Super Fire Pro Wrestling X Premium
スーパーファイヤープロレスリングX プレミアム
ヒューマン / Human
SHVC-AF6J-JPN
1996-03-29
Sports / Wrestling
Description
When used with Nintendo Power Memory carts, this game takes up all 8 blocks for the game and all 16 for the save file. The Nintendo Power cost is 1000 yen.
It's simple - SFPWXP is undoubtedly the best game out there. It has everything - great graphics, great gameplay, great edit mode and so much more. Over 100 wrestlers from around the world are already included and you can make 80 more of your favorite wrestlers yourself. You know I could go on forever, but you should really check the review for in depth information.
Bottom line: This is the game everyone's talking about. Simply the best game you will ever find, and it's 100% in English!
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No Mercy, from www.firewrestling.com R.I.P.
After hearing so much about this import game from fellow friends on the internet, I finally decided to purchase it. $139.99 is not cheap but I figured out why the price was so expensive.
Super Fire Pro Wrestling X Premium is the greatest wrestling game ever created for ANY system. That's a bold statement and I stand behind this statement 100%. This game has so many reasons to be played its not worth the time and space to list them all. But I will list most of them since I'm a nice guy.
Number one: The engine. Wrestling games have been so hard to make because people mistake wrestling games for Fighting games. I really don't like this mix up because it takes key elements away from wrestling games. But Super Fire Pro on the other hand, plays like a wrestling game. How do I know how a wrestling game plays? Well, I've been dreaming of a wrestling game with a good solid engine for so long it's sickening. The game can be fast pace or slow pace like real wrestling. The engine is also smart in way. When you think you have somebody for a awesome maneuver, he can reverse it and roll you up for the pin.
Number Two: The detail. So much detail was put into the game its unbelievable that its not a 32-bit or even 64-bit game. With 500+ moves that are highly detailed, each character must have about 80 moves at their disposal and there are 150+ character, and you can make 80 of your own! The animation is done real well. Human really took there time and created the best wrestling game that you could possibly play with moves such as the Moonsault, Figure-four leg lock, Shooting Star Press, Leg Drop, Power Bomb, Asai Moonsault, Flying Plancha, La Magistral, DDT, Skyscraper press, elbow drop, and the list goes on and on. All of the characters are real wrestlers with different names so there is no copyright infringement. Some of the characters include Ric Flair, Sting, Sabu, Rick Stiener, Scott Stiener, The Great Sasuke, The Great Muta, Vader, Jyushin Thunder Lyger, Hulk Hogan, Tiger Mask, Undertaker, Hayabusa, and about 125 more which include shoot fighters like Royce Gracie and Dan Severn. And, if you want to have a little fun, you can make 80 of your own characters.
Number three: Replay Value. Many wrestling games lack replay value making the games less then fun. But Fire Pro is just too fun that you don't want to stop playing. There are many types of matches that can be played including a Battle Royal, World Championship matches, Tag-team championship matches, One-night dream matches, Elimination matches and more. There is also secret moves that can be accessed after you beat the game which adds a lot to the game. New hidden characters are also accessible after you have beaten the game. When your done with the 150-200 characters that game lets you play as, you can make 80 characters of your own which is a feature I've been dreaming of.
Overall, Super Fire Pro Wrestling X Premium is one of best wrestling game I've ever played. The game is worth the money even if your not a big wrestling fan because there is just so much to experience.
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Brian Bukantis, from www.firewrestling.com R.I.P.
Curse you, Japan! Your food is better, your games faster to come out, your style of animation cooler, your women more attractive, your people more educated, and finally, your wrestlers have a higher workrate than anybody we've got over here! And if it weren't for the newfangled wonders of emulation, we wouldn't get this spectacular wrestling game, either! That's it, I'm moving next week...
Super Firepro Wrestling X Premium is the last installment of the Firepro Wrestling series for the Super Famicon. To make a long story short, Firepro Wrestling in Japan is to wrestling games what Mario was to platform games--the standard what other games are judged by. When compared to the games we have in the states (namely, the Acclaim series), SFPWXP makes me wanna Jim Bustaa my copy of WWF Attitude through a stack of tables. Even though it's 16 bit, and was made 4 FRICKIN' YEARS AGO, it STILL holds its own against anything in the market today. ECW Hardcore Revolution gets squashed by SFPWXP's great animation and controls, and WWF Smackdown's lousy Create a Wrestler feature pales in comparison to SFPWXP's. Wrestlemania 2000, so far, is the only game on the market that matches SFPWXP's all-round swankness--but it needed 48 more bits and 4 years to do it.
