- mortal combat music



mortal combat

This Day in History

Today's Birthday

Quotation of the Day

This article concerns the fighting game series and media tie-ins. For the first entry in the series, see Mortal Kombat (arcade game). For the movie based on the series, see Mortal Kombat (film).

Mortal Kombat (commonly abbreviated MK) is a popular series of fighting games created originally by the Midway Games company. It is especially noted for its digitized sprites (which differentiated it from its contemporaries' hand-drawn sprites), and its high levels of blood and gore, including, most notably, its graphic fatality killing moves. These were so extreme that they led to the founding of the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB).

Contents

  • 1 Overview
    • 1.1 Brief history
    • 1.2 Legacy
    • 1.3 Palette swapping and character depth
    • 1.4 Plot continuity
    • 1.5 Easter eggs and secrets
  • 2 Tournament
    • 2.1 Concept
    • 2.2 Notable tournaments
  • 3 Games in series
    • 3.1 Fighting games
    • 3.2 Non-fighting games
  • 4 Other media
  • 5 Contributing cultural material
  • 6 Mortal Kombat crossovers
  • 7 Similar games
  • 8 See also
  • 9 External links
    • 9.1 Official websites
    • 9.2 Other websites

Overview

Brief history

The original Mortal Kombat was developed as a reaction to the popular Capcom fighting game Street Fighter II, with digitized graphics of real game actors as opposed to animated cartoon graphics. The original idea of Mortal Kombat was thought up in 1989 along with storyline and game content, but not put into arcades until 1992 (and game systems). Some say the game's graphic violence was gratuitous, and was only included in order to generate a public outcry and controversy that would garner publicity for the game. Although highly controversial, the mix of realism and violence propelled Mortal Kombat to widespread and historic renown.

Throughout the series, the game was known for its violence and fatalities, for its exotic special moves it featured, as well as a tendency to replace a hard c sound in its lexicon with a k - hence the name Mortal Kombat.

Legacy

Midway created five sequels for the arcade and home systems, each one bloodier, more brutal, and stranger than the last. Mortal Kombat 4 brought the series into 3D, replacing the digitized fighters of the previous games with polygon models, while Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance was the first in the series to skip arcades altogether and go directly to consoles, a symptom of U.S. arcade market's dramatic decline. The second-to-last installment in the series, Mortal Kombat: Deception, was released for the Xbox and PlayStation 2 platforms in October 2004 (with a Nintendo GameCube version released in February 2005 with two exclusive characters: Shao Kahn and Goro). Following a gameplay style very similar to the one found on Deadly Alliance, Deception also features several new gaming modes, such as a Puzzle Fighter-like puzzle game, an Archon-like chess game, and an RPG-style quest mode, as well as a suicidal finishing move (Hara-Kiri) for each character, usually performed to prevent the opponent from doing a fatality. A Sony PSP version of Deception (named Mortal Kombat: Unchained) has also been announced, while a future release, Mortal Kombat: Armageddon, will wrap up the current story continuity and feature almost all the characters that have appeared in the series.

Finishing moves in later games included the Animality (turning into an animal to violently finish off the opponent), the Brutality (decimating an opponent into pieces with a long combination of hits or combo), the Friendship (offering one's opponent a token of friendship), and the Babality (transforming the opponent into a baby). The Babality and Friendship moves were created as a jokey non-violent finishing move, a swipe at the U.S. Congressional Investigation for Violence in Videogames who came down harshly on the Mortal Kombat games. Purists, fonder of the earlier style, were upset by the introduction of such finishing moves, yet Mortal Kombat's "purely violent" and dark gameplay was once again implemented after the release of Mortal Kombat 4.

Palette swapping and character depth

More-so than other fighting games at the time, Mortal Kombat was notorious for re-coloring certain sprites to appear as different characters. This was most prominent with the series' various ninja/assassin characters. Although many of the more popular characters were spawned from these palette swaps, the sheer over-saturation of the roster with them, as well as the fighting game genre's gradual demand for unique looks for all their characters, lead to many fans growing sick of the re-colors, and joking about their overuse in the series. Hence, "ninja syndrome" is a typical complaint among fans to describe any fighting game that has similar-looking or palette swapped characters.

However, unlike pallete swapped characters such as Ken, Ryu, Akuma, Sean et al. which featured different faces and thus looked more different, Mortal Kombat's characters featured totally different special moves, making each more unique from a gameplay perspective.

