Super Street Fighter II Turbo (0)

Overview
Super Street Fighter II Turbo (known in Japan as Super Street Fighter II X: Grand Master Challenge) is a 2D fighting game developed by and released for (running hardware) on February 23, 1994.
The fifth official iteration of builds upon by adding new moves (such as the , a special powerful technique for all characters that can only be activated after building up the new ) and an adjustable speed setting (which must be turned on by the operator), allowing players to ramp up the speed up to a level similar to . This also marks the first in the series to remove the bonus mini-games that occurs between every few consecutive matches.
Each fighter, along with new moves, also have a variety of changes to their gameplay mechanics (for example, has a wide variety of new kicks) and a new primary color palette in similar vein to Hyper Fighting. The game also includes a new hidden boss, (known in the Japanese version as Gouki), who is shown in promotional artwork and the game's introduction sequence. Believed to be born out of the , this fighter has a variety of powerful moves (including the ability to throw in the air) and can only be fought by progressing through the difficult single-player game without continuing under a certain condition (either achieving the high score before reaching M. Bison, or reaching M. Bison in under 25 minutes).
Also known as "Super X" or "Super Turbo", this iteration is the last one released for nearly ten years, proceeded by , , and . Despite the newer versions, the arcade version of this installment is still used in competitive tournaments.
Characters
All characters from are updated in some way. However, players can pick a special version of each character (which reverts the changes form New Challenges, removes the Super Meter, and restores the original color scheme) with a special cheat code.
The game's new secret boss, , is unique as he is the only CPU-controlled fighter who does not have a Super Meter. His moveset is also different (and less powerful) when player-controlled.
New Additions
- (secret boss, known as Gouki in the Japanese versions, that is playable with a cheat code)
Returning Characters
- (boss, known as M. Bison in the Japanese versions)
- (boss, known as Balrog in the Japanese versions)
- (boss)
- (final boss, known as Vega in the Japanese versions)
Ports
- It was first officially ported to the in November 1994, published by Capcom in Japan and for North American and European regions. This version uses the of the version of .
- It was ported by to systems running AGA chipsets (namely the A1200 and A4000) in 1995. Released by in both North America and Europe, this version differs heavily from the Amiga ports of and New Challengers and uses the same quality sprites as the arcade version. While this version includes no music, it was later ported to the in Europe with a new soundtrack arrangement.
- It was ported by to systems running MS-DOS in 1995. Released by GameTek in both North America and Europe, this version differs from its predecessor's PC port and utilizes the same quality sprites as the arcade version (rather than a direct rip of a SNES/Genesis port). While the Floppy Disk version uses MIDI-quality audio, the CD-ROM version uses the same soundtrack as the CD32 version.
- It was officially ported to the and on November 30, 1997 as part of the compilation (alongside its predecessor and ).
- It was officially ported to the in Japan as an exclusive mail-order release on December 22, 2000. Titled Super Street Fighter II X for Matching Service, this port is a faithful reproduction of the arcade version and includes and numerous hidden options (including the ability to toggle changes between minor game revisions, the ability to toggle features of , and the ability to play as two alternate versions of Akuma: one used for the game's CPU-controlled boss and one with the Super Move).
- It was officially ported to the as Super Street Fighter II Turbo Revival (Super Street Fighter II X Revival in Japan). It was released in Japan on July 13, 2001, North America on October 30, 2001, and Europe on November 2, 2001. While the game's character sprites are based on the SNES version of the game's predecessor, this version features a variety of new graphics (including large re-drawn character portraits), special effects, and backgrounds (including some from the series), as well as new unlockable game modes (including and ) and the unlockable option to play as the version of Akuma used for the game's CPU-controlled boss. It was later digitally re-released for the in Japan (on July 1, 2015), Europe (on July 16, 2015), and North America (on November 19, 2015).
- It was ported to the and on November 14, 2006 as part of the compilation.