IMDb RATING
8.0/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Mortal Kombat Trilogy has over 30 characters for some one-on-one martial arts fighting, while also introducing the "Aggressor" bar, and a new finishing move called Brutality.Mortal Kombat Trilogy has over 30 characters for some one-on-one martial arts fighting, while also introducing the "Aggressor" bar, and a new finishing move called Brutality.Mortal Kombat Trilogy has over 30 characters for some one-on-one martial arts fighting, while also introducing the "Aggressor" bar, and a new finishing move called Brutality.
Sal DiVita
- Nightwolf
- (as Sal Divita)
- …
Kerri Hoskins
- Sonya Blade
- (archive footage)
Becky Gable
- Kitana
- (archive footage)
- …
Brian Glynn
- Shao Kahn
- (archive footage)
Steve Ritchie
- Shao Kahn
- (archive footage)
- (voice)
Anthony Marquez
- Kung Lao
- (archive footage)
Lia Montelongo
- Sindel
- (archive footage)
Michael O'Brien
- Stryker
- (archive footage)
John Parrish
- Jax
- (archive footage)
Eddie Wong
- Liu Kang
- (archive footage)
Kyle Wyatt
- Mob Leader
- (voice)
Steve Beran
- Shadow Priest
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
John Vogel
- Masked Guard
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJohnny Cage is the only character to have all new sprites for this game. This is a result of Johnny Cage's original actor, Daniel Pesina, being fired by Midway sometime after the release of Mortal Kombat II (1993). His new sprites are that of Chris Alexander. However he has lost the splits punch move all together in this version.
- GoofsWhen a character is killed by an explosion fatality or something similar, they have a regular human skeleton. Even if it was a four-armed character, reptilian, or cybernetic ones. Likewise, sometimes the number of skulls on the ground following such a fatality is often inconsistent.
- Alternate versionsThe PC, PlayStation, and Saturn versions have many differences from the Nintendo 64 version. While space forbids a comprehensive analysis, some of the major differences include more characters on the PlayStation (like two versions of Kano, Rayden, Jax and Kung Lao, as well as all of the boss characters), boss fatalities on the N64, and only one Sub-Zero character on the Nintendo console (though he has the combined powers of the masked and unmasked Sub-Zeroes). Finally, the PC and PlayStation have a male Chameleon, who randomly assumes the powers of the male ninjas, whereas the N64 has a female Khameleon, who can become Kitana, Mileena or Jade.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Angry Video Game Nerd: Superman 64 (2008)
Featured review
I like this version of Mortal Kombat the least because they did the minimum amount of work to bring back the old characters\scenes that they put into the game. Instead of creating new graphics they took old graphics and tried to make them fit into the MK3 style which did not work so well also instead of filming new footage so that the characters can do the new combo moves they took the old footage and mixed it up so it seems like they are doing combos. Then a lot of the new characters where left unfinished making this in general feel like an unfinished game.
The series wen't downhill after Mortal Kombat II for the arcade and there had been nil a good home version made, most of the home versions just made the game look bad, especially this one this cheapened it. Mortal Kombat II (ARCADE) will always hold the crown as the best 2D Mortal Kombat. Because instead of improving on the formula they took it (MK3-4) in a direction that was not good for it m aking it progressively more cartoony, cheesy, wwf like, unfinished, not as dark. But they now seem to be fixing that with the newest versions and improve the gameplay to boot. NOW it's going in the right direction (since MKD).
The series wen't downhill after Mortal Kombat II for the arcade and there had been nil a good home version made, most of the home versions just made the game look bad, especially this one this cheapened it. Mortal Kombat II (ARCADE) will always hold the crown as the best 2D Mortal Kombat. Because instead of improving on the formula they took it (MK3-4) in a direction that was not good for it m aking it progressively more cartoony, cheesy, wwf like, unfinished, not as dark. But they now seem to be fixing that with the newest versions and improve the gameplay to boot. NOW it's going in the right direction (since MKD).
- Smoke-Tetsu
- Oct 21, 2004
- Permalink
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