

Koji Tobe voiced Ken in New Generation and 2nd Impact, while Yuji Kishi voiced in 3rd Strike.Wataru Takagi voiced Ryu in New Generation and 2nd Impact, while Toru Okawa voiced in 3rd Strike.The Other Darrin: All the returning characters, sans Ibuki and Akuma, got new voice actors in 3rd Strike:.The Danza: Makoto is voiced by Makoto Tsumura.Cross-Regional Voice Acting: For 3rd Strike, several of the characters, both new and Darrined, were voiced by actors situated in Toronto, incorporating a mix of Japanese and Canadian actors not unlike the Marvel vs.Creator Backlash: Longtime Capcom artist Akira "Akiman" Yasuda has said if he could rewrite history, he would've never worked on the game.

Former Capcom Coin-Op sales manager Drew Maniscalco estimates that only 300 or so SF III cabinets were sold in the U.S., as opposed to the 3000 units sold by Marvel vs. This, coupled with declining public interest in American arcades due to the rising popularity of consoles, led to the game performing poorly at launch.
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This series also had the misfortune of launching almost concurrently with the Alpha series, which was a prequel to II and actually did contain many of the series mainstays that III lacked.The learning curve of the game had also increased exponentially, in part because series veterans had become too good, and partly to throw off newcomers who knew what to expect from Street Fighter given its outsized footprint on the genre.Capcom is doggedly trying to fix this in the sequels (with some success). The unfamiliar cast were less-memorable, and most of them failed to generate a large following, let alone leave a mark on pop culture like the others.Some say years of updates/prequels to Street Fighter II resulted in franchise fatigue.Most likely it was a strong case of unrealistic expectations.It's hard to pinpoint exactly why it flopped: Acclaimed Flop: The game had incredible hype given its lineage.
