And vs codes. Reports about bugs in same areas in our hack would be nice too. 999-999 - Show what revision you have, example UMK3 version 0.6 300-300. Nemesis_c mean we can't stretch sprites programmatically. Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 cheats, Passwords, Tips, and Codes for SNES. Jump to: Password (2). Mortal Kombat Komplete Edition. Mortal Kombat Arcade Kollection. Mortal Kombat.
Page Tools More. This page contains a list of cheats, codes, Easter eggs, tips, and other secrets for Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 for Genesis. If you've discovered a cheat you'd like to add to the page, or have a correction, please. Cheats menu At the beginning of the game when the 'Start Game' and 'Opinion' menu appears, press A, C, Up, B, Up, B, A, Down. Shao Kahn will say 'Excellent' and the Cheats menu will appear. 8 Lives in Galaxian Mini-Game Enable the killer kodes cheat and select 'play hidden game'. While the intro screen is running hold (X+A+Z+C).
Hold this down until the game starts. You should know the code has worked if you hear a firing sound and see no laser fire on screen. You know have 8 lives.
Advertisement Advancement On one of the 'Endurance' or boss squares play the game but lose. Right before your opponent kills you, press Start on the second controller. At the Mortal Kombat screen, press Start on the first controller. Choose a character and start a game. When you play you will move above that square.
This sometimes works on normal players but sometimes it doesn't. Note: This trick always works if you select Shao Kahn. You will then play against several different characters endlessly. As a bonus, every time they win they will do a finishing move on you. Bonus Stage To access the secret stage, beat the game as any character. When the green lightning is coming out of the Shao Kahn Tower enter the game as a second player.
You will be tranported to a special stage where you fight in the air and can not jump. Hurt Me Harder Plug in a second controller, but play a one-player game. When you lose, hold Down on both controllers and your opponent will kill you with a fatality, or even the awesome BRUTALITY. If you thought fatalities hurt, brutalities will take you all to PIECES!!!!! Level Skip To advance to the next opponent in a one-player game, press START on the second controller at the end of round one. Note: Doing this at bosses causes strange effects.
Advertisement Play as Human Smoke Select the robot Smoke on character select screen. Then, before the fight screen comes up, hold High Punch + Low Punch + High Kick + Low Kick. Continue to hold these until Shao Kahn announces the round.
Play as Human Smoke with a Three-Button Controller Enable the SECRETS option and disable the timer. At the 'Choose Your Fighter' screen, pick any two fighters and at the VS screen enter the code 444-444 (this changes you into a random fighter every 10 seconds.) With the first controller beat the second player then on the round two beat the second player until he is almost dead then if you turn in to Human Smoke (You change randomly!) kick him until he is dead, the let the second player's time run out, now you are at the choose your destiny screen, pick any tower and wait until you reach the bottom of the tower and bingo!
You see a question mark, that mean you are now Human Smoke!
Rain in (2011) First game (1995) Created by Designed by ( MKT) Luis Mangubat ( MK:A) Atomhawk Design ( MK2011) Lynell Forestall ( MK:DotR) Jennifer L. Parsons ( Annihilation) Beverly Safier ( Konquest) Portrayed by John Turk ( UMK3, MKT) Tyrone C. Wiggins ( Annihilation) Percy Brown ( Konquest) Voiced by ( MK:DotR) ( MK2011) ( MKX) Information Weapon Storm Sword ( MK:A) Origin Edenia Fighting styles ( MK:A) Rain is a in the franchise. Originating as a joke inserted into by Mortal Kombat co-creator in order to stir up fan interest in the game, he became a in the follow-up title. In the games, Rain hails from the otherworldly realm of Edenia like and, but he does not share his compatriots' allegiance to their homeland and instead opts to serve evil Outworld emperor. He plays his most prominent role in, where he is revealed to be a and related to the protagonist of the game's storyline.
Since his UMK3 debut, Rain's presence in the Mortal Kombat franchise has been relatively sparse, as he has been selectable in only the series' two compilation titles ( Trilogy and Armageddon) and the 2011 reboot, for which he was a later addition to the character roster as, while he appears as a nonplayable character in 2015's. General critical reception to the character has been mixed, despite his relative popularity within the fanbase. Contents. History and creation Rain's first appearance in the Mortal Kombat series literally spans one second, when he is spotted running up to and attacking on the Portal stage in the sequence of 1995's. A second and less frequent sighting in the sequence saw him facing Kahn on the Portal bridge and merely falling over backwards. Similar to in the, players attempted to hunt him down to no avail, and the speculation regarding his existence was further aggravated by a message activated by a Kombat Kode that read, 'Rain can be found in the Graveyard,' in reference to a stage in the game where he was never actually seen. Series co-creator explained that Rain's conception 'was me being a jerk, basically.'
