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* ArtEvolution:
** Both with in-game rendering and ''especially'' the cutscenes. Just look at ''Tekken 1'''s incredibly blocky "humans" that simply didn't move naturally at all, to ''2'' upping the ante several notches within only ''nine months''; even if they were still notably blocky, they at least moved more like people. ''3'' then jumped leaps and bounds beyond that, and by the time the series hit the [=PS2=] and a new generation of arcade hardware, it never looked back.
** Similarly, the visual styles of the characters themselves have notably changed. Even beyond CostumeEvolution, someone like Jin carries his core appearance from ''3'' all the way to to ''8'', but has subsequently been enhanced, refined, toned both up and down and revised subtly with each new generation of ''Tekken'', particularly with his face growing from trying to simply look "realistic" to having a stylized but distinct structure all his own. Even in the HD era, the differences between ''6'', ''7'' and ''8'' are colossal, and even recurring characters with returning costumes look notably different per game.
** Both with in-game rendering and ''especially'' the cutscenes. Just look at ''Tekken 1'''s incredibly blocky "humans" that simply didn't move naturally at all, to ''2'' upping the ante several notches within only ''nine months''; even if they were still notably blocky, they at least moved more like people. ''3'' then jumped leaps and bounds beyond that, and by the time the series hit the [=PS2=] and a new generation of arcade hardware, it never looked back.
** Similarly, the visual styles of the characters themselves have notably changed. Even beyond CostumeEvolution, someone like Jin carries his core appearance from ''3'' all the way to to ''8'', but has subsequently been enhanced, refined, toned both up and down and revised subtly with each new generation of ''Tekken'', particularly with his face growing from trying to simply look "realistic" to having a stylized but distinct structure all his own. Even in the HD era, the differences between ''6'', ''7'' and ''8'' are colossal, and even recurring characters with returning costumes look notably different per game.
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* ''Tekken'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken'' ''VideoGame/{{Tekken}}'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken 2'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken 2'' ''VideoGame/Tekken2'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken Tag Tournament'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation2) \\
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* ''Tekken Tag Tournament'' ''VideoGame/TekkenTagTournament'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation2) \\
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* ''Tekken 3'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken 3'' ''VideoGame/Tekken3'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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Heihachi appears as a VersionExclusiveContent character on the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2, UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 and UsefulNotes/Xbox360.
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Heihachi appears as a VersionExclusiveContent character on the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2, UsefulNotes/PlayStation3 Platform/PlayStation2, Platform/PlayStation3 and UsefulNotes/Xbox360.Platform/Xbox360.
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** Some of the characters have {{unblockable attack}}s that will instantly [[OneHitKill knock out your opponent]] (or leave very little health left) but performing these attacks either takes too long or is very hard to input without messing up. Kuma, for example, has a {{Fartillery}} attack that can ''[[OneHitKO immediately knock out ANY character]]''. Too bad he takes forever to perform it, and its range is tiny. In 5, the commentator will say [[StealthInsult "Oops"]] if it does connect.
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** Some of the characters have {{unblockable attack}}s that will instantly [[OneHitKill knock out your opponent]] (or leave very little health left) but performing these attacks either takes too long or is very hard to input without messing up. Kuma, for example, has a {{Fartillery}} attack that can ''[[OneHitKO immediately knock out ANY character]]''. Too bad he takes forever to perform it, and its range is tiny. In 5, ''5'', the commentator will say [[StealthInsult "Oops"]] if it does connect.
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** Chain Grabs. They're some of the most visually impressive attacks in Tekken, but each new step offers the opponent a new chance to break the grab, limiting their usefulness on someone experienced. What's worse, some chain grab breaks will cause the initiator damage when the opponent escapes.
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** Chain Grabs. They're some of the most visually impressive attacks in Tekken, ''Tekken'', but each new step offers the opponent a new chance to break the grab, limiting their usefulness on someone experienced. What's worse, some chain grab breaks will cause the initiator damage when the opponent escapes.
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* BadassArmFold: A requirement of being a Mishima, it would seem. Even then, the Kazama family and a few others partake in this frequently as well.
* BadassArmy: The Tekken Force.
* BadassBiker: Paul, Jin, Hwoarang, Nina, Lars and [[spoiler:Xiaoyu]].
* BadassArmy: The Tekken Force.
* BadassBiker: Paul, Jin, Hwoarang, Nina, Lars and [[spoiler:Xiaoyu]].
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** The first reveal trailer for Tekken 8 depicts a duel between Kazuya and Jin in the midst of a thunderstorm.
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** The first reveal trailer for Tekken 8 ''Tekken 8'' depicts a duel between Kazuya and Jin in the midst of a thunderstorm.
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* BullyingADragon: In 4, [[SmugSnake Jeff Slater,]] the current Vale Tudo champion, challenges Craig Marduk to "the biggest unofficial bout of the century." Problem is, not only is [[TheGiant Marduk]] significantly bigger than Slater, but he was a Vale Tudo champion as well. [[UseYourHead All it takes is a headbutt to bring Slater down.]]
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* BullyingADragon: In 4, ''4'', [[SmugSnake Jeff Slater,]] the current Vale Tudo champion, challenges Craig Marduk to "the biggest unofficial bout of the century." Problem is, not only is [[TheGiant Marduk]] significantly bigger than Slater, but he was a Vale Tudo champion as well. [[UseYourHead All it takes is a headbutt to bring Slater down.]]
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* ChainsawGood: Alisa Bosconovitch is built and fights with this.
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* CharacterCustomization: The past several games have allowed this to some extent with hair, clothes, items and emblems. You could conceivably make up pilots from the ''VideoGame/AceCombat'' games for example; thanks to a ton of logos from the game, with a little work Michelle and Alisa can look like reasonable [[{{Expy}} expies]] of WesternAnimation/KimPossible and Cameron from ''Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles'', or take Nina, play around with the hair and she resembles [[Franchise/ResidentEvil Jill Valentine]].
