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Soulcalibur III
Cover of Soulcalibur III
The NTSC box art for the game, depicting characters Mitsurugi and Ivy in the background, Zasalamel in the front, and Nightmare in the logo.
Developer(s) Project Soul
Publisher(s) Namco
Designer(s) Hiroaki Yotoriyama
Picture format 480p (EDTV)
480i (SDTV)
Platform(s) PlayStation 2
Arcade
Released NA October 25, 2005
EU November 18, 2005
JP November 23, 2005
Genre(s) Fighting
Mode(s) Up to 2 players simultaneously, for up to 8 players total in a League mode
Ratings ESRB: T (Teen)
PEGI: 16+
OFLC: M
OFLC/NZ: M
CERO: 12+
USK: 12
Input methods 8-way Joystick, 6 Buttons
Cabinet Upright
Arcade system Namco System 256
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Soulcalibur Legends
Soulcalibur IV (Chronologically)

Soulcalibur III (ソウルキャリバーIII Souru Kyaribā Surī?) is the sequel to Soulcalibur II and is the fourth overall installment in the Soul series of fighting games. It was released exclusively for the PlayStation 2, unlike its predecessor Soulcalibur II, which was also released for both the Nintendo GameCube and the Xbox, with a single different guest character featuring in each version.

Soul Calibur is the name of the holy sword, created to battle the evil sword Soul Edge, around which the game's story-lines revolve. It is the second part of 1590 A.D. Trilogy storyline.

The game includes new modes such as Tales of Souls, an interactive story-driven mode comparable to Soul Edge's Edge Master Mode; Create-A-Soul Mode, in which players can create custom characters from thirteen total occupations, with multiple weapons and fighting styles; and Chronicles of the Sword, a real-time-play mode that allows players to take their created souls through adventures of their own. The game also has the largest character roster – 24 characters playable in Tales of Souls mode and an additional 18 playable in all other modes – and largest battle stage selection in the Soul series history.

Although recent generations of fighting games have supported online play, Soulcalibur III does not. The game's producer, Hiroaki Yotoriyama, has said that, "At the current time, the online infrastructure is extremely different between countries, and there's people that can not enjoy network gaming. We've decided to concentrate on improving the game's offline content and its characters so that people all over the world will be able to have fun."[1]


Features[]

SCIII

Rock fighting Nightmare.

Features in Soulcalibur III include:

Create-A-Soul[]

Create-A-Soul allows players to construct their very own characters by donning them with an assortment of clothing parts such as armor or robes. The player may also change the character's hairstyle color, eye color, skin color and facial features, ranging from young to old as well as voices. As the player completes tasks through the game, more parts can be unlocked for availability. Depending on the parts chosen, the character's alignment (good or evil) and personality (loud and brash or quiet and reserved) will change, which influences their dialogue in battle as well as their Destined Battle in Quick Play. Character construction first starts with the creation's gender, followed by their fighting style and weapon. At the start, only three are available, though seven more can be unlocked as well. 9 of the styles also contain Soul styles, which allows the character to use the same weapons and fighting style as the playable characters, save for Olcadan and Abyss. The Swordmaster style allows the creation to select all but the Soul styles.

Soul Arena[]

Contains two modes; Quick Play mode, in which the player fights through a gauntlet of opponents ending with Abyss, in the vein of the Arcade Mode of previous games; and Mission mode, in which the player chooses from a list of battles which feature unusual circumstances to overcome.

Tales of Souls[]

Choose one of the characters and lead them on a journey around the world, searching the Soul Edge. The player is given the option to choose what path the character takes, and depending on the choices made, and whether the player has lost a match, either Abyss or Night Terror will be fought as the final boss. There are also optional battles entitled 'Prepare to Defend Yourself' in which either a bonus character or unplayable character is faced; these battles may not be retried if lost, but the story progresses regardless.

Chronicles of the Sword[]

A separate storyline from the main Soul series. Players create a protagonist through the Create-A-Soul feature and goes through a series of battles in the vein of strategy RPGs such as the Fire Emblem series, with battles being resolved as traditional Soulcalibur-style matches. The characters can level up, which increases their effectiveness in these battles.

World Competition[]

Play against various pre-rendered opponents from around the world, similar to Tekken 5's Arcade Mode

Most Extra Weapons make a return from Soulcalibur II. In this installment, however, the number of extra weapons is reduced to 8 different weapons, including the two defaults for 1P and 2P, the Ultimate Weapon, Joke Weapon, and The Ancient. The system is once again changed, this time based solely on abilities; normally 2 per weapon, 4 per Ultimate, and 3 occasionally. Icons are displayed telling every effect in detail for each weapon.

