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Rugal Bernstein

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Rugal Bernstein
The King of Fighters character
Rugal as seen in the King of Fighters All Star
First gameThe King of Fighters '94 (1994)
Designed byShinichi Morioka[1]
Voiced by
Various
  • Toshimitsu Arai (KOF '94-98, Capcom vs. SNK series, KOF 2002: Unlimited Match, KOF Sky Stage, Neo Geo Heroes: Ultimate Shooting, Metal Slug Defense)[2]
    Norio Wakamoto (KOF 2002)
    Banjō Ginga (Dengeki Bunko Drama CD)
    Tsuguo Mogami (KOF: Destiny onwards)
Portrayed byRay Park
In-universe information
Fighting styleHybrid martial arts (mastered numerous martial art styles)
OriginGermany
NationalityGerman

Rugal Bernstein (Japanese: ルガール・バーンシュタイン, Hepburn: Rugāru Bānshutain) is a video game character created by SNK. First introduced in The King of Fighters '94, he is a recurring boss in The King of Fighters fighting game series, appearing in some titles as an enhanced version called Omega Rugal (オメガ・ルガール, Omega Rugāru). As the host of the tournaments from The King of Fighters '94 and '95, Rugal plans to turn all the competitors from the tournament into stone statues as part of his collection. Despite his death in '95, Rugal is still featured in The King of Fighters titles which do not contain a storyline (nicknamed "Dream Matches"). He has also been featured in the Capcom vs. SNK series as a boss character.

His character has also appeared in other media related to The King of Fighters franchise, including comic adaptations and The King of Fighters live-action film, and portrayed by British martial arts actor Ray Park. As the first boss character from The King of Fighters, the SNK staff created him to be one of the most difficult characters to defeat. His Omega Rugal form from '95 has been noted by the staff to be their favorite boss to the point they added him in the Dream Match titles. Publications for video games and other media have provided praise and criticism for Rugal's character.

Conception and design

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During development of The King of Fighters '94, several final boss designs were considered, including a masked dominatrix with a spiked whip, a long haired gentleman in a formal suit, and an early sketch of a muscular man wearing a mask and checkerboard sash around his waist.[3] The concept for making Rugal was to make "the biggest, baddest, most evil villain imaginable," due to the planning team's love of villains,[4] and as his character evolved a planned in-game team consisting of series bosses Geese Howard and Wolfgang Krauser was scrapped to further highlight him.[5] The stage you fight him in was meant to reflect his personality, and at one point they considered it to be a giant mecha modeled after his appearance, before switching to an aircraft carrier.[4][5] Rugal has been described by developers as "He's the only character who truly represents the ultimate KOF boss" and has become the boss character with the biggest number of appearances in The King of Fighters series, becoming a favorite character among both the developers and series artist Falcoon.[6][7] The character's popularity has continued even to his appearance in The King of Fighters XV, with artist Tomohiro Nakata surprised by how acclaimed the decision to include Rugal was.[8] Due to his multiple "deaths" in the series, developers joking added the hobby "resurrection" to his official profile.[9]

Standing 1.97 m (6 ft 5 in) tall,[9] Rugal is a tall, blonde and athletic man with a thin mustache and his right eye missing. His normal outfit consists of a red formal tailcoat suit with black accents, fingerless gloves, a black cummerbund and ribbon tie, and a white shirt underneath.[10] This outfit has been used for most of his casual appearances, including crossover titles such as Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000 and its sequel.[11] In The King of Fighters '94, when he is defeated the first time he will toss away most of his upper clothes, now wearing a black sleeveless undershirt with his suspenders dangling loose while, and fighting more seriously.[12]

In The King of Fighters '95, though other options were considered Rugal returned as the game's final boss with a modified design. Many ideas were considered for this version, including having him fight shirtless with a tattoo of a leopard covering his left arm and pectoral, a design with armor embedded into his flesh, and another featuring heavy cybernetic implants, with goggles covering his eyes and wires extending from his arms into his chest. A more outlandish design, called "Rugal Infinity", would have featured his body merged with Geese and Krauser, appearing as a six armed naked man with the other two men's faces sticking out of the sides of his head, akin to depictions of the god Ashura.[13] Dubbing him "Omega Rugal", they ultimately settled on an appearance similar to his King of Fighters '94 counterpart, but with his upper body having burst from his clothing, wild white hair, cybernetic prosthetics replacing his right hand and eye, and the Greek letter "Ω" tattooed on his back.[14] Director Masanori Kuwasashi was in charge of the making of this version of the character, aiming to give loose ends with the Orochi demon explored in the series' first story.[15] Omega Rugal later returned in King of Fighters '98, his design changed with the developers focusing on using his secondary 'serious' appearance in '94 as a base, while retaining the cybernetic red eye.[16] This served as Omega Rugal's look from that game onwards with minimal modifications and additions, such as a costume variant adding a red longcoat and armored shoulderpads in XV as an unlockable reward for defeating him as a boss.[8]

Appearances

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In video games

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Rugal was introduced in the 1994 game The King of Fighters '94, as a megalomaniac arms dealer inviting fighters from all over the world to fight in his martial arts tournament, seeking worthy opponents and turning those he defeats into stone statues for his throne room. Protagonist Kyo Kusanagi and his teammates make it to the finals, where he finds his father Saisyu has already fought against Rugal and suffered a mortal blow. Angered, Kyo defeats him, but Rugal activates a self destruct sequence in an attempt to kill him.[17] In The King of Fighters '95, Rugal organizes a new King of Fighters tournament to take revenge on Kyo. To this end, Rugal revives and brainwashes Kyo's father to kill him. After Saisyu is knocked unconscious, Rugal fights them in an enhanced form named Omega Rugal.[18] Once defeated, his body is unable to handle the stress, and as his body disintegrates declares he will return.[19] Omega Rugal later returns in "dream match" King of Fighters titles, non-canon entries in the series, serving as the final boss for both The King of Fighters '98 and The King of Fighters 2002,[20][21] and appearing as an optional boss in their subsequent remakes.[22][23][24] In The King of Fighters 2000, Rugal appears as a non-playable assistant character (dubbed a "striker") to Kula Diamond.[25] After the events of The King of Fighters XIV, Rugal is revived and returns as a playable character and optional boss in downloadable content for King of Fighters XV.[26]

In pachinslot games including The King of Fighters Pachinslot and KOF Fatal Fury pachinko games, Rugal appears.

In other fighting games, Rugal appears as the final boss of King of Fighters R-2 for the NeoGeo Pocket Color, a chibi parody of King of Fighters '98 in which he is creating clones of other fighters, and upon defeat self-destructs his aircraft carrier with a cartoon bomb.[27] In crossover titles, Rugal appears in both Capcom vs. SNK titles, and as an optional boss fight. In it, a cutscene shows Rugal and Street Fighter character Akuma fighting, with the former defeating the latter and absorbing his essence before casting him aside. This version of Rugal, dubbed "God Rugal" ("Ultimate Rugal" in western releases), appears in a disheveled version of his suit with darkened skin, both his eyes and right hand glowing a bright red, and gains access to several of Akuma's attacks.[28] When defeated, Rugal tries to continue to fight but the stolen essence overtakes him much to his shock, transforming him into a being resembling Akuma before vanishing.[29]

Outside of fighting games, he appears on cards for SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters Clash and its sequels,[30][31] as well as VersusTCG, a physical trading card game based on the first game.[32] In mobile games, he appears as a boss in a King of Fighters themed event for Puzzle & Dragons.[33]

Gameplay

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When designing his gameplay, flagship director Toyohisa Tanabe stated that his fighting style was created to emphasize Rugal's strength as the series' first boss character. He also comments "going a bit overboard" with his Genocide Cutter technique damage ratio in The King of Fighters '94.[34] His Dead-End Screamer special move was originally a technique in which Rugal breaks the neck of his opponent and crushes it. However, it was seen as lacking drama, so it evolved into a move in which he breaks his victim's neck, crushes the victim, and then further spins the victim around to do more damage, striking a pose at the end of the move.[9] In addition an idea was planned for him to be able to instantly learn and utilize any attack used against him. However this feature was abandoned due to memory restraints, and his use of Kaiser Wave and Reppuken, moves belonging to Krauser and Geese respectively, is a remnant of this concept.[35] His The King of Fighters '98 move set was noted to be strongest of all his appearances,[6] and was carried forward to XV with his playable version having slightly different moves to balance the character.[26]

In other media

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Aside from the main series, Rugal has also appeared in other media from the King of Fighters series. Rugal appears in the first chapter from the spin-off manga The King of Fighters: Kyo, showing his fight against Kyo Kusanagi from King of Fighters '95.[36] In 1995, the character was voiced by Banjō Ginga in the Dengeki Bunko-produced CD drama The King of Fighters - King of Fighters '94, a retelling of the story from the video games.[37] In the manhua The King of Fighters: Zillion, one of the stories is based on King of Fighters 2002, in which Rugal confronts another lead character from the series, K'.[38]

In the 2010 live-action film adaptation of The King of Fighters, Rugal is played by veteran actor Ray Park.[39]

Reception and cultural impact

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Rugal has been widely praised for not only his high difficulty as a boss, but also his personality and character portrayal

Rugal's high difficulty in King of Fighters '94, notably during his second phase, led to fighting game fans coining the term "SNK Boss syndrome", in reference to when a computer-controlled opponent in a fighting game is extremely difficult to play against to the point of feeling "outright broken".[12] Retro Gamer cited that his attacks copied from other fighters gave him a "formidable foundation", and that his own suite of attacks coupled with his lore of killing defeated opponents by turning them into statues them made him "the ultimate boss".[40] Darren Bonthuys of GameSpot called him "the boss of bosses", stating that he played like a culmination of every previous boss in other SNK fighting games, "but better".[41] 1UP.com described his Omega Rugal design as "one of the most stylish boss designs in fighting history, although more than a few gamers grew to hate the sight of him," and praised his absence in King of Fighters '96.[42] However, the magazine RetroManiac called him "one of the most charismatic bosses in the saga", and praised his inclusion in even handheld versions of King of Fighters.[43] Eliot Lefebvre of Dualshockers in turn named him one of fighting game's most iconic characters, stating that his high difficulty coupled with his lore made him an exception amongst fighting game villains in that he was as memorable as the player characters themselves. He further added that even in cases where Rugal was playable, "Rugal is remembered as a boss."[44]

Gavin Jasper of Den of Geek praised Rugal's character as a villain, comparing him to Capcom's Street Fighter antagonists with "He’s what M. Bison wishes he could be," and "he proves that as great as Akuma is, his power is better wielded by a megalomaniac with the gift of style and swagger."[45] Going into more detail with the latter, he added that while other crossover fighting games such as Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite would routinely feature a "merged" villain from their respective franchises, Rugal's approach of stealing Akuma's techniques and how he utilized them with his own style set him apart.[46] He further praised Rugal by stating despite all incarnations of the character being incredibly difficult to fight, "the dude has so much swagger and radiates such coolness that I can’t hate him. He’s Rugal Goddamn Bernstein and we’re better for knowing him." Jasper noted that while Rugal returned for "dream match" games in the series, in his eyes solidifying himself as "THE villain of King of Fighters", he felt the character didn't wear out his welcome. Instead he stated Rugal was defined as much by his weakness as his strengths, namely in regards to his deaths in the King of Fighters and Capcom vs. SNK titles due to absorbing too much power, describing it as "classic villainy".[45][47]

In Mexico where the King of Fighters franchise is extremely popular, Rugal's presence as a playable character has led to his picture being plastered on arcade cabinets with a statement not to select him, specifically stating "Prohibido jugar con Rugal" (lit. "Forbidden to play with Rugal").[48] A Spanish scholarly paper discussing human nature and the social norms of sportsmanlike conduct also mentioned Rugal in this context, and political figure Jaime Rodríguez Calderón specifically asked people not to use him when suggesting they play The King of Fighters among other video games during a "Game Day" celebration.[49][50] However Brazilian anthropology researcher Deyse Brandão in a dissertation cited Rugal as an example of a popular nickname amongst young students in her country, in the same vein as "Stark" or "Naruto", with the students applying the character's symbolism towards themselves as a form of identity.[51]

References

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  1. ^ The King of Fighters: The Ultimate History. Bitmap Books. 2022. p. 501. ISBN 9781838019181.
  2. ^ SNK. The King of Fighters '94 (Neo Geo). SNK. Level/area: Credits.
  3. ^ All About The King of Fighters '94 (in Japanese). Vol. 7. Studio Bent Stuff. November 1994. pp. 204–205.
  4. ^ a b All About The King of Fighters '94 (in Japanese). Vol. 7. Studio Bent Stuff. November 1994. p. 87.
  5. ^ a b All About The King of Fighters '94 (in Japanese). Vol. 7. Studio Bent Stuff. December 1994. p. 237.
  6. ^ a b "Omega Rugal Official Profile". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2008-07-14. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  7. ^ @falcoon_master (November 8, 2015). "KOFのボスキャラといえば、やはりルガールが一番。かっこいい!強い!そして品がある!94,95当時、迂闊に振り回した小Pの牽制にざっくりジェノサイドをあわされて体力半分くらいもっていかれるのが何とも快感でした。(涙" (Tweet) (in Japanese) – via Twitter.
  8. ^ a b "【KOF XV】Here comes a special sketch and some comments about OMEGA RUGAL from KOF XV lead designer, Tomohiro Nakata!". Twitter. Archived from the original on March 12, 2024. Retrieved May 20, 2023.
  9. ^ a b c "Rugal Bernstein Official Profile". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2007-10-25. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  10. ^ The King of Fighters Perfect Art Collection '94-'97 (in Japanese). Gamest. 1998. pp. 202–205. ISBN 978-4-88199-459-7.
  11. ^ CAPCOM VS.SNK 2アナザープレイガイド (CAPCOM完璧攻略シリーズ) (in Japanese). Tankobon. October 2001. pp. 97–98. ISBN 4575162884.
  12. ^ a b Sullivan, Lucas (2014-04-14). "12 unfair fighting game bosses that (almost) made us rage quit". GamesRadar. Archived from the original on 2016-10-28. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  13. ^ All About The King of Fighters '95 (in Japanese). Vol. 12. Studio Bent Stuff. October 1995. p. 342.
  14. ^ All About The King of Fighters '95 (in Japanese). Vol. 12. Studio Bent Stuff. October 1995. pp. 134, 329.
  15. ^ The King Of Fighters: The Ultimate History. Bitmap Books. 2022. p. 502. ISBN 9781838019181.
  16. ^ The King of Fighters: The Ultimate History. Bitmap Books. 2022. p. 377. ISBN 9781838019181.
  17. ^ SNK (1994-08-25). The King of Fighters '94 (Neo Geo). SNK. Rugal: I... impossible! How could I lose a battle...!!/Benimaru: We are No. 1! I knew it!/Rugal: Y... yes, indeed... but I haven't really lost yet!! A watery grave awaits you!/Benimaru: Jesus! Let's get away!
  18. ^ SNK (1995-07-25). The King of Fighters '95 (Neo Geo). SNK. Saisyu Heh, Kyo. My power wasn't so great after all. Kill him, Kyo. Avenge me...!/Kyo: Rugal, you slime!/Rugal: Heh, heh. The defeated dog barks loudest! Taste my fury! Wooooo...
  19. ^ SNK (1995-07-25). The King of Fighters '95 (Neo Geo). SNK. Rugal: Even with my new power, I lost. What? My body...????? No... to meet such a fate! But I'll be back... you jerks!
  20. ^ "The King of Fighters '98". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2007-10-01. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  21. ^ "The King of Fighters 2002". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on 2017-04-14. Retrieved 2009-01-29.
  22. ^ SNK Playmore (2008). The King of Fighters '98: Ultimate Match (PlayStation 2). SNK Playmore. Level/area: Special Battle/Stage.
  23. ^ SNK Playmore (2009). The King of Fighters 2002: Unlimited Match (PlayStation 2). SNK Playmore. Level/area: Final Stage.
  24. ^ "The King of Fighters NeoWave Hints & Cheats". GameSpot. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  25. ^ "Another Striker" (in Japanese). SNK Playmore. Archived from the original on 2009-05-10. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  26. ^ a b "KOF XV Game Director Discussed Omega Rugal's New Moves". Siliconera. 14 April 2022. Archived from the original on May 21, 2023. Retrieved May 20, 2023.
  27. ^ SNK (1999-03-19). King of Fighters R-2 (NeoGeo Pocket Color). Scene: Game Ending.
  28. ^ Edwards, John; Omar Kendall; Paul Edwards (2001). Capcom Vs. Snk 2: Mark of the Millennium 2001 Official Fighter's Guide. Brady Publishing. ISBN 0-7440-0097-1.
  29. ^ Capcom (2001-08-03). Capcom vs. SNK 2 (PlayStation 2). Scene: God Rugal Boss Fighting Ending Scene. Rugal: Evolution is something to be honored... However only the chosen few are allowed to experience it!/Akuma: (...not powerful enough)/Rugal: ...! ...Wha? What?! What is this...?!/Akuma: (...This mind is not strong enough...)/(...Not strong enough to control my power!)/(I am the one with no name. I am nothing and everything.)
  30. ^ SNK (1999-11-21). SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters Clash (NeoGeo Pocket Color). Scene: Card Gallery.
  31. ^ SNK (2001-09-13). SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters 2 Expand Edition (Neo Geo Pocket Color). SNK. Level/area: Card gallery.
  32. ^ "VERSUS TCG SNK vs CAPCOM カードファイターズ マネージメント ac-043U" (in Japanese). Wanted Internet Group. Archived from the original on 2005-01-19. Retrieved 2009-06-16.
  33. ^ "【追記あり】『パズドラ』×『KOF』コラボ第2弾続報!"レオナ"、"八神庵"、"草薙京"の新進化形態後ステータスが公開". Famitsu (in Japanese). 2020-09-25. Archived from the original on 2022-12-07. Retrieved 2023-05-23.
  34. ^ Akihiko Ureshino, ed. (September 20, 2005). The King of Fighters Perfect Reader (in Japanese). Nikkei Business Publications, Inc. ISBN 4-8222-1711-6.
  35. ^ All About The King of Fighters '94 (in Japanese). Vol. 7. Studio Bent Stuff. November 1994. p. 187.
  36. ^ Natsumoto, Masato (1996). The King of Fighters Kyo, volume 1. Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-319759-4.
  37. ^ SNK (1995). Electric Shock CD Library - The King of Fighters '94 (Media notes). MediaWorks. MWCG-0014.
  38. ^ "Remembrances of KOF: An Interview with Eiji". King of Fighters 10th Anniversary Official Website. Archived from the original on April 18, 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
  39. ^ Ashcraft, Brian (2009-07-11). "King of Fighters Movie Promotional Images". Kotaku. Archived from the original on 2009-08-15. Retrieved 2009-08-16.
  40. ^ "Why Rugal is the Ultimate Boss". Retro Gamer. No. 151. January 2016. p. 77. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  41. ^ Bonthuys, Darren (2022-04-06). "20 Annoying Boss Fights That'll Make You Rage-Quit". GameSpot. Archived from the original on 2023-05-20. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  42. ^ "History Of...The King of Fighters, SNK's classic team-based 2D fighting series". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 2011-06-04. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  43. ^ "The King of Fighters". RetroManiac. No. 7. November 2013. pp. 99–100. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  44. ^ Lefebvre, Eliot (2022-12-16). "10 Most Iconic Fighting Game Characters Of All Time". Dualshockers. Archived from the original on 2023-06-09. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  45. ^ a b Jasper, Gavin (2016-11-14). "King of Fighters: Ranking All the Characters". Den of Geek. Archived from the original on 2023-05-20. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  46. ^ Jasper, Gavin (2017-05-31). "The 20 Best Altered Fighting Game Characters". Den of Geek. Archived from the original on 2023-04-07. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  47. ^ Jasper, Gavin (2021-02-08). "50 Best Fighting Game Final Bosses from Street Fighter, Mortal Kombat, Tekken, and More". Den of Geek. Archived from the original on 2021-02-23. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  48. ^ Estaban, Martinez (2022-06-02). "Cool look at history of tournament-banned fighting game characters". Shacknews. Archived from the original on 2023-05-20. Retrieved 2023-05-20.
  49. ^ Vila, Ezequiel (September 2013). "Challenge accepted". Revista LUTHOR Nro (in Spanish) (16): 38.
  50. ^ @JaimeRdzNL (August 29, 2021). "Quiero felicitar a los gamers de NL por ser su día, que se la pasen fregón y festejen desde su casa. No inviten a sus amigos a un antro o bar, invítenlos a que jueguen en línea al Call of Duty, al Pokémon Unite o unas retas en el KOF, pero sin usar a Rugal" (Tweet) (in Spanish) – via Twitter.
  51. ^ Brandão, Deyse de Fátima do Amarante (2015). "Consumo como experiência social: experimentações, vivências e práticas da cultura pop em um coletivo juvenil". Universidade Federal da Paraíba, João Pessoa (in Portuguese): 154.