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* CharacterCustomization: The past several games have allowed this to some extent with hair, clothes, items and emblems. You could conceivably make up pilots from the ''VideoGame/AceCombat'' games for example; thanks to a ton of logos from the game, with a little work Michelle and Alisa can look like reasonable [[{{Expy}} expies]] {{exp|y}}ies of WesternAnimation/KimPossible and Cameron from ''Series/TerminatorTheSarahConnorChronicles'', or take Nina, play around with the hair and she resembles [[Franchise/ResidentEvil Jill Valentine]].
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* CoolMask: King, King II, Armor King, Armor King II, Kunimitsu, Jaycee, [[spoiler:and Michelle in her ''[[StealthPun Tag 2]]'' ending]]. And of course, who can forget the cool, ever-changing masks of Yoshimitsu?
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* CyberpunkForFlavor: The Mishima Zaibatsu and G Corporation's presences as mega-corporations whose use of robotics and bio-technology have made the world of Tekken a worse place definitely read as {{Cyberpunk}}, but it all still coexists with explicitly supernatural and wacky elements. Tekken 4's attempts at DoingInTheWizard and overall aesthetic make it the closest to straight Y2K-era cyberpunk.
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* CyberpunkForFlavor: The Mishima Zaibatsu and G Corporation's presences as mega-corporations whose use of robotics and bio-technology have made the world of Tekken a worse place definitely read as {{Cyberpunk}}, but it all still coexists with explicitly supernatural and wacky elements. Tekken 4's ''Tekken 4's'' attempts at DoingInTheWizard and overall aesthetic make it the closest to straight Y2K-era cyberpunk.
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** In Jack 6's level (Container Terminal 3) of the Scenario Campaign in 6, there's a BossInMookClothing much like this. It rarely blocks because it doesn't need to; burning through its health on Hard mode will usually drain the [[TimedMission timer]] before it can actually be brought down even with S-Class clothing (in most cases the endlessly swarming Jack bots are the real offensive threat). Most players opt to [[RailingKill just knock it into the nearby water]].
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** In Jack 6's level (Container Terminal 3) of the Scenario Campaign in 6, ''6'', there's a BossInMookClothing much like this. It rarely blocks because it doesn't need to; burning through its health on Hard mode will usually drain the [[TimedMission timer]] before it can actually be brought down even with S-Class clothing (in most cases the endlessly swarming Jack bots are the real offensive threat). Most players opt to [[RailingKill just knock it into the nearby water]].
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* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: Azazel, Devil, Ogre.
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* DirtyOldMan: Put Wang against any female (with the exception of Xiaoyu), and see for yourself. This becomes major Squick when he does it against ''Roger Jr.'' (Though in this case, it may be interpreted a desire to actually eat the kangaroos rather than any kind of attraction.)
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* DownerEnding: While Tekken endings are often ambiguous enough as to what will happen next to make it unclear if this is ever the case, with Tekken 7 having a story mode it is considering how [[spoiler:Heihachi died after it was revealed he was a Well-Intentioned Extremist, Kazuya is more of a devil than ever, Jin is still recovering from the events of Tekken 6, and Akuma couldn't fulfill Kazumi's dying wish.]]
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* DownerEnding: While Tekken ''Tekken'' endings are often ambiguous enough as to what will happen next to make it unclear if this is ever the case, with Tekken 7 ''Tekken 7'' having a story mode it is considering how [[spoiler:Heihachi died after it was revealed he was a Well-Intentioned Extremist, Kazuya is more of a devil than ever, Jin is still recovering from the events of Tekken 6, ''Tekken 6'', and Akuma couldn't fulfill Kazumi's dying wish.]]
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** The game speed is slower and there is no sidestepping of any kind. Sidestepping was added for Kazuya in ''Tekken 2'' and for every character in Tekken 3 onward.
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** The game speed is slower and there is no sidestepping of any kind. Sidestepping was added for Kazuya in ''Tekken 2'' and for every character in Tekken 3 ''Tekken 3'' onward.
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** The biggest case of Fanservice in ''Tekken Tag Tournament 2'' is not portraits or win poses... After Capcom, with Videogame/StreetfighterXTekken including DLC that cost several times the price of the game, Katsuhiro Harada promised all character and stage specific DLC would be free... and he delivered, while throwing in revealing swimsuits for nearly everyone.
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** The biggest case of Fanservice in ''Tekken Tag Tournament 2'' is not portraits or win poses... After Capcom, with Videogame/StreetfighterXTekken ''VideoGame/StreetfighterXTekken'' including DLC that cost several times the price of the game, Katsuhiro Harada promised all character and stage specific DLC would be free... and he delivered, while throwing in revealing swimsuits for nearly everyone.
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*** In [=TTT2=] the only females without jiggle physics are: Angel, Leo, Lili, and Christie. However, they all gain jiggle physics with alternate costumes except Leo.
** In Tekken 7, several female characters have alternate costume options that alter their figures. The already buxom Eliza, for example, has her chest nearly double in size.
** In Tekken 7, several female characters have alternate costume options that alter their figures. The already buxom Eliza, for example, has her chest nearly double in size.
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*** In [=TTT2=] ''[=TTT2=]'' the only females without jiggle physics are: Angel, Leo, Lili, and Christie. However, they all gain jiggle physics with alternate costumes except Leo.
** InTekken 7, ''Tekken 7'', several female characters have alternate costume options that alter their figures. The already buxom Eliza, for example, has her chest nearly double in size.
** In
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** Jin uses Shito-ryu in earlier games, a fast and high style, but also has some throws from his mother and some special attacks from his dad and grandpa. He ditched Mishima style after Tekken 3 in favor of "traditional Karate", which is probably Kyokushin judging by his moveset, kata and subtle hints in his backstory[[note]]He trained at a dojo in Brisbane, a city which at the time of Tekken 4 had a famous Kyokushin school with a renowned master[[/note]]. Devil Jin still uses Jin's original style in later games, albeit with wings and laser beams.
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** Jin uses Shito-ryu in earlier games, a fast and high style, but also has some throws from his mother and some special attacks from his dad and grandpa. He ditched Mishima style after Tekken 3 ''Tekken 3'' in favor of "traditional Karate", which is probably Kyokushin judging by his moveset, kata and subtle hints in his backstory[[note]]He trained at a dojo in Brisbane, a city which at the time of Tekken 4 ''Tekken 4'' had a famous Kyokushin school with a renowned master[[/note]]. Devil Jin still uses Jin's original style in later games, albeit with wings and laser beams.