There are no third character costumes presented in this installment, but to compensate there's a Color Edit mode, where the player can edit the colors out of 3, or in some cases 4, sections of a character's costume and make their own personal version of it. The parts that can be changed range from clothing to skin to hair color.

Characters[]

Nearly all characters who have been featured in a Soul series title in the past return, except for Inferno, Necrid, Seong Han-myeong, Edge Master, and the console-exclusive guest characters Heihachi, Link, and Spawn. Soulcalibur II's mimic character Charade does return, but only as an non-playable enemy character appearing on certain paths for some characters' Tales of Souls. Other unlockable characters include personnel in the Chronicles of the Sword quest, opponents from the Tales of Souls mode, and the weapon, armor, and item shop owners. Characters in bold are unlockable. The styles of all playable characters except for Olcadan and Abyss can be used in custom characters; the classes that can use these styles are listed below.

Returning Characters[]

  • Astaroth - Barbarian
  • Cassandra - Sage
  • Cervantes (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 625 times) - Pirate
  • Ivy - Pirate
  • Kilik - Monk
  • Lizardman (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 675 times) - Assassin
  • Maxi - Monk
  • Mitsurugi - Samurai
  • Nightmare - Knight, but appears as a Barbarian, maybe because of his fighting style
  • Raphael - Knight
  • Rock (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 475 times) - Gladiator
  • Seong Mi-na - Gladiator
  • Siegfried - Knight
  • Sophitia (can be unlocked by defeating her in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 525 times) - Sage
  • Taki - Ninja
  • Talim - Saint
  • Voldo - Dancer
  • Xianghua - Dancer
  • Yoshimitsu (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 425 times) - Samurai
  • Yun-seong - Thief

New Characters[]

  • Abyss (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode after unlocking Cervantes, Lizardman, Olcadan, Rock, Sophitia, and Yoshimitsu or fighting 725 times)
  • Night Terror (unplayable)
  • Olcadan (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 575 times)
  • Setsuka - Ninja
  • Tira - Assassin, Thief
  • Zasalamel - Saint

Custom disciplines/Bonus characters[]

Custom Disciplines are available to custom characters. They tend to be plainer than disciplines of main characters, mostly not involving taunts and side throws. Several weapon designs of disciplines are based upon characters that use similar weapons, usually unused weapons from Soulcalibur II. Each class also has a character representing the class. These characters must be unlocked, either by playing through Tales of Souls and Chronicles of the Sword, or by playing a certain number of matches.

A custom character with the Swordmaster job can use any of these disciplines.

  • Chinese Blade / Luna (can be unlocked by clearing Chronicle 11 of Chronicles of the Sword Mode or fighting 650 times) - Sage
  • Chinese Sword / Hwang Seong-gyeong (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 600 times) - Assassin, Pirate
  • Dagger (paired with a small bomb) / Chester (can be unlocked by clearing Chronicle 19 of Chronicles of the Sword Mode or fighting 950 times) - Saint, Thief
  • Grieve Edge (bladed shoes) / Valeria (can be unlocked by defeating her in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 700 times) - Barbarian, Dancer, Gladiator, Monk
  • Iron Sword (Zweihänder) / Strife Astlar (can be unlocked by clearing Chronicle 20 of Chronicles of the Sword Mode or fighting 1,000 times) - Barbarian, Knight, Pirate
  • Katana / Arthur (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 550 times) - Samurai
  • Katana and Shuriken / Miser (can be unlocked by defeating her in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 450 times) - Ninja, Samurai
  • Dual Kunai / Greed (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 500 times) - Assassin, Ninja
  • Lance / Girardot Argezas (can be unlocked by clearing Chronicle 15 of Chronicles of the Sword Mode or fighting 800 times) - Knight
  • Dual Nunchaku / Li Long (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 1,150 times) - Monk
  • Rapier / Amy (can be unlocked by defeating her in Tales of Souls Mode and then clearing the Soul Arena mission "Beloved" or fighting 1,250 times) - Knight, Pirate
  • Steel Fan / Demuth Beel Zebus (can be unlocked by clearing Chronicle 10 of Chronicles of the Sword Mode or fighting 850 times) - Dancer, Saint
  • Extendable Staff / Hualin (can be unlocked by defeating her in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 750 times) - Monk, Sage, Saint
  • Segmented Sickle / Aurelia Dichala Dolce (can be unlocked by clearing Chronicle 12 of Chronicles of the Sword Mode or fighting 900 times) - Ninja, Samurai, Thief
  • Sword and Shield / Abelia Schillfelt (can be unlocked by clearing Chronicle 18 of Chronicles of the Sword Mode or fighting 1,050 times) - Gladiator, Sage
  • Dual Tambourines / Lynette (can be unlocked by defeating her in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 1,100 times) - Dancer
  • Dual Wave Sword (Curved blades) / Revenant (can be unlocked by defeating him in Tales of Souls Mode or fighting 1,200 times) - Assassin, Barbarian, Gladiator, Thief