A huge fan of, Boon's inspiration for the character was the 1984 track, coupled with his jokingly wondering what color palette had not yet been used in the games. In another nod to the singer, Rain addresses himself as 'Prince of Edenia' in. By the time Boon had decided to include him as a selectable in UMK3, the game was already completed, so due to time constraints he had to hack into the attract mode to insert a snippet of the character as an unplayable red herring who was a purple of, while creating a new font for displaying his name in his power bar; therefore, it is the only one in the game that is not italicized. Rain was made a playable character with his own backstory and distinct set of moves for the home versions of UMK3 and the 1996 home-release compilation title, the latter which was to actually include another new ninja character, Tremor, a brown palette swap who had been axed during the development process (he later made his first series appearance in the 2000 spinoff ). The noncanonical biography that had been created for him was passed on to Rain instead and included in the game's instruction manual. Appearances In video games As a child, Rain was smuggled away from his homeland of Edenia in the midst of the realm's takeover by Outworld emperor Shao Kahn, while his father stayed behind to perform his duties as general of Edenia's armies, but he was killed and his armies crushed in the invasion.
Thousands of years later, during the events of MK Trilogy, Rain resurfaced during Kahn's invasion of Earthrealm prior to the third Mortal Kombat tournament, and was attacked by Kahn's extermination squads; not wanting to suffer at their hand, he elected to turn his back on his homeland and side with Kahn, who trained him as an assassin alongside fellow Edenians and before enlisting them in the fight against the Earth warriors. However, Kahn's would-be domination of Earthrealm is unsuccessful and Rain is absent from the series until the Konquest mode of (2004), where he asks to find a dagger belonging to Goro, which he in turn keeps for himself until he is knocked out by Jade. MK: Armageddon (2006) marks Rain's return as a playable after a decade. As one of only seventeen characters in the game to receive an official biography, he plays his largest role in the original series continuity by learning of his true Edenian heritage from Outworld sorcerer, who lets Rain in on a secret that his late father had tried to keep from him: that he is actually a direct descendant of Argus, the protector god of Edenia, in addition to being the half-sibling of the game's protagonist and his brother, both of whom were favored by their father to assume his mantle of Edenia's protectors. Rain consequently starts to refer to himself as a prince of the realm, as seen in Armageddon's Konquest mode, but he still chooses to independently fight on the side of evil. Rain confronts Taven in Arctika but is defeated in battle and flees into a portal. His storyline is altered in the 2011 reboot, which makes no mention of his father or siblings, instead describing him as having been orphaned at a young age by Kahn's conquest of Edenia and raised under the protection of Edenian resistance fighters.
As he gained a reputation as an exceptional warrior, his level of arrogance followed suit, and when he was refused leadership of the resistance, he to their (unidentified) sworn enemy. This caught the attention of Kahn, who offered the power-hungry Rain an army of his own in exchange for his services. However, in Rain's ending, Kahn had no intention of fulfilling his end of the bargain. Rain therefore kills him in combat and ends up saving Earthrealm in the process, for which he is thanked by, who also informs him that he is the son of Argus. Rain, consequently drunk with power to which he felt he was entitled, coupled with a sense of superiority from being the offspring of a god, takes over Kahn's armies to rule all realms, starting, to Raiden's horror, with Earthrealm.
Rain is not playable in (2015), but is a supporting character in the game's story mode. He serves as Mileena's advisor and tries to help her reclaim the Outworld throne from the warlord in the midst of a civil war. Rain plans to take the throne for himself when the war is over, but is stopped. He is featured in 's noncanonical arcade ending, in which he and Tanya flee Kotal Kahn's forces in Outworld but are captured.
She turns him over to Kahn in exchange for, and Rain is burned at the stake. Design and gameplay. Percy Brown as Rain in Rain's live-media incarnations were portrayed by African-American actors. He was played by stuntman Tyrone Cortez Wiggins in the 1997 film, in which he partakes in the Outworld invasion of Earth while serving as the general of Kahn's extermination squads, but is killed when Kahn hammers him into a fire pit in his for sparing the lives of and (both of whom never appear onscreen) after having captured them. In a continuity violation, an outtake of his demise was edited into 's death scene later in the film.
