from 'Champion Edition' began to subside, the infamous 'grey market' enhancements began to appear. Many of these went by names like 'Turbo', 'Hyper', and 'Super', including the 'Rainbow Edition' and 'Accelerator T1'. In early 1993, Capcom sued these manufacturers for copyright infringement and thus put an end to the development and distribution of these unauthorized enhancement kits. Capcom then released "Street Fighter II' - Hyper Fighting" (known as "Street Fighter II' Turbo - Hyper Fighting" in Japan), as the 'official' "Champion Edition" upgrade. This, just like the grey market kits, was a simple ROM upgrade to the "Champion Edition" board. Later on, Capcom developed the CPS2 (A/B) system that featured "Super Street Fighter II - The New Challengers" and its sequel "Super Street Fighter II Turbo" (known as "Super Street Fighter II X - Grand Master Challenge" in Japan), the final 'Street Fighter II' game until the 2003 release of "Hyper Street Fighter II - The Anniversary Edition".

* Each stage has background colors that would change in later versions of the game (mainly time of day changes), here are the original color schemes for each stage background :
1) Ryu stage : The stage has red-orange sky and a yellow moon.
2) E. Honda stage : The walls are dark blue; the floor is royal blue. The big picture (excluding the sun) is black. The 'Victory' sign is blue. The Hiragana Yu on the left is purple.
3) Blanka stage : The snake is green, and the wooden houses are in brighter colors than in "Street Fighter II' - Champion Edition".
4) Guile stage : The sky is daylight. There is teal tinted canopy on the jet. The symbol on the ground is blue. The missile linings are yellow. The people in the background wear green, but that doesn't change until "Super Street Fighter II - The New Challengers".
5) Ken stage : The boat is red; the 2 guys on top are wearing brown clothes and purple clothes. On the bottom are the bald man in grey shirt, a man in white bowler and white coat, a woman in pink dress, and a guy in the cyan shirt and brown pants. The guy in the trenchcoat and hat is blue.
6) Chun Li stage : The 2 customers wear blue, the meat store's roof is light blue and its sign is red, the meats hanging on the ceiling are pink, the man holding the chicken wears green, the "Shanghai Friend Corridor" is light blue with red letters, the water sign is green, and the ground is a bright beige.
7) Zangief stage : The floor is silver, and the area to the left is red. The 'Attention' flyers are tan with brown letters.
8) Dhalsim stage : The stage has red curtains, a teal stone floor, and a red carpet.
9) Balrog ([JP] M. Bison) stage : The stage floor is blue. The guy throwing confetti at win/lose wears orange, the car to the left is navy blue, and the car to the right is black.
10) Vega ([JP] Balrog) stage : The stage and floor are orange, and the Flamenco dancers are dressed in yellow.
11) Sagat stage : The Buddhist statue is silver, and the grass is a lighter shade of green than in later versions of the game.
12) M. Bison ([JP] Vega) stage : the sky is daylight. The palace roof is pale red, and the bell is olive-green with red trim.

* Mike the Bison : many have conjectured whether Mike from the original "Street Fighter" is the same as Balrog ('Mike Bison' in Japan) from SFII. While Capcom of Japan confirms this, Capcom of America strenuously denied it (mainly due to the possibility of Mike Tyson filing a lawsuit). In Japan, as long as the name is changed, it's far easier to basically rip off someone else's character and have it treated as an original creation (in America it would be some form of copyright/identity theft). Ironically, as a result of the name change, Vega is a better fitting name for the Spanish warrior. (Vega is known as 'Balrog' in Japan. The name Balrog has its roots in Nordic mythology, while Vega is a Hispanic name.)

The E in E. Honda's name stands for his first name, Edmund; the M in M. Bison's name stands for 'Major'.

* About Chun Li : Chun Li is notable for being one of the first successful and popular female video game protagonists. When SFII was released, most female characters in games existed as objectives to be rescued or cast in the roles of other supporting characters, such as townspeople, girlfriends, the occasional opponent, or simply background decoration. Beyond RPGs, there were very few female heroes in action-based video games. After the success of SFII and Chun Li's popularity, female protagonists became more and more common. Since then, in games with selectable characters, at least, there will generally always be one or two selectable female characters.