Guest Character[]

  • KOS-MOS - Can be created in Create-A-Soul after gaining all Type-X Armor parts. (Guest Character, Xenosaga Franchise)

Unplayable Characters[]

Throughout the Tales of Souls story mode, the player will come across certain characters after a battle when the character feels like he/she is "being watched". If choosing Stop, they will fight either a bonus character (which can be unlocked after winning) or an unplayable character. Some characters can be created through Create-A-Soul, such as Assassin, while others like Charade cannot. New characters are marked as bold.

Variable Cancel[]

Variable Cancel was a glitch present only in the console version of Soulcalibur III, it allowed the ability to cancel various animations (including attack and recovery animations) into a neutral position allowing the player to do any move they wish. This glitch is largely the main reason why the community deemed the console version to be noncompetitive. The glitch is performed by inputting Guard down down or G22 during certain moves such as Throw animations and Attacks. What made this glitch an issue was it allowed the ability to cancel the start of a throw animation which would allow you to perform a second throw immediately before a throw break is possible[2], the ability to cancel the middle or end of a throw animation which creates combos that are not possible under normal circumstances[3], and most notability the recovery animations on certain moves such as Guard Impact which would create situations that allowed a free hit on the opponent if they landed a successful Guard Impact on one of your attacks.[4] Variable Cancel being very easy to input combined with creating situations that punishes players for landing successful Guard Impacts and allowing very strong combos that should be impossible are the main reasons why this game did not get adopted by the competitive community, many of them sticking to Soulcalibur II instead.

Soulcalibur III: Arcade Edition[]

SoulCaliburIIIAEflyer

Arcade flyer.

Soulcalibur III: Arcade Edition is an update of Soulcalibur III. Most notably it removed the notorious Variable Cancel Glitch.

Description[]

"Soulcalibur III: Arcade Edition is a re-tuned, re-vamped, and, most importantly, fixed version of Soulcalibur III. Naturally, all glitches found in the console version have been fixed. In addition to that we've re-tuned the overall balance of many moves and re-vamped Amy, Hwang and Li Long as official characters. All three have been revised into more unique move sets and help to expand the already expansive Soulcalibur III line-up." ----WCMaxi (Namco Producer)

All of the characters return except for Abyss who is an unplayable boss with Night Terror, Inferno returns as an unplayable sub-boss, every playable character gets a total of six costumes (although they're merely just palette swaps of their 1P and 2P outfits), and finally Amy, Hwang and Li Long are regular characters, with Amy getting a new 2P outfit as well. The game has three different modes. Training Mode, Standard Mode and Legend Mode.

Training Mode[]

In training mode the player chooses a character and trains with the character's moves for 300 seconds (5 minutes).

Standard Mode[]

In standard, the player chooses a character and fights through 9 battles without being interrupted by cutscenes or movies.

Legend Mode[]

The player chooses a character and chooses a legend character (which is not the chosen character) and fights it. The player fights to level up and starts on Level 1 and the maximum level is Level 999.

Collectible card game[]

Soulcalibur III is part of the Universal Fighting System Collectible Card Game, created by Sabertooth Games and now published by Fantasy Flight Games. It was one of the official founding franchises of the card game, alongside Street Fighter, when the game was released April 2006. UFS has seen 5 expansions based on Soulcalibur III's characters and history.

Gallery[]

Artwork[]

Boxarts[]

Screenshots[]

Characters Mini Artworks[]

Soulcalibur III Player's Manual[]

Trivia[]