The palette-swapped characters consisted of eight male ninjas (Scorpion, Sub-Zero, Ermac, Smoke, Reptile, Noob Saibot, Rain, and Chameleon), four female assassins (Kitana, Mileena, Jade, and Khameleon), and three cyberninjas (Sektor, Cyrax, and an automated version of Smoke), making a total of 15 repaints, or roughly one-quarter the series' total roster. However, when the series made the transition into 3D, all the ninjas were given more unique looks.

Furthermore, the 2D Mortal Kombat games are notable when compared to their contemporaries in the terms of character differentiation. The Mortal Kombat characters played virtually identical to one another (with the exception of unplayable boss and hidden characters). Whereas in other fighting games characters had differences in the speed, range, and strength of "normal" moves, different walking speeds, different jumping heights and distances, and so on and so forth, characters in Mortal Kombat differed only in their special moves and finishing moves. Essentially this led to increased importance placed on special moves, as they were the only unique part of any character. Compared to similar fighting games of its generation, Mortal Kombat had a wider variety of special moves. There were two schools of thought on this topic. Critics felt that the gameplay of Mortal Kombat was inferior due to having less complexity in the normal moves compared to Street Fighter and other series. Supporters however felt that normal move complexity mostly added to the game's learning curve without adding real strategic depth, and that greater strategic depth and fun factor was created by having more radically different special moves, and thus believe that Mortal Kombat had better gameplay. In any case, the games after Mortal Kombat 4 changed this by finally differentiating characters normal moves and even giving them multiple fighting styles.

Plot continuity

Every single game in the Mortal Kombat series features a different ending for every character. Because many endings in a single game will contradict each other, only one or a few per game are considered canon, and the true endings are never known until the next game is released. The result is that when a new Mortal Kombat game is released, fans speculate about which ending (or endings) are real.

Nearly every game's canon ending involves the good guys emerging triumphant over evil, except for the release of Mortal Kombat: Deception, which revealed that Earthrealm's warriors in Deadly Alliance had failed to prevent Shang Tsung and Quan Chi from resurrecting the Dragon King's army.

Easter eggs and secrets

Mortal Kombat was among the first titles in the fighting game genre to include secret characters, secret games, and other Easter eggs. Mortal Kombat 3, for example, included a hidden game of Galaxian. Many extras in the series have only been accessible through very challenging, demanding, and sometimes coincidental requirements.

In the 1992 arcade original, when fighting on The Pit stage (the bridge), the player could qualify to fight the hidden character Reptile, a merge between the Sub-Zero and Scorpion characters, provided that he executed a Fatality, obtained a double flawless victory and never hit block during the winning round (due to Sonya's fatality combination including the block button, she was allowed to face Reptile on the home ports); moreover, all of the above was useless (with the exception of the SNES version) if shadow figures didn't happen to fly over the background moon, an event decided solely by random logic in the game. In Mortal Kombat II, Reptile would be developed into a full character with his own special moves and would be available from the outset. The Sega Genesis games had some unique eggs: in Mortal Kombat, a headshot of President of Probe Software Fergus McGovern flew in front of the moon in Mortal Kombat's Pit stage, while in Mortal Kombat II, Raiden could perform a "Fergality" by pressing Back, Back, Back, Block during a fatality on the Armory stage. It was pioneering ideas like these that has made Mortal Kombat one of the most memorable of the genre.

Another Easter egg actually came about from a rumored glitch. In the original arcade version of the first Mortal Kombat, a rumor stated that the game would sometimes present problems due to a bug and mix two characters together. This would usually be two of the ninja characters, resulting in a ninja in a semi-red suit. The computer would display his name as "ERMAC", short for "error macro." As word spread, people thought they had found a secret character. In the game audits, ERMACS will appear on one of the pages, possibly being a stat to either show how many times a player encountered a secret character or a glitch. That wasn't the case, yet in Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3, it was decided to make an actual Ermac character. Also, glitch characters occurred should the player accomplish the very difficult feat of reaching Reptile in Endurance mode in the first Mortal Kombat. Once Reptile was defeated, the second character would jump down. As Reptile used a special green colour palette, the following fighter (a normal fighter) would be a jumble of the character's original colors plus Reptile's green colors.