* About M. Bison ('Vega' in Japan) : His design shares more than one detail with Kato, a character of the anime 'Doomed Megalopolis'. Like Kato, M. Bison is tall and thin, wears a red military uniform, keep wind his body with a black mantle when he's not fighting and possesses some obscure evil powers: even the star impressed on his hat (until Super Street Fighter II) is similar to the design of Kato.

The cabinet and the main characters Ryu, Ken, Zangief Chun Li, Cammy, Blanka and M. Bison, make an appearance on the 2012 animation movie 'Wreck-It Ralph' from Walt Disney Animation Studios.

- UPDATES -

Here is the list of all versions :

910206
* US release.

910214
* WORLD, US and JAPAN releases.

910228
* WORLD and US releases.

910306
* US and JAPAN releases.

910318
* WORLD and US releases.

910411
* US and JAPAN releases.

910522
* WORLD, US and JAPAN releases.

911101
* US release.

911210
* JAPAN release.

920312
* JAPAN release.

ADDITIONAL NOTES :

US versions have the "Winners Don't Use Drugs" screen.

In the Japanese versions :
* Balrog is named 'M. Bison' (in this case, the M stands for 'Mike', see Trivia section above for further details).
* Vega is named 'Balrog'.
* M. Bison is named 'Vega'.
* Guile's deceased friend Charlie is named 'Nash'.
* Guile's wife Jane is named 'Julia'.
* Guile's daughter Amy is named 'Chris', however there is no mention of her name anywhere in Guile's Japanese ending.

None of the endings are translated 100% accurately from Japanese to English, but most are pretty close :
* Blanka's ending : In the non-Japanese versions, Blanka's mother says that he was lost when his plane crashed in Brazil when he was a baby.
In the Japanese versions there is no explanation of how, when, or where mother and son were separated.
Since the anklets she gave to Jimmy BEFORE they were separated still fit him, he was probably not supposed to be a baby when he was lost.
* Chun Li's ending : Chun Li refers to M. Bison's organization as 'Bison's drug'. This was probably supposed to be 'drug ring', as the word 'ring' was added in later versions of the game.
In the Japanese versions, she calls it 'the organization of evil'; there is no mention of drugs.
* Dhalsim's ending : In the Japanese versions, Dhalsim says that the photograph is of him a long time ago.
In the non-Japanese versions, he says it is him 'in his past life'.
Since only three years had passed, he obviously didn't actually mean that he had died and been reincarnated since the photograph had been taken.
* Guile's ending : In the non-Japanese versions, Guile asks M. Bison if he remembers : him (Guile), him and Charlie and Cambodia. Bison says he remembers and that Guile was not the runt he was then.
None of this is said in the Japanese versions.
In the non-Japanese versions, after his wife Jane stops Guile from killing Bison, she says that killing him won't bring Charlie back, only make Guile a murderer, just like Bison.
In the Japanese versions, 'Julia' only says that killing 'Vega' won't bring 'Nash' back. She does not say that it would make Guile a murderer.

- TIPS AND TRICKS -

* Characters stats : If you enter the classic Konami code UP(x2), DOWN(x2), LEFT, RIGHT, LEFT, RIGHT, MP, LP on the Player-2 side during the demo fight in attract mode, it makes a bunch of zeros appear.
First line contains 0001 0002 0003 0004
Second line contains 0005 0006 0007 0008 0009 0010 0011 0012

0001 = No idea, probably some sort of 'experience points' for 1P side.
0002 = The no. of coins put in in the left-hand slot.
0003 = Same as 0001, but for 2nd player.
0004 = Same as 0002, but for right-hand slot.
0005 = No. of times Ryu has been used.
0006 = No. of times Honda has been used.
0007 = No. of times Blanka has been used
0008 = No. of times Guile has been used.
0009 = No. of times Ken has been used.
0010 = No. of times Chun Li has been used.
0011 = No. of times Zangief has been used.
0012 = No. of times Dhalsim has been used.

* Special Ending : Finish the game on 1 credit to see an additional credit sequence.

* To get Ryu vs. Ryu : Start a fresh game on the left side (1P). Select any character other than Ryu. Play the game until you reach Ryu. Lose. Join in the game on the other side and hit 2P BEFORE the timer runs out. Select Ryu and enjoy fighting Ryu.

* Guile Freeze Himself (aka 'Pose' and 'Statue') : Get close enough to your opponent to do an upside down kick. Charge back on the joystick. After charging back, press roundhouse to execute the upside down kick, while continuing to charge back. As soon as Guile kicks and starts to flip around to land on the ground, throw a Sonic Boom with fierce (this is why we have been charging back). Guile will freeze standing up on one leg (which is one of the frames of Guile's landing after the upside down kick).