Gameplay-- "KICK! FLY! SUBMISSION! SUPLEX!"......the UNBEREIVABRE introduction not only says that, but if you look for a deeper meaning, you'll see that the game is saying, in stereotypical Japanese Engrish: "In Your Face Baka! Ha! Ha! Ha! ^_^". It beats WM 2000's "TOUGH 'n SEXY!" intro, at least.
But since there's no category for intros, I'll just get to the gameplay now.
To the non-wrestling fan, Firepro Wrestling X Premium plays like their stereotypical view on wrestling, only with simpler graphics: Two guys slap the spum out of each other for 5 minutes, then one gets on top of the other for three seconds to win. Of course, if you actually start playing the game, you'll see that, hot daiym, there's a load o' stuff that you can do! You can knock your opponent over the top rope, make your opponent bloody by whipping him into the guardrail, beat him down in the corner, grab the ropes after getting Irish Whipped, spit fire and mist, bump the ref, heck, I even pulled off a plancha onto a guy who was in the middle of vertical suplexing someone, causing a trainwreck on the outside (well, the game doesn't really have train wreck spots, but it was cool to see three guys down at the same time)! There aren't any life bars in this game; instead, the opponent's health is measured by how hard they're breathing! Izzat cool or what?
The game plays pretty easily...that is, after you've mastered the seemingly impossible tie up system (more on that later). After you've gotten past that, the game becomes much easier, and you'll start finding out about all the magical happy things included in the game. There's options for a tag team, handicap, and a four man battle royal, TONS of wrestlers to choose from, and an amazing Edit Wrestler mode (more on that later, too). The pace of the matches can be fast like a cruiserweight match, or slow and (as Christopher Robin Zimmerman himself would say) "deliberate", like a heavyweight match. Unlike the competition, SFPWXP doesn't let you pull off big damage moves like the Powerbomb right off the bat...you gotta wear the opponent down with weaker attacks (like the Chop) first. Otherwise, the computer will counter the big move all the time--just like a real match. None of these 40 second "matches" that we see in other games...nope...
Graphics--Toss that blocky 3D animation in the corner, and feast your eyes on these beautiful 2D sprites! Well...okay, maybe 3D DOES look better (after, however, the horrible motion capturing of the Acclaim games), but all the same, this is some pretty gosh damn good animation. Each wrestler, while small, has some nice detail on them (including...FACIAL EXPRESSIONS~!), and will even wear the "crimson mask" if hit with enough Rough moves (like Headbutts).
Hate to be cheesy, but SPEAKING OF WHICH, the moves are another part of the game that made it worthwhile for me! Each one, from the Elbow Pat to the Dragon Screw to the Orange Crush, looks great. And a big part of how great a move looks in the game (like in real-life wrestling) is how the opponent reacts, or "sells" it. For example, in the Hammer Blow, the opponent's face gets the sweat slapped off of it as their head snaps back from the punch. In the Western Lariat, the opponent's body flips over backwards from the impact of the clothesline. In the Screwdriver, they fall upside down from a suplex position, head literally BOUNCING off the mat. Part of the reason I watch wrestling anyway is to see all dem cool moves that are pulled off, and this game had them in spades.......... Uh, do people still say that?
Music--Well, it's a Japanese game, so you can expect lots of h3LL4 c00L guitar riffs and ditties that play over and over again...in the bleepy, blippy way that only a 16 bit game can. Some are pretty good, and compliment the action, but after a whlie, they get repetitive and annoying, and you'll just want to hear an MP3 instead :)
The SOUND EFFECTS, however...kick some serious arse. Everything--a slap (which sounds almost exactly like the real thing, BTW), slam to the mat, "WHOOOSH!" of someone off the top rope, or "PFFFT!" of somebody spitting poison fog--sounds great, and adds a punch to whatever's going on at the time. There're barely any voices in the game (no commentary...but hey, that gotten repetitive, anyway), but hey, there's no need for it. The sparse amount of voices that are in the game sound like a Japanese guy with his mouth full, so I guess less is more in this case.