However, one of the most fascinating elements of Mortal Kombat was completely unplanned and out of the programmers' hands. Following the release of Mortal Kombat II, a myth culture was created around the game. The most famous one is the Goro myth. In the first game, Goro was a four-armed monster that acted as a miniboss to the game's main boss, Shang Tsung. Many fans were convinced that Goro was hidden somewhere in Mortal Kombat II and many were obsessed with finding him. Alas, these rumors were later confirmed as untrue.

Some Easter eggs originated from private jokes between members of the Mortal Kombat development team. The best-known example is "Toasty," which began in Mortal Kombat II. Developers fell into the habit of yelling the victory cry "Toasted!" (and later, "Toasty!") during the testing phase of development. This joke found its way into the game in the form of a small image of sound designer Dan Forden, who would appear in the corner of the screen during gameplay and sing the word "toasty." Later games included other jokes that originated in similar fashion; Mortal Kombat 4 had characters quickly uttering unintelligible battle cries in a similar fashion to Raiden's utterances in the first two games. "Toasty" is also found in Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks after pulling off a chain of hits and will appear randomly, but the picture of Dan Forden will not appear. Pressing the start button during the "Toasty" will also result in the player receiving a 1000 experience points bonus. On rare occasions, in Deception's chess mode, when a player puts a death spell on another, one can hear "Toasty" as well.

Tournament

Concept

The Mortal Kombat tournament was originally thought to be a solely human conception, until later retcons revealed it to be universal among the series' featured Realms, created by the Elder Gods as a way for other realms to defend themselves against Outworld after it grew too powerful.

A realm may declare Mortal Kombat on another realm, if they wish to invade it and conquer it. Once one party declares Mortal Kombat, the other party may not refuse. A tournament ensues, where the combatants will be knocked out until the reigning champion does battle with the challenger. Once defeated, a single Tournament victory is added for the realm. Once that realm earns ten Tournament victories in a row, they earn the right to invade the losing realm. This is the only 'legal' way for a realm to invade another, and any violation of this rule is seen as treason against the Elder Gods. The reigning champion will have their aging suspended by the Elder Gods until the next tournament.

Notable tournaments

BMK - Before Mortal Kombat I

MK - Mortal Kombat I

AMK - After Mortal Kombat I

  • 1000+ BMK-500 BMK: The first known Mortal Kombat tournament, created when sorcerer Shang Tsung, under orders by Outworld emperor Shao Kahn, took control of an Earthrealm Shaolin tournament in a bid to upset the furies and invade Earth. In this time span, Shang Tsung held a 9-tournament winning streak, but was cut short in the tenth tournament by the Great Kung Lao.
  • 500 BMK-0 MK: The Great Kung Lao held his position as Grand Champion for only one generation, after which his title - and his life - was taken by Shang Tsung's newest warrior, Goro, who held the title for another nine victories.
  • 0 MK (Mortal Kombat): Liu Kang, a young monk, defeats Goro, thus breaking his winning streak and preventing Outworld's invasion of Earth. Shang Tsung challenges Liu to a battle, trying to salvage something from his champion's loss, but is defeated, as well. As such, he is forced to relinquish his hold on the tournament and flee back to Outworld.
  • 0 MK-1 AMK (Mortal Kombat II): A false tournament proposed by Shang Tsung to Shao Kahn, to lure Earth's warriors to Outworld by kidnapping Sonya, where Kahn's forces would have a distinct advantage. It also posed as a distraction away from Kahn's revival of his wife, Queen Sindel on Earth, which would force a merger of the realms regardless of the false tournament's outcome. Liu Kang gains victory.
  • 7 AMK+ (Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance): Although the main storyline does not involve a tournament for the main characters, at this time, there was a tournament going on; one set up by Shang Tsung and his partner, the necromancer Quan Chi to give the Outworld native Li Mei a chance to free her people, who were currently enslaved by the two sorceres in order to build a temple over a soulnado, a means of which they could achieve their goals of ultimate power and immortality. This tournament has not been expressly stated as a Mortal Kombat tournament, and it is highly debatable among fans whether or not it can be called such, but regardless, it was as fake as the one set up by the Deadly Alliance in Outworld, with the sorcerers having no intention of keeping their word, regardless of the outcome.