Un-freeze : You can 'un-freeze' at any time, even after the round ends (that makes it a good pause). To do so, execute a Flash Kick (charge down for 2 seconds then press up and any kick).

* Guile's Handcuffs (aka 'Freeze the Enemy') : Though its not required, its easiest to do this move when the enemy is dizzy. Charge down for 2 seconds. Then press UP (as if you were doing a Flash Kick) and hit the Strong and Forward buttons, while trying to hit strong a split second before hitting forward. Basically what you are doing is throwing your opponent with strong, and while in middle of the throw, you do a Flash Kick. When this move is done, you see all of the frames of Guile's Strong throw, however instead of flying across the screen at the end of the throw, the enemy sticks to you.

Un-handcuff : The 'un-handcuff' is the difficult part because it requires doing Guile's Shadow Throw. Charge back for 3 seconds then hit forward on the joystick along with the Fierce and Roundhouse buttons. Just like in the Handcuffs, you should try to hit the Roundhouse button slightly before the Fierce button. Also, you should hit the buttons slightly after moving the joystick forward. You can practice this by throwing Sonic Booms and seeing how far forward you can walk and still throw the sonic boom.

* Guile Invisible Throw (aka 'Shadow Throw', 'Magic Throw', 'Phantom Throw') : Charge back then hit forward on the joystick along with the Fierce and Roundhouse buttons. Just like in the Handcuffs, you should try to hit the Roundhouse button slightly before the Fierce button. Also, you should hit the buttons slightly after moving the joystick forward. You can practice this by throwing sonic booms and seeing how far forward you can walk and still throw the sonic boom.

* Guile Reset the Machine (aka 'Blackout') : Do a throw with Strong. Then do a Flash Kick before the opponent hits the ground. You can also try doing this by doing a Flash Kick with Fierce and Roundhouse.

* Dhalsim Invisible glitch : Throw a Yoga Fire (down, down-forward, forward) with both the Fierce and Forward buttons. This only works on versions 3 and 4 of the SFII boards.

* Blanka Double Roll Bite (Blanka rolls slow, then fast then bites without landing) : Do a slow roll (with Jab). While rolling, charge for a second roll. Roll with Fierce before Blanka lands. While in the second roll, push the joystick forward and hit Fierce to bite.

* Ken or Ryu Get Stuck on the car and bounce : Start the car bonus round. Break the left (or right) side of the car until it blocks. Face away from the car. Do a jump toward the car. Kick right after you jump but not at the same time as you jump. If you are lucky, you will be facing backwards. This is a tough one, so have patience.

* Ken or Ryu Endless Hurricane Kick : Do a normal Hurricane kick then tap Roundhouse extremely fast (fast enough to do Honda's Hundred Hand Slap, Chun Li's Lightning Leg, or Blanka's Electricity) while Ken or Ryu is in the air.

* Zangief Turbo Short : This is another glitch that is fun only to do once. If you hit your opponent with low Short, do another low Short, then hit Jab as fast as possible. If a 3rd low Short would have hit the opponent a Short will come out even though you are hitting Jab. If the short would have missed, Jab usually comes out even though short will from time to time.

- SERIES -

1. Street Fighter (1987)
2. Street Fighter II - The World Warrior [B-Board 90629B] (1991)
3. Street Fighter II' - Champion Edition [B-Board 91634B-2] (1992)
4. Street Fighter II' - Hyper Fighting [B-Board 91635B-2] (1992)
5. Super Street Fighter II - The New Challengers [Green Board] (1993)
6. Super Street Fighter II Turbo [Blue Board] (1994)
7. Street Fighter Alpha - Warriors' Dreams [Blue Board] (1995)
8. Street Fighter Alpha 2 [Blue Board] (1996)
9. Street Fighter III - New Generation (1997)
10. Street Fighter III - 2nd Impact : Giant Attack (1997)
11. Street Fighter Alpha 3 [Blue Board] (1998)
12. Street Fighter III - 3rd Strike : Fight For The Future (1999)
13. Hyper Street Fighter II - The Anniversary Edition [Green Board] (2003)
14. Street Fighter IV (2008)
15. Super Street Fighter IV - Arcade Edition (2010)
16. Ultra Street Fighter IV (2014)