Control--Simple as can be. You've got your standard kick, punch, and run buttons, as well as the taunt, and a button that pulls off a stronger standing attack (like a dropkick). Climbing the turnbuckle, rolling into the ring, springboarding and slingshotting back out of it can all be accomplished with one button...and hitting a move off the top rope is even easier. Each of the four buttons on the controller...er, keyboard, stands for a different attack when you're up top--no mashing two buttons together in here like in the Acclaim games. My only minor gripe about the controls is that it's a little frusterating to get big spinny kicky moves like the Solebutt or the Kneel Kick to hit correctly.
Well...that, and the INSANELY difficult tie up system. Right off the boot, you'll be losing every tie up imaginable to the ruthless AI. Time after time, you'll walk into him, saying "THIS is gonna be the one..." and tie up...only to get a clubbin' blow to your back by the opponent. And if you don't find out how to pull off moves before you get really POed, then you probably won't wanna play the game again, which is a big ol' mistake. Fortunately, I'm here to tell you that:
"To tie up, just press the Y, B, or A (for a light, medium, or big move) buttons RIGHT WHEN THE HANDS MEET! That's all! Same thing for Back Grapples! Presto! Bang-bang! Whee!"
Now, if you wanna learn everything about the game, just read the FAQ at WrestlingPlayer.com. Don't ask me :)
Fun Factor--Super Firepro Wrestling X Premium is one of the most fun wrestling games I've ever played. Just about all the little touches in wrestling have made it to the 2D ring (well, except for weapons), and gameplay-wise, it makes for fluid, fun wrestling action. The moves, like I said before, are one of the best parts of the game, and beating your opponent down with one after another of your favorites, then pinning him with a flippy floppy top rope move is a blast. The game gets boring... but only if you play it too much in one sitting, which, for me, happens with every game anyway.
Finally, the Edit Wrestler mode is the best thing since I figured out how to do a moonsault in real life. You get to tweak around the colors of pre-existing costumes in the game, choose boots, kneepads and tights, and swap heads to make a wrestler that fits right into the rest of the roster (something that the fantasy wrestlers you could create in Acclaim games just weren't able to do, due to the lame costumes available). You're able to select each and every move that your wrestler has from one of the largest movelists I've ever seen, set their skills, choose their fighting style, and even set up every aspect of their CPU Logic! The appearence is just a little limited--since you can't make an individual shirt and pants combo if you want to have WWF stars in the game--but that's just a minor gripe.
Overall Satisfaction-- It's great to know that a 2D game made four years ago can still hold its own next to the fancy-shmancy games that say "d00dz c#3ck 0uT t#353 k3vvL 3D 6R4p#1x d00dz". No, of course it's not perfect--due to a Championship mode that basically throws you into 80+ frickin' matches back to back, and if you want the oh-so-thpecial Triple Crown, you gotta play another 50 or so matches--but it's definetely worth a play if you're a mark, a smart, a smark, or just one of the WWF "sheep" fans. Why those crazy Japanese didn't import this one to the States is beyond me.
Highs: Great animation, kickass Edit Wrestler mode, helluva fun!
Lows: Repetitive quest-for-the-belt Championship mode, frusterating tie up system (at first)
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James Gowdey, from www.firewrestling.com R.I.P.
References
• Nintendo Power 公式遊び方 Book Vol. 0, pages 74-75
• Nintendo Power 公式遊び方 Book Vol. 1, pages 132-133
ROM Information
Country
Japan
Internal CRC
0242
CRC32
82DE1380
MD5
88B3C5B6E79BF4859940090C4CA6EABE
SHA-1
1D3B397CE08F88B6787DF63D1914BDAEB2C3999C
SHA-256
4DECFD480780D91F70F01C70552ABD25A8AC0F8F6CEB49D1A5E72BA486203AFC
ROM Speed
120ns (FastROM)
ROM Size
32 Mb
ROM Bank
HiROM
ROM Type
Normal + Battery
SRAM Size
256 Kb
Internal Title
SFPX PREMIUM version
Common Filenames
Super Fire Pro Wrestling X Premium (J).sfc (GoodSNES v0.999.5)
Super Fire Pro Wrestling X Premium (Japan).sfc (No-Intro 2011-12-24)
Super Fire Pro Wrestling X Premium (NTSC)(Jap)(1.0).sfc (Zapatabase 2011-01-30)