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** Kazuya was also very fond of his paternal grandfather, Jinpachi, [[DotingGrandparent who partially trained and doted on him]] as a youth before Heihachi betrayed him. By the time Kazuya had grown up, Jinpachi had been consumed by a wicked demonic power and Kazuya himself had embraced his devil persona. Thus, in Kazuya's Tekken 5 ending, he briefly holds his injured grandfather in his arms and the two recollect their happier years together...before Kazuya's eyes burn red and he flashes a Slasher Grin before finishing Jinpachi off.
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** Kazuya was also very fond of his paternal grandfather, Jinpachi, [[DotingGrandparent who partially trained and doted on him]] as a youth before Heihachi betrayed him. By the time Kazuya had grown up, Jinpachi had been consumed by a wicked demonic power and Kazuya himself had embraced his devil persona. Thus, in Kazuya's Tekken 5 ''Tekken 5'' ending, he briefly holds his injured grandfather in his arms and the two recollect their happier years together...before Kazuya's eyes burn red and he flashes a Slasher Grin before finishing Jinpachi off.
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* GenreShift: Tekken is a straight fighter, but certain minigames and modes (IE Tekken Force, Devil Within and the entirety of Tekken 6's Scenario Campaign) have translated that into a BeatEmUp.
* TheGloriousWarOfSisterlyRivalry: Nina and Anna Williams.
* TheGloriousWarOfSisterlyRivalry: Nina and Anna Williams.
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* GenreShift: Tekken is a straight fighter, but certain minigames and modes (IE Tekken Force, Devil Within and the entirety of Tekken 6's ''Tekken 6's'' Scenario Campaign) have translated that into a BeatEmUp.
* %%* TheGloriousWarOfSisterlyRivalry: Nina and Anna Williams.
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* GratuitousDiscoSequence: Tiger, so very much.
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** Season 2 of ''Tekken 7'' was headlined by Negan from ''Series/TheWalkingDead''. UnexpectedCharacter to the extremes.
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** Season 2 of ''Tekken 7'' was headlined by Negan from ''Series/TheWalkingDead''.''Series/TheWalkingDead2010''. UnexpectedCharacter to the extremes.
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** Kazuya defeating [[spoiler: Heihachi and [[TheBadGuyWins the world becoming a worse place because of it]] happened in Tekken 2 where he took over Mishima Zaibatsu and used it to try to create an independent nation, and once again in ''7'' where after killing Heihachi, he keeps the war for world domination going and is destroying the Mishima Zaibatsu.]]
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** Kazuya defeating [[spoiler: Heihachi and [[TheBadGuyWins the world becoming a worse place because of it]] happened in Tekken 2 ''Tekken 2'' where he took over Mishima Zaibatsu and used it to try to create an independent nation, and once again in ''7'' where after killing Heihachi, he keeps the war for world domination going and is destroying the Mishima Zaibatsu.]]
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* {{Jerkass}}: Kazuya, Heihachi and Bryan. Oh, boy.
* JokeCharacter: Dr. Bosconovitch and Manga/{{Gon}} in the [=PS1=] port of ''Tekken 3''. Kuma, Panda, Roger, and Alex qualify, as well, being animals.
* JokeCharacter: Dr. Bosconovitch and Manga/{{Gon}} in the [=PS1=] port of ''Tekken 3''. Kuma, Panda, Roger, and Alex qualify, as well, being animals.
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* KryptoniteIsEverywhere: Surprisingly there are at least 5 different and unrelated things that counter the devil gene in some way. [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]] since they mostly don't get used:
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* KryptoniteIsEverywhere: Surprisingly there are at least 5 different and unrelated things that counter the devil gene in some way. [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]] {{Downplayed|Trope}} since they mostly don't get used:
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* LosingYourHead: Alisa Bosconovitch. She can even ''detonate'' it and ''materialize a new one''.
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* NatureHero: Julia Chang, and Michelle Chang before her. Jun Kazama was this mixed with angelic spiritual qualities.
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** In ''Tag 2'', Angel looks a lot like actress SaoirseRonan.
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** In ''Tag 2'', Angel looks a lot like actress SaoirseRonan.Creator/SaoirseRonan.
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** For a lot of players, ''Tekken 4'' felt like a step back from ''Tekken Tag Tournament'' which had made a number of innovations and included a much larger roster. Gameplay-wise, it went for a grittier feel. It removed the characters' primary throws, added walls to the levels (which had previously been open ended), and introduced a story mode that was not hugely different to Arcade mode. The game only really had two new, non-clone characters, in the form of Steve Fox (who, being a boxer, only has punches) and Craig Marduk (who in story, killed the first Armor King, which led to old school fans instantly disliking him). Although Eddy returned to the game, it was as a second costume for a Moveset Clone, Christie, which many fans felt was demoting an innovative character. Only two pre-Tekken 3 characters not in that game returned in 4, these being Kazuya and Lee. Thankfully, Tekken 5 returned to the series' roots by re-introducing a number of the older characters and improving the gameplay of 4.
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** For a lot of players, ''Tekken 4'' felt like a step back from ''Tekken Tag Tournament'' which had made a number of innovations and included a much larger roster. Gameplay-wise, it went for a grittier feel. It removed the characters' primary throws, added walls to the levels (which had previously been open ended), and introduced a story mode that was not hugely different to Arcade mode. The game only really had two new, non-clone characters, in the form of Steve Fox (who, being a boxer, only has punches) and Craig Marduk (who in story, killed the first Armor King, which led to old school fans instantly disliking him). Although Eddy returned to the game, it was as a second costume for a Moveset Clone, Christie, which many fans felt was demoting an innovative character. Only two pre-Tekken 3 pre-''Tekken 3'' characters not in that game returned in 4, ''4'', these being Kazuya and Lee. Thankfully, Tekken 5 ''Tekken 5'' returned to the series' roots by re-introducing a number of the older characters and improving the gameplay of 4.''4''.
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* {{Ojou}}: Lili.
