Fight'n'Joke fight scene
Image via Mental Drink

1997’s Fight’n’Jokes gets re-release with online multiplayer and rollback netcode

Semi-humorous fighting game.

Mental Drink has today released a new version of 1997ā€™s MS-DOS title Fightā€™nā€™Jokes, which doesnā€™t have any relation with 2017ā€™s Fightā€™n Rage (that I know of). This re-release is pretty lavish, featuring rollback netcode and online multiplayer. Thatā€™s swinging for the fences.

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If you hadnā€™t heard of Fightā€™nā€™Jokes, neither had I. Itā€™s hard to overstate the massive impact that 1991ā€™s Street Fighter II had on the game industry, so the ā€˜90s were packed to the rafters with fighting games looking to get in on that sweet, sweet success. This also resulted in a few parody games like Clay Fighter and Brutal: Paws of Fury. DOS wasnā€™t exactly the most happening place for fighting games, however. If you wanted to be taken seriously, you generally needed an arcade release.

What really caught my attention with this Fightā€™nā€™Jokes re-release was the sincerity behind it. About five people worked on the original release, but despite that, it looks pretty good for a late DOS title and it features most of what youā€™d expect from a fighting game. Sure, itā€™s two-button (plus a charge button), but so were a lot of the NeoGeo Pocket fighting games like SNK vs. Capcom: The Match of the Millennium. I’m not trying to say it’s great, it just punches above its weight class.

There are 10 characters plus four that are unlockable and 11 stages. You can re-map the controls, so it works easily with an arcade stick. The name alone sets it up like itā€™s supposed to be funny, but itā€™s mostly just cartoonish like a newspaper comic strip. The press release actually describes it as ā€œsemi-humorous,ā€ which would be about right.

Mental Drink still features the same brothers who were behind Nasty Brothers Software, the creators of Fightā€™nā€™Jokes. The re-release ports the game to a new engine that runs natively on modern operating systems. Along with online multiplayer, thatā€™s not an easy job. It really speaks to how much affection they have for the little title. It was previously ported to Switch and Xbox One, but that version didnā€™t have online multiplayer. Theyā€™re planning to patch the console versions to bring them to parity with the PC version.

Fightā€™nā€™Jokes is available now on PC. Although itā€™s listed as Early Access, the core game is complete. Mental Drink is just looking for feedback on the online performance.


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Zoey Handley
Staff Writer - Zoey is a gaming gadabout. She got her start blogging with the community in 2018 and hit the front page soon after. Normally found exploring indie experiments and retro libraries, she does her best to remain chronically uncool.