Games in series

Fighting games

Mortal Kombat: Armageddon (2006) is the next major fighting game in the series
  • Mortal Kombat
  • Mortal Kombat II
  • Mortal Kombat 3
  • Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3
  • Mortal Kombat Advance
  • Mortal Kombat Trilogy
  • Mortal Kombat 4
  • Mortal Kombat Gold
  • Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance
  • Mortal Kombat: Tournament Edition
  • Mortal Kombat: Deception
  • Mortal Kombat: Unchained
  • Mortal Kombat: Armageddon (to be released on October 9, 2006)

Non-fighting games

Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks (2005) is the latest non-fighting game in the series
  • Mortal Kombat Mythologies: Sub-Zero: The first in a planned series of MK spinoff games featuring popular characters from the fighting games. MKM:SZ, a platform game, focused on the original Sub-Zero and his missions just prior to the first Mortal Kombat.
  • Mortal Kombat: Special Forces: An action game also set prior to the first Mortal Kombat, featuring Jax's pursuit of Kano. Originally Sonya was to have starred as well, though she was cut after Tobias left Midway.
  • Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks: An action game (with a versus-fighting mode as well), starring Liu Kang and Kung Lao, telling an alternate version of the events between the first and second Mortal Kombat. Players could also control Scorpion and Sub-Zero as bonus content.

Other media

Mortal Kombat was adapted into two major motion pictures, Mortal Kombat (1995), and Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (1997). Both films were not screened for critics prior to theatrical release, and had a poor critical reception at the time they were released, but the first movie was a major financial success, eventually grossing $70 million in the U.S. (and over $125 million worldwide) while jumpstarting the Hollywood careers of Paul W. S. Anderson and Robin Shou, among others. Unfortunately, that momentum did not carry over into Annihilation, which received a colder reception from critics and viewers alike, and took in only $30 million in the U.S. Although it is very unlikely, a third movie, Mortal Kombat: Devastation, is said to be in production as confirmed officially, and with rumors of its release going back to late 2005, may finally be released by the end of 2007.

The franchise also sparked two TV series, the 1996 animated series Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm and the 1998-1999 live-action Mortal Kombat: Conquest. Neither series ran for more than one season (despite the popularity of Conquest). In 1995, an animated prequel to the first movie, titled Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins, was released straight to home video. Coinciding with the popularity of TV media, the Mortal Kombat: Live Tour was launched at the end of 1995. The tour expanded to 1996 featuring MK characters in a theatrical display on stage.

There have been several graphic novels based off Mortal Kombat. There were official MK and MKII comic books, the latter of which was written by Tobias. Both were advertised in the attract modes on early versions of the first two MK games. Meanwhile, in 1994, Malibu Comics launched an official MK comic book series, spawning two six-issue series ("Blood and Thunder" and "Battlewave"), along with several miniseries, and one-shot character issues, until production ended in August 1995.

Brady Games also produced a trading card game based off Mortal Kombat called Mortal Kombat Kard Game in 1996.

Jeff Rovin penned a non-canon Mortal Kombat novel, which was published in June 1995 in order to coincide with the release of the movie.

An official MK techno album based on the first game was created by the Immortals in 1994. It featured two themes for the game, Techno Syndrome and Hypnotic House. Techno Syndrome was adapted for the 1995 movie soundtrack, and incorporated the familiar Mortal Kombat yell first shown in the MK1 commercial for home systems.[1] Each movie to follow would also have their own soundtracks.

Contributing cultural material

The Mortal Kombat mythology borrows heavily from multiple sources, primarily (but not limited to) Asian cultures, religions, languages and martial arts. Examples include the following:

  • Many have speculated that the general art direction and theme of the first Mortal Kombat games, most noticibly in terms of gore and storyline, seem to be based off of Asian films popular in the US in the 1970s to the early 1990scitation needed]. More contemporary parallels can be made with films like Battle Royale and Kill Bill. Darrius is said to have been developed around the character Williams (played by Jim Kelly) in the legendary Kung Fu film Enter the Dragon.
  • Raiden, who is the God of Thunder in Mortal Kombat, takes his name from the Japanese Raiden (meaning "thunder and lightning"), which is the name of a demon-god in Japanese mythology. The shinto Raiden is usually depicted as a man-beast with red flesh, sharp teeth, long hair and a large drum for making thunder. The Mortal Kombat Raiden's trademark glowing eyes and straw hat, however, appear to have been inspired by the Three Storms in the film Big Trouble in Little China. In the early console releases and associated media, he was also named Rayden.
  • Fujin (Mortal Kombat 4) is named after the Japanese wind god Fuujin. The mythological Fujin is Raiden's brother and the two are two of the oldest Shinto gods.
  • Ashrah (Mortal Kombat: Deception) is a benign fallen angel who presided over the sea and healing.
  • Shujinko (Mortal Kombat: Deception) is from the Japanese shujinkou (meaning "protagonist").
  • Damashi (Mortal Kombat: Deception) is from the Japanese damashi (meaning "deception").
  • Hotaru (Mortal Kombat: Deception) is from the Japanese hotaru (meaning "firefly").
    • Kenshi (Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance and Mortal Kombat: Deception) is from the Japanese kenshi (meaning "swordsman").
  • The White Lotus Society to which Liu Kang belonged may or may not have been named after the secret White Lotus Society which existed in China during the Yuan Dynasty and Ming Dynasty. A white lotus is traditionally symbolic of death.
  • The Lin Kuei ninja clan that Sub-Zero hails from is an allusion to the real-life myths of a Lin Kuei assassin guild in the mountains of China, who may or may not have been taught the ways of mysticism by mountain and forest spirits and demons such as the Tengu. Rumor has it that representatives of the historical Lin Kuei traveled to Japan to teach the locals the art of what would eventually be known as ninjutsu, a tale that is mimicked by Takeda's departure from the Mortal Kombat Lin Kuei to set up his own ninja clan in Japan, the Shirai Ryu.
  • Kano's Black Dragon clan may be based loosely on the historical Black Dragon Society.
  • Moloch shares his name with the ancient Middle Eastern deity Moloch.
  • Shang Tsung as a name is an actual expression for "temple elder". Deriving this from the fact that Chinese mysticism often entwined spirituality and magic, this may be a reference to Shang Tsung's actual call as a sorcerer.
  • Sheeva's name can be recognized, as based on the Hindu god, Shiva, both of which have four arms.
  • Bo Rai Cho's appearance resembles that of Sha Wujing of Journey to the West.
  • The name Bo' Rai Cho is a play on the Spanish word borracho, meaning "drunk".
  • The idea of reincarnation is taken from Buddhism and Hinduism.
  • Onaga's may be based off of the Dragon King of Journey to the West, a cruel monarch who was killed by a child hero.

Mortal Kombat crossovers

  • Characters from the Mortal Kombat series have sometimes appeared in other video games as secret characters, particularly other Midway games:
    • Raiden had a cameo appearance in a pinball machine, Bally's 1994 World Cup Championship, in a bonus round.
    • Raiden, Reptile, Scorpion and Sub-Zero appeared as playable characters in early versions of NBA Jam TE and the Sega Saturn conversion. [2]
    • Raiden and Shinnok appeared as unlockable characters in the original NFL Blitz game.
    • Raiden appeared as an unlockable character in Unreal Championship 2: The Liandri Conflict (which coincidentally also included a fatality system similar to MK's). Shao Kahn's voice is also an alternate to the default announcer.
    • Sub-Zero and Scorpion both appear as secret characters in MLB Slugfest 20-04.
    • Scorpion can be unlocked as a skin for the main character of the Midway game Psi Ops.
  • Mortal Kombat has also been the focus of several extremely popular game modifications, including hacks to the original Mortal Kombat PC games (MK2: Kintaro's Vulgar Version), and the integration of console artwork and audio into other game engines, including but not limited to the original Quake and Unreal engines (Mortal Kombat Quake TC).
  • A fanmade version of Pong based on the Mortal Kombat series called Pong Kombat was released in 1994.
  • MushroomKombat is a satirical take on Mortal Kombat featuring the eight-man metal band Mushroomhead as fighters.
  • The Mortal Kombat characters are also featured in the trading card game Epic Battles which pits them against characters from other fighting game series.
  • Modal Kombat is a parody of the game Mortal Kombat, where gameplay is controlled by players performing live on guitars.
  • In the game NBA Ballers: Phenom, in the Training Academy stage, you will be able to see characters such as Sub-Zero, Raiden and Liu-Kang in the background watching streetball with the crowd.