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* The ''Tekken'' series is known for having a pre-rendered intro movie and pre-rendered ending videos for each character.
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* RageQuit: In 7, the number of times a player quits in the middle of an online match gets tracked, and if it occurs often enough they get penalized.
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* RageQuit: In 7, ''7'', the number of times a player quits in the middle of an online match gets tracked, and if it occurs often enough they get penalized.
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** It's been done before: The Netsu system was present in the original Tag as well, albeit some combinations in that game completely prevented the Rage system from activating altogether -- [[BigBad Ogre]] is [[HeroKiller understandably]] disliked by most of the cast.
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** It's been done before: The Netsu system was present in the original Tag ''Tag'' as well, albeit some combinations in that game completely prevented the Rage system from activating altogether -- [[BigBad Ogre]] is [[HeroKiller understandably]] disliked by most of the cast.
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* SealedEvilInACan: Ogre, Jinpachi, and Azazel.
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* ShowerScene: Anna Williams gets one in her ''Tekken 2'' ending.
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* SidelinedProtagonistCrossover: [[Franchise/StreetFighter Akuma]], [[VideoGame/FatalFury Geese Howard]], and [[Series/TheWalkingDead Negan]] became {{Guest Fighter}}s in ''Tekken 7''. All of them are antagonists in the works they appear in. For the latter, [[spoiler:his characterization is taken from before he starts [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold mellowing out]] in Season 9, which began just a couple of months after his inclusion's announcement in [[TournamentPlay EVO]] 2018]].
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* SidelinedProtagonistCrossover: [[Franchise/StreetFighter Akuma]], [[VideoGame/FatalFury Geese Howard]], and [[Series/TheWalkingDead [[Series/TheWalkingDead2010 Negan]] became {{Guest Fighter}}s in ''Tekken 7''. All of them are antagonists in the works they appear in. For the latter, [[spoiler:his characterization is taken from before he starts [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold mellowing out]] in Season 9, which began just a couple of months after his inclusion's announcement in [[TournamentPlay EVO]] 2018]].
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* TheStoic: Sergei Dragunov. Nina as well, to a certain extent.
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* {{Stripperiffic}}: Christie and Zafina. ''7'' adds Katarina and Master Raven.
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* TragicHero: Jin. BeingGoodSucks ''big time'' if you're a Mishima.
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* WeaponizedBall: Perhaps the entire point of ''Tekken Ball''.
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* WhamShot: For ''7: Fated Retribution'': Remember how Kazumi met with someone in the VERY FIRST trailer, a sequence revisited several times afterwards? [[spoiler:[[Franchise/StreetFighter Street Fighter's]] Akuma is that figure, and he had been making a promise to Kazumi to kill Heihachi and Kazuya all those years ago]].
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* WhamShot: For ''7: Fated Retribution'': Remember how Kazumi met with someone in the VERY FIRST trailer, a sequence revisited several times afterwards? [[spoiler:[[Franchise/StreetFighter Street Fighter's]] [[spoiler:Franchise/StreetFighter's Akuma is that figure, and he had been making a promise to Kazumi to kill Heihachi and Kazuya all those years ago]].
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* AllLoveIsUnrequited: There's Kuma for Panda, Ganryu for Michelle, and later her replacement Julia, and Xiaoyu for Jin.
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* AllLoveIsUnrequited: There's Kuma for Panda, Ganryu for Michelle, and later her replacement Julia, and Xiaoyu for Jin.Jin (until ''8'' where Jin likely returns these feelings)
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* BadassBiker: Paul, Jin, Hwoarang, Nina and Lars.
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* BadassBiker: Paul, Jin, Hwoarang, Nina Nina, Lars and Lars.[[spoiler:Xiaoyu]].
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* ''Tekken 6'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}) \\
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* ''Tekken 6'' ''VideoGame/Tekken6'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}) \\
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''VideoGame/StreetFighterXTekken'', a {{crossover}} with ''Franchise/StreetFighter'' was released in 2012, this game had gameplay based on Street Fighter but featured a full roster of ''Tekken'' characters. A follow-up with Tekken-style gameplay titled ''Tekken X Street Fighter'' was announced alongside ''Street Fighter X Tekken'', but it fell into DevelopmentHell and was left as {{Vaporware}}.
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* ''Tekken'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation) (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken 2'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken 2'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation) (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken 3'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation) \\
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* ''Tekken 3'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation) (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation) \\
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** ''Tekken Advance'' (UsefulNotes/GameBoyAdvance) \\
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** ''Tekken Advance'' (UsefulNotes/GameBoyAdvance) (Platform/GameBoyAdvance) \\
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%%* ''Tekken Card Challenge'' (UsefulNotes/WonderSwan) \\
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%%* ''Tekken Card Challenge'' (UsefulNotes/WonderSwan) (Platform/WonderSwan) \\
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* ''Tekken Tag Tournament'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation2) \\
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* ''Tekken Tag Tournament'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation2) (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation2) \\
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** ''Tekken Tag Tournament HD'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStation3) \\
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** ''Tekken Tag Tournament HD'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStation3) (Platform/PlayStation3) \\
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* ''VideoGame/Tekken4'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation2) \\
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* ''VideoGame/Tekken4'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation2) (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation2) \\
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* ''VideoGame/Tekken5'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation2) \\
to:
* ''VideoGame/Tekken5'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation2) (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation2) \\
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** ''Tekken 5: Dark Resurrection'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStationPortable[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken: Dark Resurrection''" on PSP.[[/note]] \\
