Popular games for franchise Flying Dragon
A port of Hiryuu no Ken Gaiden, a spin-off of the Flying Dragon series. It is a fighting game in the Flying Warriors series, using the westernized characters in place the of the ones from Hiryuu no Ken Gaiden. Includes a beat-'em-up mode.
Flying Warriors is a port/remake of Hiryuu no Ken II: Dragon no Tsubasa, with altered levels, graphics, storyline (being about westernized characters) and music. It carries over some improvements from Hiryuu no Ken III.
Get ready for furious fighting action with ULTIMATE FIGHTER! The evil enemy made a raid on Rick's master's training school, took symbols and swords away, and left a letter of challenge behind. Rick, having vowed to be a true fighter, took up this challenge to win back the lost items. Sharpen your fighting skills and prepare for devastating, bonecrushing battles. Rick's fate is in your hands. The challenge addressed to him is also made to you. The success of his quest depends on your courage, cunning, and flawless martial arts technique.
The Game Boy Color (colorized) version of SD Hiryuu no Ken Gaiden 2.
Also called SD Mode in the West, with a Japanese complete name of SD Hiryuu no Ken, the game has RPG features applied to the fighting game, with super deformed visuals and more "fantastic" visuals.
A fighting game from 1985, notable for being the first to implement a combo system. It is the first game in the Flying Dragon (Hiryuu no Ken) series.
SD Hiryuu no Ken Gaiden 2 is the sequel to SD Hiryu no Ken's Game Boy port. It features a few new characters.
The third NES game in the Hiryuu no Ken saga
In a mysterious region of China, Ryuhi, was born and raised in high mountain tops. There he received instruction from his wise teacher, Juan. At a young age he became a master of Kempo. One day, his teacher Juan was attacked and robbed of the Secret Scrolls of Hiryu-no-Ken, of which he was the author. Ryuhi possessed the 6th volume of the Secret Scrolls, the Shingan No Sho, or Book of the Mind's Eye which Juan had managed to save. Ryuhi begins his journey to Shorinji as a last request from a dying Juan. Gengai, the bishop of Shorinji welcomed the little Ryuhi, and begins to train him in Shorinji Kempo. Six years later, they received a letter of challenge from the Tusk Soldiers, a mysterious organization of enemies of the Shorinji. Ryuhi is determined to take part in the upcoming "World Tournament of Contact Sports" as a representative of Shorinji. His motive is to prevent the Tusk Soldiers from becoming champions of Contact Sports at the tournament. After learning from Gengai that it was the Tusk Soldiers who attacked his teacher and robbed him of the Secret Scrolls, he leaves for the World Tournament. There are two different types of gameplay. Journey levels are side-scrolling levels where Ryuhi must defeat five bosses and find certain items valuable to the mission. The tournament levels are where the player gets to fight one-on-one against enemies in the same way as the first game in the series released in 1985, Shanghai Kid. The player must go through the game twice to get the true ending. All six scrolls must be collected the first time through to get the first ending. The second time through the player needs to collect all six scrolls again, along with four crystal balls. The crystal balls can only be found in the second quest. However, players can miss one of these items and finish the game, but the true ending will not be received.
Released in 1995 for the Game Boy.
Also called Virtual Mode in the West, with a Japanese complete name of Virtual Hiryuu no Ken 1.5, the game is a standard arcade fighting game with the option for 3D or 2D movement.
A retro action game collection featuring four early Hiryu no Ken titles, combining martial arts battles, side-scrolling stages, and unique battle mechanics across the series. Japanese language support only.
An expanded version of SD Hiryuu no Ken, a game from within Hiryuu no Ken: Twin (Flying Dragon overseas), was released in Japan only, adding more characters (such as Jack, Ryu, and Gofire from the Super Chinese series), items and a new gameplay mode. It also removed the more realistic "Virtual Mode", favoring the super deformed "Quest Mode".
Virtual Hiryu no Ken is an entry in the Flying Dragon series for PlayStation.
A brawler and fighting game and the first Super Famicom game of the Hiryu no Ken (Flying Dragon) series from Culture Brain. It was followed by an updated version which would later be released in the US as Ultimate Fighter.
SD Hiryuu no Ken is an Action game, published by Culture Brain, which was released in Japan in 1994.
MMA-styled fighting game where each character represents a fighting style, and each style is represented by two characters.