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Here are six beat ’em ups that, against all odds, still hold up today.
6) Gekido: Urban Fighters

Gekido: Urban Fighters has a few things working in its favor. Most notably, Marvel comic book artist Joe Madureira contributed some art to the project. He later went on to work on Darksiders, which is an excellent hack-and-slash game. Gekido also had Fatboy Slim and Apartment 26 create some music. That could be a negative for non-fans of those artists, but it works for this very 2000s video game.
The Urban Fighters mode is where you’ll find the Streets of Rage-like gameplay. You can also jump into the various other modes, which are more like a traditional fighting game, but the main story mode is where you’ll spend most of your time. Gekido doesn’t break much new ground, but it’s a solid take on the classic genre.
5) Captain Commando

Captain Commando hit arcades in 1991. The Super Nintendo got a port in 1995, which introduced several limitations to get it to run on the 16-bit systems. Thankfully, the PlayStation received a port in 1998. It doesn’t bring back everything, but it is much closer to the original arcade release.
The only bad news, depending on where you lived at the time, is that Captain Commando‘s PS1 port only came out in Japan. That makes it slightly less attractive for modern audiences because it’s now pretty easy to pick up the arcade version for your PC. Still, it was a great beat ’em up for the PlayStation, so it deserves a spot on this list.
4) Crisis Beat

Bandai’s Crisis Beat takes place on a cruise liner, which is a fun setting that we haven’t really seen in many other beat ’em ups. The ship has been hijacked by terrorists, and you have to jump into hand-to-hand fisticuffs to save the day. There are four different characters to pick from, and you can add a friend to the mix if you’re lucky enough to have one.
What’s really working in Crisis Beat‘s favor is that it only uses two buttons for combat. That makes learning its combos relatively simple, so almost anyone can pick it up. It did get a 2013 re-release on the PlayStation Network, but it still isn’t the easiest game to get your hands on these days.