to:
** ''Tekken 5: Dark Resurrection'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStationPortable[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3)[[note]]Released (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStationPortable[=/=]Platform/PlayStation3)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken: Dark Resurrection''" on PSP.[[/note]] \\
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* ''Death by Degrees'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStation2) \\
to:
* ''Death by Degrees'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStation2) (Platform/PlayStation2) \\
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** ''Tekken 6: Bloodline Rebellion'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3[=/=]UsefulNotes/{{Xbox 360}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStationPortable)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken 6''" on console.[[/note]] \\
to:
** ''Tekken 6: Bloodline Rebellion'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3[=/=]UsefulNotes/{{Xbox 360}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStationPortable)[[note]]Released (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation3[=/=]Platform/{{Xbox 360}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStationPortable)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken 6''" on console.[[/note]] \\
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** ''Tekken 3D: Prime Edition'' (UsefulNotes/Nintendo3DS) \\
to:
** ''Tekken 3D: Prime Edition'' (UsefulNotes/Nintendo3DS) (Platform/Nintendo3DS) \\
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** ''Tekken Tag Tournament 2 Prologue'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStation3) \\
to:
** ''Tekken Tag Tournament 2 Prologue'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStation3) (Platform/PlayStation3) \\
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** ''Tekken Tag Tournament 2: Unlimited'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3[=/=]UsefulNotes/Xbox360[=/=]UsefulNotes/WiiU)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken Tag Tournament 2''" on console.[[/note]] \\
to:
** ''Tekken Tag Tournament 2: Unlimited'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3[=/=]UsefulNotes/Xbox360[=/=]UsefulNotes/WiiU)[[note]]Released (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation3[=/=]Platform/Xbox360[=/=]Platform/WiiU)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken Tag Tournament 2''" on console.[[/note]] \\
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** ''Tekken Revolution'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStationNetwork) \\
to:
** ''Tekken Revolution'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStationNetwork) (Platform/PlayStationNetwork) \\
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** ''Tekken 7: Fated Retribution'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation4[=/=]UsefulNotes/XboxOne[=/=]PC)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken 7''" on console/PC.[[/note]] \\
to:
** ''Tekken 7: Fated Retribution'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation4[=/=]UsefulNotes/XboxOne[=/=]PC)[[note]]Released (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]Platform/PlayStation4[=/=]Platform/XboxOne[=/=]PC)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken 7''" on console/PC.[[/note]] \\
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* ''VideoGame/Tekken8'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStation5[=/=]UsefulNotes/XboxSeriesXAndS[=/=]PC)[[/index]]\\
to:
* ''VideoGame/Tekken8'' (UsefulNotes/PlayStation5[=/=]UsefulNotes/XboxSeriesXAndS[=/=]PC)[[/index]]\\(Platform/PlayStation5[=/=]Platform/XboxSeriesXAndS[=/=]PC)[[/index]]\\
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Tekken 8 story trailer
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* BadassBiker: Paul, Jin, Hwoarang, and Nina.
to:
* BadassBiker: Paul, Jin, Hwoarang, Nina and Nina.Lars.
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* BigBad: Heihachi in the first, third (with Ogre), and fourth games, Kazuya in the second and seventh, Jinpachi in the fifth, Jin and Azazel in the sixth. Basically, anyone who takes over the Mishima Zaibatsu becomes the BigBad.
to:
* BigBad: Heihachi in the first, third (with Ogre), and fourth games, Kazuya in the second and seventh, eighth, Jinpachi in the fifth, Jin and Azazel in the sixth. Basically, anyone who takes over the Mishima Zaibatsu becomes the BigBad.
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** Jun wanted to save Kazuya from Devil back in ''2'' but ultimately failed. Xiaoyu is trying to make Jin see the error of his way and become the man he used to be.
to:
** Jun wanted to save Kazuya from Devil back in ''2'' but ultimately failed.''2'', and is still continuing it come ''8''. Xiaoyu is trying to make Jin see the error of his way and become the man he used to be.
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** The world war precipitated by Jin in ''6'' creates a number of these in-story. Lars and other rebellious Tekken Force members are one example. Miguel is also the leader of another according to the Scenario Campaign.
to:
** The world war precipitated by Jin in ''6'' creates a number of these in-story. Lars and other rebellious Tekken Force members are one example. Miguel is also the leader Hwoarang and Baek are leaders of another according to the Scenario Campaign.Campaign, with Miguel being a member of it.
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** The seventh currently has Eddy (against Kazuya), Lili (against Asuka) and Miguel (against Jin).
to:
** The seventh currently has Eddy (against Kazuya), Lili (against Asuka) and Miguel (against Jin).Jin).
** The eighth currently has Feng (against Leroy).
** The eighth currently has Feng (against Leroy).
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** The first game used the same cheery tune for all its endings, including Kazuya's where he tosses his father down a cliff.
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** Season 2 of ''Tekken 7'' was headlined by Negan from ''Series/TheWalkingDead''. UnexpectedCharacter to the extremes,
* HardTruthAesop: Jin's actions in ''Tekken 6'' serve as a lesson that even if you have good intentions behind them, it doesn't always mean the methods of doing said things are the right ones. During his time as the CEO of the Mishima Zaibatsu, he declares WorldWarIII to cause as much chaos as possible to awaken Azazel, the source of the Devil Gene. He intends to get a MutualKill, but instead it [[AllForNothing ends up in failure]]. He becomes [[YouAreWhatYouHate just as reviled as his father and grandfather, two people he loathes as a result]] earning contempt from people like Miguel, and is forced to live with the consequences for the rest of his life even though that goal of his was a noble one.
* HardTruthAesop: Jin's actions in ''Tekken 6'' serve as a lesson that even if you have good intentions behind them, it doesn't always mean the methods of doing said things are the right ones. During his time as the CEO of the Mishima Zaibatsu, he declares WorldWarIII to cause as much chaos as possible to awaken Azazel, the source of the Devil Gene. He intends to get a MutualKill, but instead it [[AllForNothing ends up in failure]]. He becomes [[YouAreWhatYouHate just as reviled as his father and grandfather, two people he loathes as a result]] earning contempt from people like Miguel, and is forced to live with the consequences for the rest of his life even though that goal of his was a noble one.
to:
** Season 2 of ''Tekken 7'' was headlined by Negan from ''Series/TheWalkingDead''. UnexpectedCharacter to the extremes,
extremes.