- STAFF -

Planners : Akira Nishitani (Nin), Akira Yasuda (Akiman)
Character designers : S.Y, Ikusan Z, Sho, Erichan, Pigmon, Katuragi, Mak!!, Manbou, Ball Boy (Ballboy), Kurisan, Q (Q Kyoku), Mikiman, Tanuki, Yamachan, S-Taing, Nissui, Buppo, Ziggy, Zummy, Nakamura, M. Okazaki
Programmers : Shin, Marina, Macchan, Ecchro!!
Sound : Yoko Shimomura (Shimo-P), Isao Abe (Oyaji-Oyaji)
Special Thanks : CBX, Noritaka Funamizu (Poo), Kiyomi Kaneko (Kanekon), Shono

- PORTS -

* Consoles :
Nintendo Famicom [Unreleased Prototype]
Nintendo Famicom [AS] (1992) "Master Fighter II - The World Warrior" : bootleg by Yoko Soft
Nintendo Famicom [JP] (19??) "Mari Turbo Street Fighter III" : bootleg including Super Mario as a new fighting character.
Nintendo Super Famicom [JP] (June 10, 1992) "Street Fighter II - The World Warrior [Model SHVC-S2]"
Nintendo SNES [US] (July 1992) "Street Fighter II - The World Warrior [Model SNS-S2-USA]"
Nintendo SNES [EU] (December 17, 1992) "Street Fighter II - The World Warrior [Model SNSP-S2-NOE]"
Sony PlayStation [EU] (1998) "Street Fighter Collection 2 [Model SLES-01721]"
Sony PlayStation [US] (October 31, 1998) "Street Fighter Collection 2 [Model SLUS-00746]"
Sega Saturn [JP] (December 3, 1998) "Capcom Generation Dai 5 Shou Kakkutouka Tachi [Model T-1236G]"
Sony PlayStation [JP] (December 3, 1998) "Capcom Generation Dai 5 Shou Kakkutouka Tachi [Model SLPS-01725]"
Microsoft XBOX [US] (September 27, 2005) "Capcom Classics Collection"
Sony PlayStation 2 [US] (September 27, 2005) "Capcom Classics Collection [Model SLUS-21316]"
Microsoft XBOX [EU] (November 18, 2005) "Capcom Classics Collection"
Sony PlayStation 2 [EU] (November 18, 2005) "Capcom Classics Collection [Model SLES-53661]"
Sony PlayStation 2 [JP] (March 2, 2006) "Capcom Classics Collection [Model SLPM-66317]"

* Handhelds :
Nintendo Game Boy [EU] (1995) "Street Fighter II [Model DMG-ASFP-NOE]"
Nintendo Game Boy [JP] (August 11, 1995) "Street Fighter II [Model DMG-ASFJ-JPN]"
Nintendo Game Boy [US] (September 1995) "Street Fighter II [Model DMG-ASFE-USA]"
Sony PSP [JP] (September 7, 2006) "Capcom Classics Collection [Model ULJM-05104]"
Sony PSP [US] (October 24, 2006) "Capcom Classics Collection Reloaded [Model ULUS-10134]"
Sony PSP [EU] (November 10, 2006) "Capcom Classics Collection Reloaded [Model ULES-00377]"
Sony PSP [AU] (November 16, 2006) "Capcom Classics Collection Reloaded"

* Computers :
Atari ST [EU] (1992) by U.S. Gold
Commodore Amiga [EU] (1992)
Commodore C64 [EU] (1992) : Also released as a Budget edition (1993)
PC [MS-DOS, 3.5"] [US] [EU] (1992)
Sinclair ZX Spectrum [EU] (1992)
Atari ST [EU] (1993) by Kixx
Sharp X68000 [JP] (1993)

* Others :
LCD handheld game (19??) by Tiger Electronics : it's basically a stripped down version of SFII, made to fit on a portable unit. You have two 'game types', basically whether you want to control either the character on the left or the character on the right. The player on the left could choose between Ryu, Ken and Guile, while the right-hand character could be one of Blanka, E. Honda and Zangief. Players could control the characters on a 'simplified layout' (ie. two buttons). Although special moves exist, keep in mind it's an LCD game - there aren't many (in fact Ryu and Ken are the only characters with two moves).
Mobile Phones [JP] (December 2004)
Apple iPhone/iPod [US] (November 4, 2010) "Capcom Arcade [Model 397347348]"
Apple iPhone/iPod [US] (September 15, 2011) "Street Fighter II Collection [Model 459660048]"

