Why Mortal Kombat Still Reigns in Fighting Games

Share This Post

If you lived close to an arcade during the 90s, there’s a high chance that you remember the first time Mortal Kombat touched your life. Perhaps it was the digitized fighters, perhaps it was the pools of blood, or perhaps it was the first time someone ever yelled “Finish Him!” as a spine got ripped out for good. Mortal Kombat was not merely another fighting game—it was a cultural shockwave, a controversy magnet, and in some way a franchise that’s still going strong after over 30 years.

Image Source: Bing Image. License: All Creative Commons

The Arcade Origins: Blood, Controversy, and Fatalities

In 1992, Mortal Kombat invaded arcades with a brief twist: what if Street Fighter, but gory and with so much more attitude? Its sequel, Mortal Kombat II, doubled up on the gore and displayed a cheeky sense of humor with “babalities” and “friendships.” The creators very well knew how ridiculous it all was—and went with it. But the game’s infamy wasn’t all about humor. The firestorm over its violence was so intense that it helped spawn the ESRB ratings system. If your parents disliked it, that just made you adore it more.

The Art of the Port: Console Wars and Home Versions

For the rest of us who didn’t have unlimited quarters to waste, the real fight was which console offered the superior version at home. The SNES had better-looking and sounding graphics, but the Genesis offered smoother gameplay—and most importantly, it preserved the blood. For many fans, your initial Mortal Kombat was just whichever version your parents (or your spending money) could afford.

Storytelling and Lore: From Simple Fights to Epic Sagas

What began as a small-scale tournament with seven fighters quickly evolved into a sprawling saga filled with gods, realms, and messy family feuds. The roster exploded, the lore deepened, and suddenly Mortal Kombat wasn’t just about uppercuts and fatalities anymore.

By the time the PlayStation 2 era rolled around, the series was dabbling in story modes, side material, and even a weird tangent into kart racing. It wasn’t exactly a work of genius, but it showed that Mortal Kombat wasn’t afraid to innovate and continue to surprise fans.

The Modern Era: Reboots, Reimaginings, and Mortal Kombat 1

Flash forward to the present, and Mortal Kombat continues to find new ways to reinvent itself. The newest iteration, Mortal Kombat 1, is a reboot, sequel, and prequel simultaneously. It tones down the military-focused tone of recent titles and becomes a full martial arts movie with outrageous cutscenes and a story mode that mixes melodrama and sheer pandemonium.

The introduction of the new Kameo system introduces classic characters as tag-in assists, with new depth added to combat. Invasion mode, which is a combination of brawler and board game, is another innovation. Not all of it works—some fans lament the content-heavy Mortal Kombat 11, and the Switch port is famously clunky—but the fundamental fighting still packs a more potent punch than ever.

Mortal Kombat on the Big Screen: Hits, Misses, and Fan Service

Mortal Kombat’s cinematic aspirations date back nearly as long as the games. The 1995 movie is a cult favorite, half campy and half endearing. Its sequel, Mortal Kombat: Annihilation, is better left unremembered.

The 2021 retooling sought to marry old fans and new. Though its narrative, for the most part, lays groundwork for sequels, it serves up brutal fight choreography and spectacular deaths. Joe Taslim’s Sub-Zero stands out, Kano steals every scene he’s in, and the movie isn’t afraid to get silly when it needs to. It glosses over the actual tournament, but promises more fights to follow.

The Secret Sauce: Why Mortal Kombat Endures

So what’s prevented Mortal Kombat from dying off when so many other fighting games have? It’s the combination of iconic characters, the balance between camp and seriousness, and a fanbase that loves both the lore and the extreme violence.

Mortal Kombat has fallen a lot—through awkward spin-offs, uneven sequels, cringeworthy movies—but it never stopped being unapologetically itself. And that’s why we keep coming back. Whether you’re a casual button-masher, a lore diehard, or just here to watch someone get ripped in half, there’s always another round waiting.

Related Posts

How Blizzard Became the Biggest Cautionary Tale in Gaming

If you ever spent all night grinding dungeons in...

10 Best Batman Movies Ranked

Let's be honest: Batman is not another superhero; Batman...

10 Superman Actors Ranked Worst to Best

Superman is more than just another comic book hero;...

10 Child Stars and Their Surprising Careers

Ever wonder what happened to those kid stars you...

15 Iconic Black Actors in Hollywood

Without Black male actors, the stars in Hollywood wouldn`t...

10 TV Stars Who Never Made It in Movies

Let’s be honest: not every TV superstar is destined...