* HardTruthAesop: Jin's actions in ''Tekken 6'' serve as a lesson that even if you have good intentions behind them, it doesn'talways mean the methods of justify doing bad actions, especially when these said things are the right ones.actions comes to other people's expenses. During his time as the CEO of the Mishima Zaibatsu, he declares WorldWarIII to cause as much chaos as possible to awaken Azazel, the source of the Devil Gene. He intends to get a MutualKill, but instead it [[AllForNothing ends up in failure]]. He becomes [[YouAreWhatYouHate just as reviled as his father and grandfather, two people he loathes as a result]] because it causes many people to die, earning contempt from people like Miguel, and Jin is forced to live with the consequences for the rest of his life even though that goal of his was a noble one.
* HardTruthAesop: Jin's actions in ''Tekken 6'' serve as a lesson that even if you have good intentions behind them, it doesn't
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** Season 2 of ''Tekken 7'' was headlined by Negan from ''Series/TheWalkingDead''. UnexpectedCharacter to the extreme.
to:
** Season 2 of ''Tekken 7'' was headlined by Negan from ''Series/TheWalkingDead''. UnexpectedCharacter to the extreme.extremes,
* HardTruthAesop: Jin's actions in ''Tekken 6'' serve as a lesson that even if you have good intentions behind them, it doesn't always mean the methods of doing said things are the right ones. During his time as the CEO of the Mishima Zaibatsu, he declares WorldWarIII to cause as much chaos as possible to awaken Azazel, the source of the Devil Gene. He intends to get a MutualKill, but instead it [[AllForNothing ends up in failure]]. He becomes [[YouAreWhatYouHate just as reviled as his father and grandfather, two people he loathes as a result]] earning contempt from people like Miguel, and is forced to live with the consequences for the rest of his life even though that goal of his was a noble one.
* HardTruthAesop: Jin's actions in ''Tekken 6'' serve as a lesson that even if you have good intentions behind them, it doesn't always mean the methods of doing said things are the right ones. During his time as the CEO of the Mishima Zaibatsu, he declares WorldWarIII to cause as much chaos as possible to awaken Azazel, the source of the Devil Gene. He intends to get a MutualKill, but instead it [[AllForNothing ends up in failure]]. He becomes [[YouAreWhatYouHate just as reviled as his father and grandfather, two people he loathes as a result]] earning contempt from people like Miguel, and is forced to live with the consequences for the rest of his life even though that goal of his was a noble one.
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spelling/grammar fix(es), added example(s), general clarification on works content
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tekkentropes_7037.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''The'' BigScrewedUpFamily. [[note]]From left: [[EvilOldFolks Heihachi Mishima]], [[AntiHero Jin Kazama]], and [[DemonOfHumanOrigin Kazuya Mishima]].[[/note]]]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''The'' BigScrewedUpFamily. [[note]]From left: [[EvilOldFolks Heihachi Mishima]], [[AntiHero Jin Kazama]], and [[DemonOfHumanOrigin Kazuya Mishima]].[[/note]]]]
to:
[[caption-width-right:350:''The'' BigScrewedUpFamily.
[[caption-width-right:487:Taking the BigScrewedUpFamily to its [[SerialEscalation logical extremes]] since 1994. [[note]]From left: [[EvilOldFolks Heihachi Mishima]],
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Deleted line(s) 210 (click to see context) :
* CatchPhrase: "Get ready for the next battle" by the announcer during the VS screen, starting from ''5'' and has stayed ever since (the phrase itself originally appears in ''4'' but is unspoken). Snoop Dogg also opens his "Knock Em Down" rap in his ''Tag 2'' stage with this phrase.
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* CharacterCatchphrase: "Get ready for the next battle" by the announcer during the VS screen, starting from ''5'' and has stayed ever since (the phrase itself originally appears in ''4'' but is unspoken). Snoop Dogg also opens his "Knock Em Down" rap in his ''Tag 2'' stage with this phrase.
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Bonus Boss is a disambiguation
Changed line(s) 252 (click to see context) from:
** [[BonusBoss NANCY-MI847J]] in ''T6: BR''.
to:
** [[BonusBoss NANCY-MI847J]] [=NANCY-MI847J=] in ''T6: BR''.
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** The conflict between the Williams sisters received this. In ''Tekken 1'' and ''2'', it was mostly just Nina playing mean pranks on Anna (stealing one of her shoes in Ninas T1 ending, taking nude Polaroids of her getting out of the shower in Anna's T2 ending). By the time Tekken Tag and Tekken 4 rolled around, it had shifted to the two of them attempting to outright murder each other.
to:
** The conflict between the Williams sisters received this. In ''Tekken 1'' and ''2'', it was mostly just Nina playing mean pranks on Anna (stealing one of her shoes in Ninas T1 ending, taking nude Polaroids of her getting out of the shower in Anna's T2 ending). By the time Tekken Tag and Tekken 4 rolled around, it had shifted to the two of them attempting to outright murder each other. Though it's worth noting Anna's Japanese profile from ''2'' says that they're trying to kill each other by then, so what got Flanderized is how they do nothing but try to kill each other in later games.
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* HistoryRepeats:
** Heihachi deals with this a lot, betraying his sons and grandsons, which leads to them disowning him at best, and wanting him dead at worst. Twice the Mishima Zaibatsu was taken from him and he had to take it back. [[spoiler: Twice Kazuya threw him off a high place to kill him (A cliff in ''1'', a volcano in ''7''), and the second one succeeded.]]
** Kazuya defeating [[spoiler: Heihachi and [[TheBadGuyWins the world becoming a worse place because of it]] happened in Tekken 2 where he took over Mishima Zaibatsu and used it to try to create an independent nation, and once again in ''7'' where after killing Heihachi, he keeps the war for world domination going and is destroying the Mishima Zaibatsu.]]
** Jun wanted to save Kazuya from Devil back in ''2'' but ultimately failed. Xiaoyu is trying to make Jin see the error of his way and become the man he used to be.
** In ''1'', Paul defeated the first Kuma, but didn't have the strength needed to continue in the tournament. In ''5'', he managed to defeat the second Kuma, but once again didn't have the strength needed to continue in the tournament.
** In ''2'', Kunimitsu wants to steal Yoshimitsu's sword for her dying grandfather as he wants to make a sword as precious as it. In ''7'' the second Kunimitsu wants to steal Yoshimitsu's sword to give to her dying mother, who is the first Kunimitsu, as she never managed to steal the sword to cheer her up. Both times they failed.