- CONTRIBUTE -

Edit this entry: http://www.arcade-history.com/?&page=detail&id=2657&o=2


Licensed from Alexis Bousiges under a CC Attribution 3.0 License
cheat.dat entry:
60000000 000000 00000000 00000000 You must turn OFF ALL cheats with F6 at the beginning of the bonus levels.
60000000 000000 00000000 00000000 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
00000000 FF8ACE 00000099 FFFFFFFF Infinite Time
00000001 FF89CD 00000009 FFFFFFFF Next level = Last level
00000001 FF89CD 0000000A FFFFFFFF Lose a credit = Last level
00000000 FF82E1 00000001 FFFFFFFF No Wait Mode
60000000 000000 00000000 00000000
00000000 FF83F1 00000090 FFFFFFFF Infinite Energy PL1
00010000 FF8583 00000090 FFFFFFFF Infinite Energy PL1 (2/2)
00000000 FF83F1 00000000 FFFFFFFF Always have No Energy PL1
00010000 FF8583 00000000 FFFFFFFF Always have No Energy PL1 (2/2)
00000001 FF83F1 00000000 FFFFFFFF Drain All Energy Now! PL1
00010001 FF8583 00000000 FFFFFFFF Drain All Energy Now! PL1 (2/2)
00000000 FF8656 00000002 FFFFFFFF Finish round to win match PL1
00000000 FF8656 00000000 FFFFFFFF Rounds won always set = 0 PL1
00000001 FF8656 00000000 FFFFFFFF Rounds won set = 0 Now! PL1
00000000 FF8585 00000001 FFFFFFFF Invincibility PL1
00000000 FF8547 00000000 FFFFFFFF Command during jump "ON" PL1
00000000 FF859A 00000000 FFFFFFFF No limit next shot PL1
00010000 FF859B 00000000 FFFFFFFF No limit next shot PL1 (2/2)
00000000 FF83E4 00000001 FFFFFFFF Shot motion cancel PL1
00000000 FF83E4 00000000 FFFFFFFF Shot motion cancel (Guile) PL1
00000000 FF8458 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (E.Honda) PL1
00000000 FF8457 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (Blanka) PL1
00000000 FF8447 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (Guile) PL1
00010000 FF844D 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (Guile) PL1 (2/2)
00000000 FF8447 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (ChunLi) PL1
00000000 FF8456 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Hadouken (Ryu / Ken) PL1
00000000 FF845E 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Tatsumaki (Ryu / Ken) PL1
00000000 FF8466 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Syouryuuken (Ryu / Ken) PL1
00000000 FF8457 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Super zutsuki (E.Honda) PL1
00000000 FF8456 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Rolling Attack (Blanka) PL1
00000000 FF8446 00000006 FFFFFFFF Easy Sonic boom (Guile) PL1
00000000 FF844C 00000006 FFFFFFFF Easy Somersault kick (Guile) PL1
00000000 FF8446 00000006 FFFFFFFF Easy Spinning bird kick (ChunLi) PL1
00000000 FF8446 00000006 FFFFFFFF Easy Screw pile driver (Zangief) PL1
00010000 FF8447 00000002 FFFFFFFF Easy Screw pile driver (Zangief) PL1 (2/3)
00010000 FF8448 00000002 FFFFFFFF Easy Screw pile driver (Zangief) PL1 (3/3)
00000000 FF8456 00000002 FFFFFFFF Easy Yoga fire (Dhalsim) PL1
00010000 FF8459 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Yoga fire (Dhalsim) PL1 (2/2)
00000000 FF845E 00000002 FFFFFFFF Easy Yoga flame (Dhalsim) PL1
00010000 FF8461 00000008 FFFFFFFF Easy Yoga flame (Dhalsim) PL1 (2/2)
62000000 000000 00000000 00000000 Select Character PL1
00010000 FF8657 00000000 FFFFFFFF Ryu
00010000 FF8657 00000001 FFFFFFFF E. Honda
00010000 FF8657 00000002 FFFFFFFF Blanka
00010000 FF8657 00000003 FFFFFFFF Guile
00010000 FF8657 00000004 FFFFFFFF Ken
