GAMbIT Magazine Issue #26 April 2017 | Page 35

Pit-Fighter is the perfect example of a video game you rented on a Friday from Blockbuster and instantly regretted after playing it for five-minutes, but have to force yourself to play because you know your parents won't take you back to the video store and you had nothing else. The game is a part of its arcade counterpart, but lacking everything that made that game a neat oddity. Let's face it, the arcade version of Pit-Fighter wasn't that great of a game and only stood out because of its digitized characters. In the transition to the Super Nintendo the game lost a number of features, not least of which were the graphics, including the interactive audience and the weapons that you could use during play. Even worse is that fact that this port saw three characters removed from the game including Southside Jim, Heavy Metal and Mad Miles. And because this is a port based on an arcade game you had to try and finish the game on a single credit, so odds are if you had this game you never finished it. Pit-Fighter, in all its forms, does not stand up to the test of time unlike many of its arcade counterparts. It was one of the first games to focus on style over substance and when you remove that style for the home ports you aren't left with much. If you are having a great day and are in the mood ruin it, simply pop this one in and get ready to hate the world.