NDS (Nintendo DS) Shop
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Nintendo DS » Fighting » Ultimate Mortal Kombat  
Categories
Nintendo DS
Nintendo Wii
Related Categories
• Fighting
Action
• All Games
Nintendo DS
• Video Games Available for International Shipping
Specialty Stores

Ultimate Mortal Kombat

Ultimate Mortal Kombat


Other Views:
From: Midway Entertainment
Category: Video Games

List Price: $29.99
Buy New: $24.98
You Save: $5.01 (17%)

Qty 1 In Stock


New (18) Used (5) from $21.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 2345

Platform: Nintendo Ds
ESRB: Mature
Media: Video Game
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Age: 17 - 20 years
Operating System: Nintendo DS
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.6

MPN: 19188
Model: 19188
UPC: 031719191888
EAN: 0031719191888
ASIN: B000O5I0F8

Release Date: November 12, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Brand New!!! Ships 1st class!!

Features:
  • First Mortal Kombat ever to appear on the Nintendo DS. A faithful recreation of the original and highly successful arcade version of Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3.
  • Puzzle Kombat, the addictive and popular Mortal Kombat-style puzzle game from Mortal Kombat: Deception is includedand is playable online.
  • Using Nintendo Wireless ad-hoc with two Game Cards allows two players to battle it out with the entire cast of characters.
  • More than 20 playable Mortal Kombat characters and 15+ arenas will keep gamers involved in the fight
  • Classic finishing moves: Fatalities, Babalities, Friendships, Animalities and Stage Fatalities will give the player the chance to execute some of the most creative moves of the series

Similar Items:

  • Contra 4
  • Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare
  • Nintendo DS Lite Cobalt / Black
  • Dementium: The Ward
  • Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Ultimate Mortal Kombat combines the visceral thrills of Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 and the addictive puzzle action of the Puzzle Kombat component of Mortal Kombat Deception in a single DS-friendly package. With new record-keeping capability, and multiplayer Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection, players will be able take UMK anywhere for fighting action on the go. The Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection allow two players to battle against each other anywhere in the world via the Internet! More than 20 playable Mortal Kombat characters and 15+ arenas will keep gamers involved in the fight! Fatalities, Babalities, Friendships, Animalities and Stage Fatalities will give the player the chance to execute some of the most creative moves of the series. ESRB Rated M for Mature.


Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars MK is great   May 5, 2008
Sure Ultimate MK is an awesome game when it was released on SNES.....this Nintendo double dipping is stupid. It's nice to have this gem on hand held though.


5 out of 5 stars Great DS game for online play   March 10, 2008
I bought this game because I was looking for another game for DS that would utilize the wireless online play feature of the DS. This is the classic Mortal Combat fighting game. I was only a minor fan of the game when it was originally in arcades. As far as I can tell the DS version of the game is complete. I also bought this game partly because it was the only M rated game I have found for DS. It has all the characters from the original game and all the blood and gore and fatalities from the original game. I was also pleasantly surprised by the high quality of the graphics in sub menus for the game and the audio in the DS version might be better than the original game. The dual screen feature of the game is utilized too with the top screen displaying the combo moves for a particular character and the bottom screen displaying the fighting. Unfortunately, I am terrible at this game and the only time I tried out the online play I was beaten almost instantly. The DS game has a second mini game built in that I have grown to really like. The second game is a puzzle game similar to Tetris with blocks that fall from the top and build up. The twist is that this is a fighting puzzle game. One screen shows Mortal Combat characters fighting. The bottom screen shows the puzzle game. As you win at the puzzle game the character wins at the fight as well.


5 out of 5 stars True Masterpiece of Ultimate Mortal Kombat   November 27, 2007
Being original and traditional, I have grown up with mortal kombat. I have seen all the mortal kombat games that exists even during the early 1990s. This is it, this is the one game that is the best. People who aren't very familiar with doing 6,7,8+ combo moves very fast may come to dislike it and feel that the level of difficulty is too much to bear. At first, it was kind of hard to get back to classic fast hitting button arcade mode, but now, believe it or not, I have come to believe that I am the master the mortal kombat. You can tell that the game is programmed to predict your moves as you advance into subsequent rounds. The bonus puzzle kombat and the online WIFI capability is what really reawakens mortal kombat. The toughest master level is the best. You get unlimited trials and credits but beating master level really reminded me of my enjoyment in the old days. The graphics look nice in 2-D. I hate to say it, but 3-D looks kind of ugly, slow, and unsophisticated. In the harder of the two master levels, you get to face three opponents. Mataro may fires 6 or more fireballs at you. Fatalities must be done super fast. You have to know it by heart. Jade can be quite challenging if you have already beat two or three opponents on a consecutive basis. Other than that, I would say everything else is fair game. It's about knowing all possible moves by heart and truly knowing how to fight like a true warrior.


3 out of 5 stars Best portable MK experience on a Nintendo system so far.... but still not great   November 24, 2007
 27 out of 29 found this review helpful

Ultimate Mortal Kombat is a Nintendo DS port of the arcade game, Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. It also includes the Puzzle Kombat mode featured in some of the more recent titles, and online Wi-Fi play.

Essentially, Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3, of which the main portion of this game is a port of, was a "special edition" of sorts of Mortal Kombat 3. It added in some new levels and threw in some extra characters, mostly from earlier games. Also introduced were an additional pillar of difficulty, and the Endurance levels, not seen since the original MK. The game more or less stayed true to the Mortal Kombat 3 game play style.

Puzzle Kombat is a Tetris-esque puzzler that uses Mortal Kombat characters. You're given blocks that you must destroy using special bricks. As you progress, you'll gain power - which can be used to execute a special move that varies from character to character.

This package is a mixed bag. It's better than any other Mortal Kombat game ever released for a portable Nintendo System, but it still needs its share of refinement.

THE GOOD:

-An excellent port.
I had my doubts about Nintendo being able to scale this one down for the small screen, and have the game still work well. But they pretty much shattered my doubts. This is a more-or-less true port. It looks just like the arcade - FAR superior to that old Super Nintendo version! Things are a bit scaled down, obviously, but I have few complaints as far as this being a port goes.

-Plenty of characters, and a few secret ones.
The Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 roster, essentially, has all the characters from Mortal Kombat 3, but it also throws in a few old favorites, mostly the palette-swap Lin Kuei ninjas. There are also some hidden characters you can unlock with codes.

-An on-screen move list. FINALLY!
This is something that the old consular Mortal Kombat games were sorely missing. Now, I don't have to refer to a print-out or a players guide to figure out how to do moves or fatalities. It's great to have this feature, particularly in a port of one of the older games.

-Puzzle Kombat featured as an extra mode.
I'm glad they didn't just give us a bare bones Ultimate port, and threw in this nifty little bonus mode. It makes the overall package a little more desirable. Fans of the series who also like puzzle games - this mode is for you.

-Online Wi-Fi play!
This is another thing that Mortal Kombat has desperately been in need of. Finally, even if you don't have someone local to play with, you can find a fan somewhere else in the world, and challenge them to a fight.

THE BAD:

-Why port Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 to the DS when Mortal Kombat Trilogy is a far superior game?
I can't believe they did this! The DS is as powerful as the Nintendo 64, which played host to a version of Trilogy. Trilogy had nearly ALL of the old characters and levels, plus some new ones, and a new type of Fatality - the Brutality. Why port Ultimate instead of the far-superior Trilogy!? It boggles my mind.

-Lacks replay value.
The amount of characters here just isn't anything worth writing home about. Even with the secret characters, there are considerably less characters than in Trilogy, which this should have been a port of to begin with. There's nothing of interest outside the game. Even though the game tries not to be a bare bones port, that's ultimately what it is.

-Puzzle Kombat isn't particularly interesting.
I like the fact that they tried to go above making this a bare bones port, but let's be realistic - this is a second-rate Tetris-style puzzler, the likes of which game makers have been churning out for the last two decades. Most of the fans who buy this game are here to play some serious MK, not a lackluster puzzle game.

-Horrible, cheap artificial intelligence.
One of the biggest problems here. Playing against the computer isn't even fun. The comp will basically cheese you to death by any means necessary, always blocking your attacks and hitting you with godlike combos. This is one of the game's fatal flaws.

-Less Fatality time than ever before.
You've got one chance to enter the motion, and even then you have to rush. If you screw up the first time, too bad. I don't know what the programmers were smoking when they decided to lessen an already-short time increment.

-Move lists DISAPPEAR FROM THE SCREEN if you pause.
Having the move lists on the other screen is a great idea, in case you want to check your moves. But if you pause the game, they disappear. You heard me right. The one time you actually will have your eyes leave the action screen to check the moves, they won't be there. You won't want to do periodic glances during the fight either - the cheap comp will stomp you if you don't pay attention.

-Characters are the Mortal Kombat 3 versions, and no older versions are available.
Again, another problem that would have been almost completely remedied if this had been a Trilogy port. This version of Kung Lao, for instance, sucks in comparison to his Mortal Kombat 2 counterpart.

-Inevitable lag in online battles.
This is more a technical aspect than anything else but it's still worth addressing. While not as bad as some DS titles, it's still just bad enough that it will throw your timing off when trying to pull off those all-important special moves.

-Extra characters in the main mode must be unlocked with CODES.
Why didn't the programmers just have some "game accomplishment" way of doing this. It would have made the game experience far more rewarding. Instead you'll inevitably have to go to an online FAQ to figure out how to do it.

OVERALL:

Overall, good as this game is, there just isn't a whole lot here to recommend it. It's easily the best portable Nintendo version of Mortal Kombat ever released - and the only one I can honestly say I don't hate. But this should have been a port of Mortal Kombat Trilogy. Period. And it suffers immensely from that, not to mention its share of other flaws. I can't quite recommend it on a large-scale level, but MK die-hards who have longed for a decent portable game on a Nintendo system will be pleased at long last.

Marginal thumbs down.



4 out of 5 stars Ultimate MK3 on the DS   November 20, 2007
Ultimate Mortal Kombat marks the debut of Midway's flagship fighting series on the DS, and is by far the best portable excursion the Mortal Kombat series has seen yet. Ultimate Mortal Kombat consists of Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 and Puzzle Kombat, which you may remember as a little bonus mini-game from the somewhat more recent Mortal Kombat: Deception. Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 is pretty much spot on from the version we all remember, albeit shrunk down. Whichever one of the screens you choose to fight on, the opposite screen lists special moves and fatalities, which is a nice little bonus in itself. Puzzle Kombat is a little bit of fun for what it is, and is a nice bonus game, but the real meat and potatoes of Ultimate Mortal Kombat comes from the game's Wi-Fi connectibility options. Single player mode can get old after a while thanks to the steep difficulty curve, but the game's multiplayer options more than make up for that. Because of the game being shrunk down, there are noticable graphical glitches, but otherwise, Ultimate Mortal Kombat is a blast. The controls tightly fit the DS, and the sound effects are kept true as well. All in all, if you're a DS owner and Mortal Kombat fan who likes taking advantage of the DS' Wi-Fi capabilities, Ultimate Mortal Kombat is more than worth picking up.

Qty 1 In Stock


Web Hosting & Domain Registration

Partner Sites

BluRay Movies & Players
Nintendo Wii
DVDs for Babies
Jeep Wrangler Accessories
Network Monitoring
DSS - Dish Accessories
Gourmet Food
Plasma TV Sales
Vacations