00010000 FF8657 00000005 FFFFFFFF Chun Li
00010000 FF8657 00000006 FFFFFFFF Zangief
00010000 FF8657 00000007 FFFFFFFF Dhalsim
00010000 FF8657 00000008 FFFFFFFF M. Bison
00010000 FF8657 00000009 FFFFFFFF Sagat
00010000 FF8657 0000000A FFFFFFFF Balrog
00010000 FF8657 0000000B FFFFFFFF Vega
60000000 000000 00000000 00000000
00000000 FF86F1 00000090 FFFFFFFF Infinite Energy PL2
00010000 FF8883 00000090 FFFFFFFF Infinite Energy PL2 (2/2)
00000000 FF86F1 00000000 FFFFFFFF Always have No Energy PL2
00010000 FF8883 00000000 FFFFFFFF Always have No Energy PL2 (2/2)
00000001 FF86F1 00000000 FFFFFFFF Drain All Energy Now! PL2
00010001 FF8883 00000000 FFFFFFFF Drain All Energy Now! PL2 (2/2)
00000000 FF8956 00000002 FFFFFFFF Finish round to win match PL2
00000000 FF8956 00000000 FFFFFFFF Rounds won always set = 0 PL2
00000001 FF8956 00000000 FFFFFFFF Rounds won set = 0 Now! PL2
00000000 FF8885 00000001 FFFFFFFF Invincibility PL2
00000000 FF8847 00000000 FFFFFFFF Command during jump ON PL2
00000000 FF889A 00000000 FFFFFFFF No limit next shot PL2
00010000 FF889B 00000000 FFFFFFFF No limit next shot PL2 (2/2)
00000000 FF86E4 00000001 FFFFFFFF Shot motion cancel PL2
00000000 FF86E4 00000000 FFFFFFFF Shot motion cancel (Guile) PL2
00000000 FF8758 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (E.Honda) PL2
00000000 FF8757 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (Blanka) PL2
00000000 FF8747 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (Guile) PL2
00010000 FF874D 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (Guile) PL2 (2/2)
00000000 FF8747 00000001 FFFFFFFF Quick charge (ChunLi) PL2
00000000 FF8756 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Hadouken (Ryu / Ken) PL2
00000000 FF875E 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Tatsumaki (Ryu / Ken) PL2
00000000 FF8766 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Syouryuuken (Ryu / Ken) PL2
00000000 FF8757 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Super zutsuki (E.Honda) PL2
00000000 FF8756 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Rolling Attack (Blanka) PL2
00000000 FF8746 00000006 FFFFFFFF Easy Sonic boom (Guile) PL2
00000000 FF874C 00000006 FFFFFFFF Easy Somersault kick (Guile) PL2
00000000 FF8746 00000006 FFFFFFFF Easy Spinning bird kick (ChunLi) PL2
00000000 FF8746 00000006 FFFFFFFF Easy Screw pile driver (Zangief) PL2
00010000 FF8747 00000002 FFFFFFFF Easy Screw pile driver (Zangief) PL2 (2/3)
00010000 FF8748 00000002 FFFFFFFF Easy Screw pile driver (Zangief) PL2 (3/3)
00000000 FF8756 00000002 FFFFFFFF Easy Yoga fire (Dhalsim) PL2
00010000 FF8759 00000004 FFFFFFFF Easy Yoga fire (Dhalsim) PL2 (2/2)
00000000 FF875E 00000002 FFFFFFFF Easy Yoga flame (Dhalsim) PL2
00010000 FF8761 00000008 FFFFFFFF Easy Yoga flame (Dhalsim) PL2 (2/2)
62000000 000000 00000000 00000000 Select Character PL2
00010000 FF8957 00000000 FFFFFFFF Ryu
00010000 FF8957 00000001 FFFFFFFF E. Honda
00010000 FF8957 00000002 FFFFFFFF Blanka
00010000 FF8957 00000003 FFFFFFFF Guile
00010000 FF8957 00000004 FFFFFFFF Ken
00010000 FF8957 00000005 FFFFFFFF Chun Li
00010000 FF8957 00000006 FFFFFFFF Zangief
00010000 FF8957 00000007 FFFFFFFF Dhalsim
00010000 FF8957 00000008 FFFFFFFF M. Bison
00010000 FF8957 00000009 FFFFFFFF Sagat
00010000 FF8957 0000000A FFFFFFFF Balrog
00010000 FF8957 0000000B FFFFFFFF Vega

Credit Pugsy's MAME Cheat file
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