Rain has no fight scene in the film nor the novelization based on the script, where he has a reduced role and is identified only as a 'masked general' while Baraka takes his place among Kahn's subordinates in the Outworld invasion. At the start of the twelfth episode ('Shadow of a Doubt') of the 1998 television series, Rain makes a brief appearance and is played by Percy 'Spitfire' Brown. He has no dialogue and is sent by Kahn to kill before the next tournament, but is unsuccessful after being forced to flee when Taja intervenes. Rain was included as an 'exclusive' in a 'Klassic Ninja' six-pack of 4' action figures released in 2011 by Jazwares, while a polystone statue of the character was released by Syco Collectibles in 2012. In ' 2015 weekly Mortal Kombat X prequel miniseries, Rain debuts in the eighth chapter as he joins Reiko and Mileena in their war against, manipulating the weather to block out the sun and therefore deny Kahn his primary power source, but he is severely burned by Kahn in retaliation. He is not seen again until the twenty-first chapter, in which he is disfigured and recuperating under Mileena's care after being recovered by the Red Dragon clan.
He informs Mileena of a conversation he overheard among Red Dragon clansmen regarding her former comrade 's loyalty to, resulting in Mileena planning an invasion of Shang Tsung's island to hunt down Reiko, Havik and the Red Dragon. Reception Rain has become one of the series' more maligned characters from the first generation of games, mainly due to his origins.
He was ranked seventh on 's 2011 list of the, in which they praised his roundhouse but added, 'No ninja should be named after a Prince song.' He tied with fellow MK character for third place in a list titled '5 Terrible Fighting Game Characters That Nobody Should Ever Choose' by WhatCulture in 2013: 'He is there as a play on the Prince album, and that is so dumb.'
Cheat Code Central ranked Rain eighth in their 2012 list of the ten 'lamest' video game characters, which criticized Mortal Kombat's excessive palette swapping in general but singled out Rain as the worst of the bunch, again due to the reference to the Prince song., in 2009, ranked him fourth in their list 'The 9 Most Pathetic Fighting Game Characters' for the same reasons, adding: 'It's not that Rain is an untalented fighter. It's just that you can't help but feel like you've seen this guy somewhere before.' Stephen Kelley of called the character 'utterly horrible'. 's Gavin Jasper criticized Rain's UMK3 attract-mode appearance as 'false advertising' and 'a dick move of Boon,' but also ranked Rain 36th in his 2015 rating of the 64 series characters, due to his MK2011 ending ('Thanks, Raiden, dumbass') and the expansion of his backstory in Armageddon as 'a power-hungry jerk who believed that he was owed everything.' Ranked him 28th out of the series' top 50 characters in 2012. 'Most Mortal Kombat characters don't get their start as an inside joke, but Rain proves to be a rare exception.'
Elijah Watson of named Rain as one of the series' most brutal characters, though he cited his noncanonical Armageddon and MK2011 endings as examples while interpreting the figurative description of Kahn's death in the latter ('Rain drowned the emperor in his own blood') in a literal sense. Fans ranked Rain the 24th-best MK character in a 2013 online poll held by that rated the entire series roster. Rain's 'Upside Down Uppercut' Fatality from Trilogy, in which he punches his opponent apart into four separate segments that fly vertically offscreen and then drop back down to perfectly reform their upended corpse, placed on 's list of Mortal Kombat's fifteen worst Fatalities and made 's selection of the series' seven worst finishers: 'Rain was one of the many palette-swap clones in Mortal Kombat Trilogy, and he easily had the worst Fatality.'
James Deaux of Earth-2.net commented, 'I'm sure this was meant to be a comedic Fatality of sorts, but it looks utterly stupid.' His Animality tied with that of as the eighth-worst Fatality in the series from. Rated his 'Bubble Burst' Fatality from MK2011 as the series' third-most gruesome finisher, and Robert Workman of Prima Games ranked it 41st in his 2014 list of the series' fifty best Fatalities. Retrieved February 6, 2014. April 14, 2015. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
![Edition Edition](https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/mkwikia/images/a/a3/Ultimate_mortal_kombat_3_ihone_app.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20110320003252)
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![Kombat Kombat](http://elektropage.ru/UMKH/UMKH_041.png)
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