Similar games

  • Pit-Fighter was an arcade game made by Atari and released in 1990. It is a historic game in the fact that it was the first to ever use digitized characters with real life actors. This way of gaming was later made hugely popular by the MK series. Crowd members in the game would actually interfere and try to stab you while fighting.
  • Primal Rage featured a battle system similar to that found in Mortal Kombat, including fatality-like finishing moves and blood depiction. The major difference was that this game's characters were digitized, stop-motion animated dinosaurs and prehistoric apes puppets instead of digitized humans.
  • Killer Instinct, Guilty Gear, and the later Samurai Shodown games included instant kill moves and/or finishing moves much similar to Mortal Kombat's.
  • OpenMortal is a parody of Mortal Kombat, released for Windows and Linux under the GNU General Public License (GPL). It has 18 playable characters, with the possibility of adding designed characters, and can be played in team mode and network.
  • Thrill Kill- A direct-to-console game for the Playstation that was much gorier and violent than Mortal Kombat. Never commercially released due to the objections of Electronic Arts.
  • Time Killers was an arcade fighting game created during the success of Mortal Kombat by the game company known as Strata, featuring warriors from different time periods armed with a particular weapon. Unlike MK, however, it introduced 'Instant Kills' which could be done at any time the player desired and would immediately end a match if they hit successfully. Arms could also be hacked off with more damage.
  • Eternal Champions was an arcade-style fighting game released by Sega for the Sega Genesis, and re-released on the Sega CD. Though not necessarily a direct rip-off of Mortal Kombat, it was one of the first 2-D fighting games to include combos and incredibly gory fatalities, some of which totally out-do Mortal Kombat in the gore department (one such Fatality is the stage finisher in Dawson McShane's level, where a large wooden spike impales the losing character, resulting in gallons of blood and various intestines exploding from the fighter's torso.)
  • BloodStorm was another game created by the same team who developed Time Killers and featured the same gameplay and features, but with the addition of even managing to hack off an opponent's lower body and completely incapacitating them, as well as over-the-top violence, among other things. Fans considered it little more than a ripoff, and it ultimately flopped in the arcades.
  • Acclaim produced 2 Mortal Kombat-styled games based on the World Wrestling Federation: "WWF Wrestlemania: The Arcade Game" & "WWF In Your House". Both featured Mortal Kombat-like sprites, moves, and finishers.
  • Way Of The Warrior: Way of the Warrrior was the tile of an ultra-violent fighting that featured digitized graphics of real fighters released for the 3DO CD-ROM system by Boston-based Naughty Dog.
  • Tattoo Assassins: Tattoo Assassins was a fighting game developed by Data East using the same digitized graphics style as Mortal Kombat. Most notable is that the game featured over 200 Fatalities, including Nudalities (only a rumor in Mortal Kombat) and Animalities (before they were featured in Mortal Kombat 3).
  • Street Fighter: The Movie (video game): The game used realistic, digitized graphics, trying to capitalize on the success of Mortal Kombat. Street Fighter: The Movie was co-developed by Capcom and Incredible Technologies and published by Capcom (in Japan) and Acclaim (in the US). It was poorly received by gamers and critics.
  • Blood Warrior: A Japanese fighting game featuring digitized graphics released in 1994 by Kaneko.[3]
  • Survival Arts: Yet another violent fighting game with digitized graphics and death finishing moves, this time created by Sammy. This video game was released in 1993 in order to cash in on the success of the Mortal Kombat series. [4]
  • Bonestorm: A fictional game used on The Simpsons.
  • MK Project: A recreation of UMK3 style Mortal Kombat using M.U.G.E.N.
  • Kasumi Ninja: Kasumi Ninja is a one-on-one fighting game developed by Hand Made Software and published by Atari for the Atari Jaguar and released in 1994. It sought to capitalize on the success of ultra violent fighting games such as Mortal Kombat.
  • Ultra Vortek: Ultra Vortek is the title of a video game developed and published by Atari for its Atari Jaguar home console system in 1995. The game is a ultra violent fighting game similar to Mortal Kombat.
  • Thea Realm Fighters: Another unreleased fighting game for the Atari Jaguar feating digitized sprites. What made this one different was that it featured actors from the MK games, including Daniel Pesina, Ho Sung Pak, Katalin Zamiar, and Dr. Phillip Ahn.

