| Virtua Fighter HD Collection | |
|---|---|
| Developer(s) | M2 Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio |
| Publisher(s) | Sega |
| Series | Virtua Fighter |
| Platform(s) | PlayStation 4 PlayStation 5 Xbox One Xbox Series X Nintendo Switch PC |
| Release date(s) | Worldwide: October 25th, 2025 |
| Genre(s) | Fighting |
| Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
| Rating(s) | ESRB: T (Teen) PEGI: 12 CERO: B |
Virtua Fighter HD Collection is a video game compilation released for the PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Nintendo Switch and PC (via Steam). It includes all the Virtua Fighter games alongside it's spin-offs and other fighting games from AM2. The collection was released worldwide on October 2025 to coincide with the original arcade game's 32th anniversary. It was developed by Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio and M2, which also worked on SEGA 3D Classics and SEGA AGES ports on Nintendo 3DS/Switch respectively.
Features[]
All games in the collection can be played online (with rollback netcode and matchmaking, including rank matches, tournaments and replay sharing) to fight against other players around the world in addition to having a variety of subtitles in different kinds of languages.
All of the games would be remastered and tweaked as well.
The special edition package also comes with a DVD box set with all 35 episodes of the anime series (both Japanese/English and new dubs, as well as subtitles using other languages).
Included Games[]
- Virtua Fighter (1993)
- Virtua Fighter Remix (1995)
- Virtua Fighter 2 (1994)
- Virtua Fighter 2.1 (1995)
- Fighting Vipers (1995)
- Virtua Fighter Kids (1996)
- Fighters Megamix (1996)
- Virtua Fighter 3 (1996)
- Virtua Fighter 3tb (1997)
- Virtua Fighter Animation (1996)
- Last Bronx (1996)
- Sonic the Fighters (1996)
- Fighting Vipers 2 (1998)
- Virtua Fighter 4 (2001)
- Virtua Fighter 4: Evolution (2002)
- Virtua Fighter 4: Final Tuned (2004)
- Virtua Fighter 5 (2006)
- Virtua Fighter 5 R (2008)
- Virtua Fighter 5 Final Showdown (2010)
Extras/Bonus Features[]
- Various gameplay tips, especially for those who are new to the franchise.
- The ability for players to customize the games' controls and soundtracks.
- The ability to change between Japanese and international (North America/Latin America or Europe/Australia/Oceania/Africa/India/Asia) versions, while at the same time, featuring a variety of subtitles in different kinds of languages.
- Arcade-quality graphics with enhanced options for higher resolution visuals,and filter/screen settings for those who want an authentic arcade feel or a modern touch.
- The hub world similar to M2's older SEGA collections released on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, with a UI's look and feel of retro Japanese arcades and households.
- A robust museum mode that includes various material (like those in Dreamcast's Virtua Fighter History/VF4), such as:
- Official artwork, design documents, promotional content and rare artwork by the legendary artist, Katsuya Tera.
- Beta elements, behind-the-scenes videos of each game and tournament footage from the VFR Tournament series.
- A series of in-depth interviews with developers involved in the series like Yu Suzuki, Daichi Katagiri, Seiichi Ishii and Takenobu Mitsuyoshi, and even insight from top competitive players/members from the fighting game community.
- Character profiles, as well as profiles for the stages featured within the series.
- A unique interactive history/timeline allows the player to browse through the series' history and see how it has evolved.
- Remastered videos from Virtua Fighter 3tb, including a ending scene and "History Mode" (which shows how the first three games for the franchise were made).
- An expansive challenge mode with replays and leaderboards.
- A training mode for all the games, functioning similarly to those of VF4 and VF5's home console releases.
- Customization modes for Virtua Fighter 4: Evolution and VF5 titles from their home console releases.
- "Save States" allows the player to save their progress in single-player modes and resume at any time for any of the games.