Best of the Best: Championship Karate

Best of the Best: Championship Karate[lower-alpha 1] is a 1992 kick boxing video game initially developed by Futura and published by French company Loriciel. The game features black belt kick boxing masters whose object is to win the kick boxing championship by defeating an array of kick boxing masters in a series of fighting matches. The Sega Genesis version is one of the few games to offer support for the Sega Activator motion controller.

Best of the Best:
Championship Karate
Developer(s)Futura
Loriciel (Game Boy, Genesis, NES)
Publisher(s)
Designer(s)Pascal Jarry
Programmer(s)Pascal Jarry
Artist(s)Marco de Flores
Christophe Perrotin
Isabelle Maury
Composer(s)Michel Winogradoff
Platform(s)Amiga, Amstrad CPC, MS-DOS, NES, Super NES, Game Boy, Mega Drive/Genesis
Release1992
1993 (SNES, Genesis)
Genre(s)Fighting
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Best of the Best is an updated version of Panza Kick Boxing which was released in 1990 in Europe for various computers as well as the TurboGrafx-16.

Martial artist and actor Ron Yuan stated in a 1994 interview that "I know a lot of pure gamers will disagree, but the best SNES fighting game from a purely technical martial arts point of view is Best of the Best. It didn't get much notoriety, but my friends and I know martial arts, and they go nuts whenever we play."[1]

Reception

Juris Graney of The Australian Commodore & Amiga Review compared Best of the Best to its predecessor: "Best of the Best Championship Karate is almost a reproduction of my old favourite, Panza Kick Boxing. In fact, it's the sequel, subtitled Panza Gold Edition. Everything is the same – the crowd, the referee, the moves and everything else. The only difference is an advanced stage at the end."[2]

References

  1. Known in Japan as The Kick Boxing for the TurboGrafx-CD, Mega Drive and Game Boy and as Super Kick Boxing for the Super Famicom
  1. "Supreme Warrior Prepares to Fight". GamePro. No. 64. IDG. November 1994. pp. 60–62.
  2. Graney, Juris (May 1993). "Best of the Best: Championship Karate". The Australian Commodore & Amiga Review. Vol. 10, no. 5. p. 75.


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