  • Soulcalibur III is the first and only game in the Soul series to be presented in THX surround sound.
  • On the back of the North American Version of Soulcalibur III, on the character creation picture, it shows that the custom character's name is NAMCO, which is the name of the company that produces the Soul Series.
  • There is quite a few songs in this game that was carried over from previous games. For example, the destined battle music is the same as Soulcalibur II destined battle music.
  • It is one of the few games to not be ported to another system other than the Playstation 2.
  • Soulcalibur III is set in the year 1590, four years after the events of Soulcalibur and seven years after the events of Soul Edge.
  • Soulcalibur III is the final game to feature the long-used Soul Edge design first featured in the original Soulcalibur.
  • Despite being used in the game's logo, Nightmare never appears in his Soulcalibur II incarnation in the game, having changed to a design similar to the design featured in Soulcalibur.
  • The game was famous for being shipped with many bugs, including the Variable Cancel glitch and one that would potentially corrupt a PS2 memory card if any save is copied, deleted or overwritten before overwriting a Soulcalibur III save file.
  • According to a widely circulated internet rumour, it was originally planned for Dante from Devil May Cry to appear in Soulcalibur III as a guest character. This apparently comes from the claim that Dante almost made it into the PlayStation 2 version of Soulcalibur II and thus the assumption he would inevitably make it into Soulcalibur III. The source for all of these claims remains unknown.
    • It should be noted that, according to the localization producer for Soulcalibur II Nao Higo, Cloud Strife from Final Fantasy VII was going to be the guest character for the Playstation 2 version of Soulcalibur III before the deal fell through and Heihachi was put in instead.[5]
    • Furthermore, producer Hiroaki Yotoriyama had also stated in an interview with the production manager, Akiko "Watcher TAN" Tange, in March of 2005 that it was decided that Soulcalibur III was not going to have any guest characters.[6] Later that same year, before the game released, Yotoriyama would state, in the 195th issue of Electronic Gaming Monthly, that "Dante will not be in Soulcalibur III." When being asked as to the origins for the Dante rumour, he responded "the Internet," while "laughing so hard and long we suspected something's been lost in translation."[7]

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ Hirohiko Niizumi (2005-03-31). Soul Calibur III's producer talks details. GameSpot. Retrieved on 2006-09-16.
  2. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lq803dTVgzw
  3. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yDNVOzKNp4
  4. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctELk2LAFOI
  5. ^ "8-4 Play 10/6/2017: STEVE WOULD LIKE YOU TO PLAY IT LOUD". 8-4 Play (Podcast). 2017-10-06. Event occurs at 01:24:40. Retrieved 2023-09-01.
  6. ^ "NewKimagureWatcher【vol.1】". soularchive.jp. March 2005. Archived from the original on 2011-09-09. Retrieved 2023-09-01.
  7. ^ Elliott, Shawn (September 2005). "Soul Searching". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Issue No. 195. p. 94.
Soul series
Main Series
Soul Edge (Blade)SoulcaliburSoulcalibur II (HD Online)Soulcalibur III (Arcade Edition)Soulcalibur IV (Broken Destiny)Soulcalibur VSoulcalibur VI
Other Games
Soulcalibur LegendsSoulcalibur MobileSoulcalibur: Lost SwordsSoulcalibur: Unbreakable SoulSoulcalibur Pachislot
Media
Soulcalibur (film)Soulcalibur: Spirit SwordSoulcalibur (Chinese Manhua)Exciting! Soulcalibur DojoSoulcalibur IV (DC Comics)The Making of Soulcalibur V • Soulcalibur: Put your Soul Under Blade
Artbooks
Soul Edge Official Fanbook ~Chronicle~Legend of SoulcaliburThe Art of Soulcalibur II • The Art of Soulcalibur: Broken Destiny • The Art of Soulcalibur VNew Legends of Project Soul • The Art of Soulcalibur VI
Soundtracks
Super Battle Sound Attack Soul EdgeSoul Edge Khan Super SessionSoulcalibur Original SoundtrackSoulcalibur II Original SoundtrackSoulcalibur III Original Soundtrack - Legend of SoundsSoulcalibur IV Original SoundtrackSoulcalibur Broken Destiny Best Of SoundtrackSoulcalibur V Original SoundtrackProject Soul the Primary Sound Box
Soulcalibur III
Soulcalibur III (Arcade Edition)UnlockablesSoulcalibur III Original Soundtrack - Legend of SoundsTales of SoulsSoul ArenaChronicles of the Sword
Characters
AbeliaAbyssAmyArthurAstarothAureliaCassandraCervantesChesterDemuthGreedGirardotHualinHwangIvyKilikLi LongLizardmanLunaLynetteMaxiMiserMitsurugiNightmareOlcadanRaphaelRevenantRockSeong Mi-naSetsukaSiegfriedSophitiaStrife AstlarTakiTalimTiraValeriaVoldoXianghuaYoshimitsuYun-seongZasalamel
Stages
Battle in the StraitChaos - Spiritual RealmClock TowerEgyptian TempleEurydice Shrine - Gate of the GodsGrand LabyrinthIndian PortJyurakudai VillaKunpaetku Shrine RuinLakeside ColiseumLing Sheng-Su Temple RuinLost CathedralLost Cathedral - RuinLotus GardenOld Toledo - Burning GalleryOstrheinsburg Castle - BattlementPalgaea Shrine - RuinsPirate RaidProving GroundsRomanian Valley - Castle SiegeSacred Mt. Fuji - Lava BedSecret Money PitSilk Road RuinUnderground Buddhist SanctumValentine MansionWater Mill Valley
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