See also

  • List of Mortal Kombat characters
  • Minor Mortal Kombat characters
  • List of Mortal Kombat arenas

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Mortal Kombat

Official websites

  • Mortal Kombat Official Website
  • Mortal Kombat Comics
  • Midway

Other websites

  • Mortal Kombat Online
  • GameSpot's History of Mortal Kombat
  • Dave's Mortal Kombat
Search Term: "Mortal_Kombat_%28series%29"

mortal combat news and mortal combat articles

Here's our top rated mortal combat links for the day:

'The Shield:' Mortal and moral combat 

The Oregonian - Apr 02 7:10 AM
If there's one theme dominating the dramas on network television these days, it's the question of moral relativism. No one, it seems, can figure out exactly where to draw the line between right and wrong. The means and the ends have become impossibly tangled.
Save

Multiplayer: Putting Up A Fight 
MTV Music Television - 0 minute ago
Our gamer explains why, although he's a fan of boxing, wrestling and karate, he doesn't necessarily like to play combat-driven video games.
Save

Officers at risk when action outpaces judgment 
Dallas Morning News - Apr 01 10:48 PM
Sgt. Mike Flusche didn't hear the shotgun blast and didn't realize immediately that a chunk of his arm had been blown away.
Save

Television movies for the week of April 1. 
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Mar 31 9:25 PM
Read this article ]
Save

Six strikes, and illegal immigrants are out 
Antelope Valley Press - Mar 31 9:13 AM
This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press on Saturday, March 31, 2007.
Save

Magazine quotes fallen servicemen with local ties 
The Columbian - Mar 29 9:11 AM
T wo U.S. servicemen with Vancouver ties who were killed in Iraq are among those honored in a story called "Voices of the Fallen" in the April 2 issue of Newsweek magazine, on newsstands this week.
Save

Current Issue: 
University of New Mexico Daily Lobo - Mar 27 7:07 AM
Every console generation has a game that will forever define how that console will be remembered when it is finally eclipsed by its successor.
Save

"Pans Labyrinth" 
The Davis Enterprise - Mar 26 3:31 PM
Published Jan 26, 2007 - 14:53:23 CST. This is a far cry from Alices Adventures in Wonderland.
Save

The War in the Words of the Dead 
Newsweek - Mar 24 8:35 PM
Save

An epic battle in PlayStation 2 arena 
Long Beach Press-Telegram - Mar 24 9:06 PM
By now, we all know lines from King Leonidas. There's "This is where we fight! This is where THEY DIE!" Or how about, "Tonight we dine in hell!!" That's the essence of playing "God of War II." You will feel like the baddest dude on Earth.
Save

Last Update: 2007-04-02 10:31:46

Thank you for reading the mortal combat page - mortal combat. 

1. mortalcombat
2. mortel combat
3. motal combat
4. mortal conbat
5. mortal comat
6. moral combat
7. mortal cobat

As an extra bonus here are the top searched terms over the past month for mortal combat. Now you can see what everyone else is searching for in regards to mortal combat.

