Tekken 3 Direct
Developer: Namco Publisher: Namco Platform: PlayStation (Arcade original, PS1 port) Release Date: 1998 (PS1)
Virtua Fighter 2 , SoulCalibur , or having fun with three friends and a multitap. TEKKEN 3
The stages are vibrant and memorable—from the sinking sunset of "Jungle Outpost" to the destructible floors of the "Temple Stage." But the true star of the presentation is the soundtrack. The techno, jungle, and industrial beats (composed by Nobuyoshi Sano, Keiichi Okabe, and others) are timeless. Tracks like Jin's Theme (Emotionless Passion) and Paul's Theme (Two Different Sorts of Force) are burned into the memory of every 90s gamer. Tracks like Jin's Theme (Emotionless Passion) and Paul's
Even today, you can boot up Tekken 3 on original hardware or via emulation, and it feels right . The controls aren't clunky. The graphics hold an artistic charm. The music still slaps. The graphics hold an artistic charm
In the late 1990s, the fighting game genre was a warzone. Capcom had Street Fighter Alpha , Sega had Virtua Fighter , and SNK had The King of Fighters . But when Namco released Tekken 3 on the PlayStation, it didn't just win a battle—it ended the war. Two decades later, Tekken 3 remains not only the best game in its franchise but arguably the most important 3D fighter of all time.
For a PlayStation game, Tekken 3 is a technical miracle. The character models are smoother, more detailed, and animated with a fluidity that was unheard of in 1998. Jin Kazama’s hoodie sways, Eddy Gordo’s capoeira flows like water, and Gon (the bizarre guest character from the manga) puffs up his cheeks before breathing fire.
Tekken 3 isn't just a great fighting game; it's a cultural landmark. If you own a PlayStation, a PS2, a PS3, a PC, or a phone, you owe it to yourself to play this game. It is the undisputed champion.
