

Two new secret characters appear as well, depending on the version of the game. The PC, PlayStation and Saturn versions also contain alternate versions of Jax, Kung Lao, Kano and Raiden as they appeared in the first two titles. Bosses Goro, Kintaro, Motaro and Shao Kahn are also playable characters from the start (except for the Nintendo 64 version where only Motaro and Shao Kahn are included and must be unlocked via a cheat menu). He retains all of his moves from MKII except for the Split Punch, which had to be excluded since none of the characters from MK3/UMK3 had "reaction" animations for this particular move. Johnny Cage was also added to the roster, this time portrayed by Chris Alexander (replacing Daniel Pesina). Both characters were each given a new special move, along with combos and running animation (these animation types were not introduced until Mortal Kombat 3), and new portraits for the versus screen. The hardest criticism was directed at the Nintendo 64 version, which did not have all the content of the other versions due to limited storage space on the cartridge.Īlong with the Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 roster, Mortal Kombat Trilogy adds Raiden and Baraka as they appeared in Mortal Kombat II. It also features a new finishing move called Brutality, a long combination of attacks that ends with the opponent exploding. New additions to the game included the "Aggressor" bar, a meter that fills during the course of the match and temporarily makes a player character faster and stronger. Some completely new characters were also introduced. Mortal Kombat Trilogy features the same gameplay and story as Mortal Kombat 3, but adds characters and stages from the other three arcade games, including Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. Further versions were also released for the and R-Zone.


Unlike the previous title, it was not released in arcades (except for prototypes), but was instead released for the PlayStation, Nintendo 64, Sega Saturn and PCs.
#N64 mortal kombat trilogy moves update#
Mortal Kombat Trilogy is a fighting video game released by Midway in 1996 as an update to Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3.