1. mortal combat
2. mortal combat music
3. mortal combat song
4. mortal combat deception
5. mortal combat remix
6. mortal combat 3
7. music mortal combat
8. code for mortal combat deadly alliance
9. mortal combat armageddon
10. mortal combat flash videos
11. cheat for mortal combat deadly alliance easy koins on x-box
12. cheats for mortal combat deception
13. mortal combat them
14. family guy mortal combat
15. mortal combat characters
16. mortal combat 2
17. cheats for mortal combat deadly alliance on x-box
18. mortal combat game
19. mortal combat mishaps
20. mortal combat them song
21. mortal combat shaolin monks
22. the cheat code for the profile cod on mortal combat decption
23. fatalities on mortal combat 2
24. mortal combat - killamanjaro vs bass odyssey
25. mortal combat baraka
26. mortal combat dragon
27. fatalities for mortal combat 3
28. how o i change costumes on mortal combat deception ps2
29. mortal combat 2 fatalities
30. mortal combat deception codes
31. mortal combat monks
32. mortal combat sounds
33. unlock mortal combat deception ps2
34. cheat for mortal combat deadly alliance easy koins
35. cheats for ps2 mortal combat
36. cheats for the game mortal combat 3 of playstation 1.
37. how to unlock johny cage in mortal combat deception for ps2
38. mortal combat 3 key combinations
39. mortal combat armageda
40. mortal combat deadly alliance fatalitys
41. mortal combat deadly alliance for ps2
42. mortal combat deception fatalities
43. mortal combat shaolin monks cheats
44. mortal combat shaolin monks cheats for ps2
45. mortal combat shoalin monks
46. mortal combat sound track
47. smosh mortal combat
48. strategy guide for mortal combat shoaling monks on the xbox
49. subzero from mortal combat
50. boraca mortal combat
51. es of mortal combat armagedon
52. final combat mortal kombat
53. free mortal combat movie clips
54. how to beat kintaro for mortal combat 2 on super nintendo
55. how to beat kintaro on mortal combat 2 for snes
56. mortal combat 3 the movie
57. mortal combat 4
58. mortal combat 5 for ps2
59. mortal combat 9
60. mortal combat annihilation
61. mortal combat codes
62. mortal combat deadly alliance codes
63. mortal combat deception characters
64. mortal combat deception cheat codes
65. mortal combat deception fatalities ps2
66. mortal combat deception wager
67. mortal combat fatalities
68. mortal combat music download
69. mortal combat picture for myspace
70. mortal combat pictures
71. mortal combat sheet music free
72. mortal combat shoalin monks walkthrough
73. mortal combat sprites
74. mortal combat subzero
75. mortal combat the music
76. mortal combat themeby_scorpion
77. mortal combat videos
78. play mortal combat online
79. ps2 cheats for mortal combat shaolin monks
80. scorpian vs scorpian mortal combat
81. unlock mortal combat deception
82. what are all the characters in mortal combat deception
83. cheat codes and fatalities for mortal combat 2 on sega
84. cheat codes for mortal combat 2
85. cheat codes for mortal combat 2 on sega
86. cheat codes for mortal combat deception
87. cheat codes for mortal combat plug and play
88. cheat codes xbox mortal combat shaolin monks
89. cheat for mortal combat deadly alliance on x-box
90. cheats for mortal combat deception for ps2
91. cheats for mortal combat shoalin monks
92. cheats for the game mortal combat
93. cheats for the game mortal combat of playstation 1.
94. family guy - mortal combat
95. family guy mortal combat theme
96. fatality mortal combat
97. finish him mortal combat
98. free online mortal combat games
99. games of mortal combat
100. kenshi mortal combat
101. lee vs gara mortal combat video
102. mortal combat /games
103. mortal combat 2 codes
104. mortal combat 2 download
105. mortal combat 2 move list
106. mortal combat 3 cheat codes
107. mortal combat 3 fatalities
108. mortal combat 3 fatality list for sega genesis.
109. mortal combat 3 snes cheats
110. mortal combat 3 snes codes
111. mortal combat 3 super nintendo
112. mortal combat 4 for ps2
113. mortal combat animalities
114. mortal combat animalities deadly alliance
115. mortal combat armageddon game characters
116. mortal combat armagedon
117. mortal combat cheat codes for ps2
118. mortal combat cheats ps2
119. mortal combat deadly alliance fatality codes
120. mortal combat deception and how to do the fatalities
121. mortal combat deception crypt key locations walkthrough
122. mortal combat deception for ps2
123. mortal combat deception wager cheat
124. mortal combat deception walkthrough
125. mortal combat dedly
126. mortal combat deseption cheats ps2
127. mortal combat devastation
128. mortal combat download
129. mortal combat for super nintendo
130. mortal combat gaara
131. mortal combat ii instructions ps2
132. mortal combat instrumental
133. mortal combat mp3 orig
134. mortal combat mp3s
135. mortal combat ninjas
136. mortal combat original
137. mortal combat playstation 2 games for kids
138. mortal combat prestions cheat codes ps2
139. mortal combat repltile
140. mortal combat reptile fight song
141. mortal combat reserection for ps2
142. mortal combat shalin monks
143. mortal combat shaloin monks
144. mortal combat shaolin monks walk through
145. mortal combat shaolin monks walkthrough
146. mortal combat technol remix
147. mortal combat theam
148. mortal combat theam song
149. mortal combat themesong
150. rahzel mortal combat
151. ramstein mortal combat
152. rayden mortal combat 2 tips
153. razel mortal combat
154. realworld mortal combat
155. snes mortal combat
156. stage fatalities for mortal combat 2 on super nintendo
157. stradegy guide for mortal combat shoalin monks on the xbox
158. xbox game guide mortal combat shaolin monks