** In ''2'' Michelle's mother was kidnapped by Kazuya so he can get Michelle's pendant, which forced Michelle to participate in the tournament to save her mother. In ''3'', Michelle herself was kidnapped by Heihachi to get Michelle's pendant, forcing Julia to participate in the tournament to save her.
** Nina's and Anna's rivalry is full of this. Anna once in a while tries to be the one to make a truce, but Nina generally does something to keep it going. It's at its worst in ''7'' where Anna was sick of fighting, met someone, was about to get married, then Nina killed the groom and now Anna hates her more than ever.
** Paul is a bike riding arrogant character who was once rival of Kazuya, who doesn't care about him. Hwoarang is a bike riding arrogant character who's Jin's rival, who would rather not deal with him.
** Heihachi deals with this a lot, betraying his sons and grandsons, which leads to them disowning him at best, and wanting him dead at worst. Twice the Mishima Zaibatsu was taken from him and he had to take it back. [[spoiler: Twice Kazuya threw him off a high place to kill him (A cliff in ''1'', a volcano in ''7''), and the second one succeeded.]]
** Kazuya defeating [[spoiler: Heihachi and [[TheBadGuyWins the world becoming a worse place because of it]] happened in Tekken 2 where he took over Mishima Zaibatsu and used it to try to create an independent nation, and once again in ''7'' where after killing Heihachi, he keeps the war for world domination going and is destroying the Mishima Zaibatsu.]]
** Jun wanted to save Kazuya from Devil back in ''2'' but ultimately failed. Xiaoyu is trying to make Jin see the error of his way and become the man he used to be.
** In ''1'', Paul defeated the first Kuma, but didn't have the strength needed to continue in the tournament. In ''5'', he managed to defeat the second Kuma, but once again didn't have the strength needed to continue in the tournament.
** In ''2'', Kunimitsu wants to steal Yoshimitsu's sword for her dying grandfather as he wants to make a sword as precious as it. In ''7'' the second Kunimitsu wants to steal Yoshimitsu's sword to give to her dying mother, who is the first Kunimitsu, as she never managed to steal the sword to cheer her up. Both times they failed.
** In ''2'' Michelle's mother was kidnapped by Kazuya so he can get Michelle's pendant, which forced Michelle to participate in the tournament to save her mother. In ''3'', Michelle herself was kidnapped by Heihachi to get Michelle's pendant, forcing Julia to participate in the tournament to save her.
** Nina's and Anna's rivalry is full of this. Anna once in a while tries to be the one to make a truce, but Nina generally does something to keep it going. It's at its worst in ''7'' where Anna was sick of fighting, met someone, was about to get married, then Nina killed the groom and now Anna hates her more than ever.
** Paul is a bike riding arrogant character who was once rival of Kazuya, who doesn't care about him. Hwoarang is a bike riding arrogant character who's Jin's rival, who would rather not deal with him.
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** The ''Tag 2'' stage Coastline Sunset - set in the Philippines - features ads for Filipino arcade chains Quantum and Timezone.
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%%* ''Tekken Card Challenge'' (UsefulNotes/WonderSwan) \\
%%Released in 1999.
%%Released in 1999.
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** ''Tekken Tag Tournament 2: Unlimited'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3[=/=]UsefulNotes/{{Xbox 360}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/WiiU)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken Tag Tournament 2''" on console.[[/note]] \\
to:
** ''Tekken Tag Tournament 2: Unlimited'' (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3[=/=]UsefulNotes/{{Xbox 360}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/WiiU)[[note]]Released (UsefulNotes/{{Arcade|Game}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/PlayStation3[=/=]UsefulNotes/Xbox360[=/=]UsefulNotes/WiiU)[[note]]Released as "''Tekken Tag Tournament 2''" on console.[[/note]] \\
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** ''Tekken Revolution'' (UsefulNotes/{{PlayStation Network}}) \\
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** ''Tekken Revolution'' (UsefulNotes/{{PlayStation Network}}) (UsefulNotes/PlayStationNetwork) \\
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%%* ''Tekken Mobile'' (UsefulNotes/{{iOS|Games}}[=/=]UsefulNotes/{{Android|Games}}) \\
%%Released in 2018.
%%Released in 2018.
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I changed details around Heihachi conceiving Lars because the troper who wrote it mixed 6 and 7. 7 is the one that says Heihachi only conceived Lars to confirm he doesn't have the devil gene, while in 6 he talks like he had his suspicions that the Swedish woman may have had his kid but he wasn't sure, and definitely didn't know the supposed kid was Lars. Also removed the detail about Heihachi having an affair with that woman, Lars is like 20 years younger than Kazuya, Kazumi was dead for around 15 years by the time Lars was conceived, it's not an affair by any standard.
** To be specific, ''5'' happens two months after ''4'', ''6'' happens six months after ''5'', and ''7'' happens at best ''weeks'' after ''6''. ''8'' happens six months after ''7'', and Jun's profile mentions that Ogre's attack happened seven years ago, when back in ''6'' it was still six years ago, so a full year has passed since ''Tekken 4'', after 22 real life years...
* DemotedToExtra: Happened to the tournament itself to the point it may have become TheArtifact. From ''1'' to ''5'' the tournament is what gave Mishimas a chance to settle their current conflict with each other (Or in ''3's'' case, to allow Jin to fight Ogre), but then the war started in ''6'' and the tournament is so pointless to the main plot that it's not even referenced in Scenario Campaign since neither Lars or Alisa participated on it (Since there's no hints they joined it and they can't be picked in Arena mode). ''7'' also doesn't even hint who won the sixth tournament, or if the tournament even kept going to reach the finals.
** And speaking of ''7'', [[spoiler:the only reason why Heihachi even started that tournament was just as a PR stunt, to use it to reveal Kazuya as someone who has Devil powers, but once Akuma shows up, derails the plot and Heihachi is seemingly killed, the tournament gets cancelled, and that doesn't affect the plot at all. At this point it's clear the tournament is only still around for the characters not involved with the Mishima conflict to even have a story to begin with, so it still has a point, but it's not as important as before]].
