In 1998, Capcom blessed the Playstation with a game that we at Ourcade Games would never forget. That game was Rival Schools, a new addition to their storied fighting library. It was very similar to Marvel vs Capcom in theme, yet VERY different in nature. Everything about the game was just slightly different from the usual Capcom offering at the time, and it made the game SO much better. Let’s reminisce.
Capcom recently revealed interest in reviving their dormant IPs, so it's time to look at which Capcom series would make sense to return.
Breath of Fire, Knights of the Round, Saturday Night Slam Masters, a proper Bionic Commando game, Ghosts and Goblins. I am all down for Dino Crisis loved 1 and 2 one thing I like about Capcom is their massive library of games that need to be brought back to life. Next to Konami, Namco, Sega, old Squaresoft, Capcom was and is another one of my favorite developers. I would like it if Disney would just let Capcom make a Marvel game or two or Disney should let Capcom handle some Disney games. Capcom pulled of some great games with both Disney characters and Marvel characters.
Breath of fire would be number one choice.
Glad to see it getting some love in the comments. I loved these games 1 through 4.
Not dragon quarter
Dark Stalkers, any fighting game - or side scroller - really, just not with SF's current art direction.
The Justice Gakuen series of fighting games deserves a second chance on modern consoles, with all of its original features intact.
Capcom doesn't seem to want to resurrect any other fighting series beyond its main two
Seth:
Educators have long tried to convince the captive audience of youth that school is, in fact, cool. To very mixed results. Kids are automatically wary of anything adults try to claim is "cool," despite anecdotal evidence to the contrary, and children's television networks are constantly reminding them how dumb adults are. A long day of dry, rote memorization of facts, or perhaps getting knocked on the head by a crumbling asbestos ceiling tile, generally mark the average low-points of the real-world school experience.