Location:  Home» Gamecube » All Games » Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance  

Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance

Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance

enlarge enlarge 
From: Midway Entertainment
Category: Video Games

List Price: $9.99
Buy Used: $6.79
You Save: $3.20 (32%)



New (4) Used (15) from $6.79

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 45 reviews
Sales Rank: 9522

Platform: Gamecube
Genre: Adventure Games
ESRB: Mature
Media: Video Game
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Number Of Items: 1
Batteries Included: No
Age: 17 - 20 years
Operating System: Gamecube
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7 x 5 x 1

MPN: 19858
UPC: 031719198580
EAN: 0031719198580
ASIN: B00006FDLO

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Choose from 21 characters -- old favorites are here like Scorpion, Kung Lao and more, alongside newer & tougher characters
  • A completely new fighting system for all-new strategic possibilities and better combat
  • Full 3D movement with frighteningly realistic combat damage -- all the sweat, blood, bruises and ripped clothes of a real fight
  • Multiple modes of combat, from Arcade & Vs. matches to the new Test Your Might and Test Your Sight
  • Beautiful interactive fighting environments combined with exquisite realistic fighting, for an amazing Mortal Kombat experience!

Accessories:

  • Electronic Gaming Monthly
  • Play
  • Tips & Tricks Magazine

Similar Items:

  • Mortal Kombat Deception
  • Super Smash Bros Melee
  • Gamecube Memory Card 251
  • Gamecube Console Platinum
  • Resident Evil 4

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance takes you deeper into the Outworld with all-new matches, as you face the deadliest fighters on(or outside) Earth!

Amazon.com Review
Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance brings the MK series a new 3-D fighting engine, adds tons of features and extras, and still offers classic gameplay.

This installment introduces a 3-D battle system that still manages to maintain a 2-D feel. For example, pushing up on your controller makes you sidestep your opponent's attacks, yet it also allows you to jump by tapping up plus a direction. A revamped fighting system offers up to three different fighting styles for each fighter (one includes a weapon technique). The multiple styles provide countless variations of attacks for any given fighter. Different combinations of punches and kicks allow for lengthy and powerful chain attacks similar to the Mortal Kombat of old. Fatalities are also back and are rich in graphic representation.

New fighters join the cast of old favorites such as Sonya, Kano, Sub-Zero, Raiden, Scorpion, Johnny Cage, Jax, Cyrax, Kung Lao, Kitana, Quan Chi, Reptile, and Shang Tsung. The lavish environments surround your fighters with animated backgrounds and rich skylines. On some levels there are even breakable objects and hazards that you can interact with, such as pools of acid--the perfect landing place for a thrown opponent.

In addition to regular modes of gameplay (arcade, versus, etc.) there is an option called Konquest mode. This mode allows you to learn more about fighting styles, read up on each character's personal history, and gain Koins which can then be spent in the Krypt to unlock a host of new characters, costumes, and early concept drawings. The additional content offered with this title is plentiful, including "The Making of Deadly Alliance" and "The History of Mortal Kombat" featurettes.

Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance successfully reinvents the series by dishing up a unique mix of improved graphics and stylized gameplay without compromising those features that made the MK series popular in the first place. --Carlos Rodela

Pros:

  • Complex gameplay
  • Realistic 3-D graphics
  • Hundreds of unlockable features

Cons:

  • Weak story line
  • Unbalanced combo system



Customer Reviews:   Read 40 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Awesome   December 24, 2008
Glynn Nichalson (Chipley, FL)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Exactly what I needed. Order was right the first time. Just find the fatality codes online and your ready.


5 out of 5 stars Awesome Game.   August 5, 2007
M. Dispoto (Lewes, DE USA)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Mortal Kombat has always been awesome. This game is the best so far. MKDA is absolutley one of the coolest fighters around. The unique combos, the awesome, brutal, crazy fatalities, the unlockables. It really is a cool game. If you like blood and gore, Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance is your game.


4 out of 5 stars Nice game   May 22, 2007
S. Lopez
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Deadly alliance is the fifth fighting MK.

Pros
Konquest, the tutorial mode is somewhat awkward and bothersome and at times difficult.
Buying in the Krypt is fun for a while.
Most of the returning characters.
Three disciplines for each character, one of them is weapon based.
Fairly easy for beginners.
IMHO Kenshi is probably the best new MK character since MK2. Li Mei, Nitara and Frost are just OK.

Cons
The graphics are unimpressive.
The multi kurrency gets annoying really fast.
Some kombos are really complicated, nearly impractical unless you have the time and willingness to master them
Multi-Discipline Kombos, IMHO these are the worts kind of kombos, mainly because I find the L and R button unsuitable for a fighting game
I don't believe that the GameCube control was designed thinking about fighting games. But this is no failure of MK itself.
Bo' Rai Cho, Mavado, Drahmin and Hsu Hao are probably the worst new characters ever. Mokap is just a bad idea.
This game doesn't include some popular characters like Liu Kang, Jade, Mileena and Baraka.
No online play.

New characters
Blaze
Bo' Rai Cho
Drahmin
Frost
Hsu Hao
Kenshi
Li Mei
Mavado
Mokap
Moloch
Nitara

Returning characters
Cyrax
Jax Briggs
Johnny Cage
Kano
Kitana
Kung Lao
Quan Chi
Raiden
Reptile
Scorpion
Shang Tsung
Sonya Blade
Sub-Zero

OK, maybe this game is already too dated; maybe you should already consider buying MK Armageddon instead, if you have a PS2.
IMHO, if you have a GameCube and you like fighting games, I'd recommend Soul Calibur 2.



3 out of 5 stars An interesting attempt to distance itself from previous MK games.   September 29, 2005
KiWiSouP (Minneapolis, MN USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

It seems to me that this game is trying way too hard to break out of being just another Mortal Kombat game. The complaints of the simplistic combat system from previous MK games could no longer be ignored, so they invented a new combat system from the ground up. Like Sould Calibur, the direction you are pointing the D-Pad changes the type of attack, only unlike Soul Calibur it is somewhat unpredictable and less intuitive if you don't have each of the many moves memorized. A cool feature that enables you to switch between 2 fighting styles and 1 weapon style is a nice addition, but the combos that involve switching between the styles are quite difficult. While, it is cool that the new fighting system is based on actual martial arts styles, it would have been nice to included a feature to play with the old system...maybe by changing to "Classic Kombat" under the options screen. It is a very big minus that you cannot use the analog joystick...only the d-pad, which I find somewhat frustrating.
I find it very disapointing that some of the characters' signature moves are absent and each character only has a couple. You won't find Raiden's torpedo or teleport, nor will you find Scorpions teleport punch or even Kitana's fan throw.
In the past the fatality system had gotten a little out of hand with the addition of animalities, babalities, friendships, brutalties, etc...but in this game they opted to keep it simple by only giving each character 1 lonesome fatality. I find it humorous that the majority of fatalities end with the victor stomping on the defeated.
Which leads me to this; Mortal Kombat became popular due to the fact that it was so realistic, using digitized actors as fighters, but now the characters are bulky, overly muscular, that move stiffly, look like they are made out of plastic, and spew red pudding. Every character has had a complete makeover and looks nothing like they originally did.
Ever since Mortal Kombat 3, Midway has been unable to introduce any interesting new characters...same goes for this game. The new characters are easily forgotten and too generic to be anything other than fillers.
Other than elimination and versus, there is practice and konquest which are both just training modes. No tournament mode or 2 on 2 mode to be found.
My conclusion is to skip this game...maybe rent it, and pick up Mortal Kombat: Deception instead, as it addresses the majority of my complaints on this game.



5 out of 5 stars Real martial arts add depth to the Mortal Kombat series   June 24, 2005
Alan Hummel (The Seven Seas of Rhye)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I was a big fan of the Street Fighter and Mortal Kombat games in the early 90's, and even though I thought Mortal Kombat had cooler characters and graphics, I preferred the depth of gameplay of the Street Fighter series. In the Mortal Kombat games, everyone had the same punches and kicks, and often it was a matter of using the special moves more than anything else. With the Street Fighter games, every character (with the exception of Ken and Ryu) had unique moves -- different punches and kicks, and more possibilities.

Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance changes all of that. Each character now has 3 distinct, real, martial arts fighting styles -- 2 hand-to-hand styles and 1 weapon style each. In my opinion, this is the single best improvement they've ever made to the series. It adds an element of depth previously missing from Mortal Kombat.

The graphics are impressive, and so are the characters, though a few of the new characters are a bit unmemorable. Many hardcore fans were disappointed that each character only has one fatality, and there are no stage fatalities (though one level contains fountains of green acid that can harm you character). Also, there isn't much in the way of secrets to unlock, with the exception of The Krypt: a huge graveyard of coffins which can be unlocked with "koins" earned by winning matches. However, most of these unlockable items are pictures -- pictures of the developers, of characters, of design sketches -- pictures that don't enhance the gameplay.

This is a fantastic game, and is followed up by the equally impressive Mortal Kombat: Deception.


myGamer.com