** And speaking of ''7'', [[spoiler:the only reason why Heihachi even started that tournament was just as a PR stunt, to use it to reveal Kazuya as someone who has Devil powers, but once Akuma shows up, derails the plot and Heihachi is seemingly killed, the tournament gets cancelled, and that doesn't affect the plot at all. At this point it's clear the tournament is only still around for the characters not involved with the Mishima conflict to even have a story to begin with, so it still has a point, but it's not as important as before]].
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** And why does Heihachi conceive Lars with an unknown Swedish woman? In ''6'', it was because Hei wanted to make sure he didn't have the Devil Gene in his body (if Lars developed a Devil form like Kaz had before him, it would point Hei as the source of the gene). But in ''7'' it's revealed that [[spoiler:the Devil Gene's source was Kazumi Hachijo, Heihachi's late wife, and that not only he knew this well, he also killed his own wife in self-defense after she attacked him in her Devil form, and later he tried to kill Kazuya as well before the boy developed a Devil form too]]. So, if Hei knew this information all along, why did he get into an affair to conceive Lars, anyway?
to:
** And why does Heihachi conceive Lars with an unknown Swedish woman? In ''6'', it it's talked like Heihachi had sex with that woman in a mission in Scandivania, and [[https://youtu.be/XYyyYtZdbr8?t=2539 Heihachi he didn't even know about Lars]], but had his suspicions about the woman getting pregnant. But in ''7'' it's talked like [[spoiler: Lars was conceived because Hei wanted to make sure he didn't have the Devil Gene in his body (if Lars developed a Devil form like Kaz had before him, it would point Hei as the source of the gene). But in ''7'' it's revealed problem is that [[spoiler:the this is the same game that reveals the Devil Gene's source was Kazumi Hachijo, Heihachi's late wife, and that not only he knew this well, he also killed his own wife in self-defense after she attacked him in her Devil form, and later he tried to kill Kazuya as well before the boy developed a Devil form too]]. too. So, if Hei knew this information all along, [[VoodooShark why did he get into an affair decide to conceive Lars, anyway?anyway?]] And considering that Kazumi was killed when Kazuya was 5, and Lars is about 20 years younger than Kazuya, even if Heihachi suspected Devil Gene is contagious, [[VoodooShark why did he wait around 15 years to confirm if he has it?]]]]
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Fan speak tropes aren't allowed.
Deleted line(s) 179 (click to see context) :
* {{Bishonen}}: Lee Chaolan, Hwoarang, Steve Fox, Claudio. The most prominent one in the series, of course, is Jin. Being fighters, though, they are also quite buff ([[HeroicBuild Jin especially]]).
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** Xiaoyu’s stage in ''Tekken 3'' and ''Tekken Tag Tournament'' was set in Namco’s amusement parks, Wonder Eggs 2 and Wonder Eggs 3, respectively.
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Changed line(s) 66 (click to see context) from:
* ''Film/{{Tekken}}'' (2010)[[/index]]\\
to:
* ''Film/{{Tekken}}'' ''Film/{{Tekken|2010}}'' (2010)[[/index]]\\
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The series' many, many characters can all be found [[Characters/{{Tekken}} here.]]
to:
The series' many, many characters can all be found [[Characters/{{Tekken}} here.]]
here]].
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** From ''Videogame/{{Tekken}} 6'' and onwards during the Namco Bandai logo. It shows Jin and Kazuya about CrossCounter but the screen [[SmashToBlack smashes to black]] at the last second.
to:
** From ''Videogame/{{Tekken}} ''Tekken 6'' and onwards during the Namco Bandai logo. It shows Jin and Kazuya about CrossCounter but the screen [[SmashToBlack smashes to black]] at the last second.
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Changed line(s) 73 (click to see context) from:
A six-episode Creator/{{Netflix}} anime focusing on Jin Kazama's origin.
to:
A six-episode Creator/{{Netflix}} anime focusing on Jin Kazama's origin.origin and loosely adapts the events of ''Tekken 3''.
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Changed line(s) 61,62 (click to see context) from:
Set to release in 2024, it will be the first ''Tekken'' installment to release for ninth gen consoles, and seemingly, the first mainline installment that bypasses arcades completely in favor of home consoles. Introduces the Heat system, a franchise-first SuperMode that powers up a character’s moveset and encourages aggressive play. Total playable characters: 32.
to:
Set to release in 2024, it will be the first ''Tekken'' installment to release for ninth gen consoles, and seemingly, the first mainline installment that bypasses arcades completely in favor of home consoles. Introduces the Heat system, a franchise-first SuperMode that switches and powers up a character’s moveset and encourages aggressive play. Total playable characters: 32.
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Trope cut per TRS
Deleted line(s) 531 (click to see context) :
* PandaingToTheAudience: Xiaoyu's pet panda, Panda.
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* RuleOfCool: Realistically, certain characters like Alex, [[BearsAreBadNews Kuma]], [[PandaingToTheAudience Panda]], [[KangaroosRepresentAustralia Roger Jr.]], [[CoolSword Yoshimitsu]], [[KillerRobot Jack]] and [[ChainsawGood Alisa]] should not have been allowed into fighting tournaments alongside humans, for the simple reason that they'd kill all of their opponents within seconds. Then again, who cares about being realistic when you can pit a panda bear against a kangaroo?
to:
* RuleOfCool: Realistically, certain characters like Alex, [[BearsAreBadNews Kuma]], [[PandaingToTheAudience Panda]], Panda, [[KangaroosRepresentAustralia Roger Jr.]], [[CoolSword Yoshimitsu]], [[KillerRobot Jack]] and [[ChainsawGood Alisa]] should not have been allowed into fighting tournaments alongside humans, for the simple reason that they'd kill all of their opponents within seconds. Then again, who cares about being realistic when you can pit a panda bear against a kangaroo?
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Changed line(s) 61,62 (click to see context) from:
, it will be the first ''Tekken'' installment to release for ninth gen consoles, and seemingly, the first mainline installment that bypasses arcades completely in favor of home consoles. Introduces the Heat system, a franchise-first SuperMode that powers up a character’s moveset and encourages aggressive play. Total playable characters: 32.
to: