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  • Awesome Music: The whole soundtrack. Even if some of the game's faults undercut its tone (see Franchise Original Sin below), the music is damn atmospheric for a fighting game.
  • Creator's Pet: The designers anticipated that Stryker would become one of the most popular characters in the series. When this didn't happen (quite the reverse, actually, thanks to his design clashing with the rest of the series) they responded by increasing his power until he was a Game Breaker, which just made people hate him more. Some players, however, like the contrast, plus the irony in how he's a darkhorse for being the most normal character in the game AND how his grenades are great against jumpers. This makes him being Rescued From the Scrappy Heap in Armaggedon and 9 even funnier.
  • Ensemble Darkhorse:
    • Kabal and Ermac started out as mild Base Breakers due to their initial overpoweredness, but when toned-down for their return in Deception, the two cemented themselves as this. Ermac even gets to play cleanup for the heroes!
    • Khameleon, introduced in the N64 port of Trilogy. Fans were not pleased that she wasn't included in Armageddon, to the point that she was added to the Wii release of the game.
    • Khameleon's inclusion in Armageddon is a possible case of Fridge Brilliance, as it mirrors how the different ports of Trilogy included these silver, translucent ninjas. The Sony Playstation and Sega Saturn versions had the male ninja Chameleon, who cycled through the male ninja's moves. The Nintendo 64 port featured the female Khameleon, who cycled through the female ninja's moves. Fast forward to Armageddon, and Nintendo's port still has the female and male while the Sony and Microsoft (taking place of Sega) versions have only the male.
  • Epileptic Trees: Sheeva's connection to Goro. Speculation goes anywhere from his sister/a relative of his (a la Kintaro) to his wife.
  • Even Better Sequel: Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 is considered (by some, hence why this trope is YMMV) to be the best game not just in the Mortal Kombat 3 series of games, but the entire series as a whole until Mortal Kombat 9.
  • Fetish Retardant: Mileena.
  • Franchise Original Sin: The series' sense of cool started to dissipate with Mortal Kombat 3. Shockingly enough, many fans still love it. If anything, everything stated below is possible Narm Charm:
  • Game Breaker:
    • Kurtis Stryker went from out of place in MK3 to out of place and freaking annoying to fight in UMK3 when Midway gave him a gun for one of his special moves. This blew him to full-on Creator's Pet-dom and cemented his being Put on a Bus until Armageddon.
    • Nightwolf had this early on in the original MK3's life cycle. In early arcade versions, he could run faster than he could throw. This let him pull off combos which were both impossible to avoid and not actually supposed to be possible in the first place. Thankfully, later revisions slowed down Nightwolf's running speed and kept him from Stryker's fate.
    • Both Rain and Noob Saibot have unlimited combos in Trilogy, the former using his screen-wrapping roundhouse over and over, and latter using his Teleport Slam.
    • In an example that ended up defining him instead of making him an annoyance, Kabal was the fastest character in the game. Add in the Run button and you've got some really quick beatdowns.
    • Kabal and Ermac in their respective debuts (vanilla MK3 and UMK3) at least approached this status, so the dev team was savvy enough to tone them down a bit in the Updated Rereleases.
    • Sheeva's Teleport Stomp move in MK3 made her one. It was easy to pull off and quite damaging. With enough patience and skill, even Motaro can be swiftly taken down with it.
  • Most Annoying Sound: Shao Kahn's announcer voice in MK3.
  • Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant: Mileena, again.
  • Porting Disaster: Trilogy. You're pretty well boned no matter what version you opt to get.
    • The Playstation/Saturn version contains every available character (a few with multiple iterations), but being on a disc, there's Loads and Loads of Loading involved, and the game is prone to locking up.
    • The N64 version, by contrast, has a much smaller character roster, is missing frames of animation, suffers from tinny sound, and has the problem with the N64's controller design, but is arguably more stable and contains a few additional features.
  • Rescued From the Scrappy Heap: Stryker in Mortal Kombat 9. Inverted with Sindel in the same game.
  • The Scrappy: Stryker, before his Armageddon redesign and him getting his own plotline in 9.
  • Scrappy Mechanic: If you watch a lot of the behind-the-scenes footage and interviews for MK3, Ed Boon and John Tobias tout the combination lock system for multiplayer as something "revolutionary" and was the main focus in its advertising to arcade operators, listing that codes and symbols were going to be everywhere and that every MK player was going to be dying to seek out. In execution, it was a cheat system that not a lot of players used and Midway's NBA Jam series had been using this code system several years before MK3 did.
  • That One Boss: Motaro, a centaur, who can teleport behind you and chain attacks with no end. Not to mention his immunity to projectiles. And then there's the uber-fast Shao Kahn...
  • Tier-Induced Scrappy:
    • In this era, Nightwolf ran faster than he threw people. Thankfully, Deception's lack of a Run button prevented a redux of this.
    • Stryker was unpopular in MK 3, so the developers tried to compensate for this by ramping up his threat level in UMK3. Thing is, he wasn't unpopular because he wasn't powerful enough...
  • Vindicated by History: Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 gets a lot more tournament play nowadays (and was one of the first online-enabled XBOX Live Arcade games), and a lot of the characters that were hated back in the nineties are now returning fan favorites in Mortal Kombat 9. Inverted with Sindel after a particularly infamous scene late in the story mode of Mortal Kombat 9.
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