Street Fighter

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(Appearances: formatting and links)
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==Appearances==
==Appearances==
*[[Main Page 17]] — The [[20X6 Marzipan]]'s pose is nearly identical to [[Wikipedia:Chun-Li|Chun-Li]]'s victory pose from Street Fighter II (and all of the later Street Fighter variants and spinoffs). "Yatta!" is a Japanese word which means "I did it!", or "All right!" in English.
*[[Main Page 17]] — The [[20X6 Marzipan]]'s pose is nearly identical to [[Wikipedia:Chun-Li|Chun-Li]]'s victory pose from Street Fighter II (and all of the later Street Fighter variants and spinoffs). "Yatta!" is a Japanese word which means "I did it!", or "All right!" in English.
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*[[20X6 vs. 1936]] — The kicking attack [[Stinkoman]] practices bears a strong resemblance to Chun Li's lightning kick attack from the Street Fighter II series.
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*[[20X6 vs. 1936]] — The kicking attack that [[Stinkoman]] practices bears a strong resemblance to Chun Li's lightning kick attack from the Street Fighter II series.
*[[3 Times Halloween Funjob]] — [[The Poopsmith]] [[:Image:Poopsmith MBison.PNG|dresses up]] as [[Wikipedia:M. Bison|M. Bison]], the final boss of Street Fighter II.
*[[3 Times Halloween Funjob]] — [[The Poopsmith]] [[:Image:Poopsmith MBison.PNG|dresses up]] as [[Wikipedia:M. Bison|M. Bison]], the final boss of Street Fighter II.
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**The flaming maneuver the Poopsmith does when you click on him is M. Bison's Psycho Crusher attack from Street Fighter. The move was known in earlier versions of Street Fighter II as the "flaming torpedo". Hence, the reference to a "flaming Poopsmith".
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**The flaming maneuver the Poopsmith does when clicking on him is M. Bison's Psycho Crusher attack from Street Fighter. The move was known in earlier versions of Street Fighter II as the "flaming torpedo". Hence, the reference to a "flaming Poopsmith".
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*[[Email FAQ]] — It states that, "That drawing of Homestar in the fan section is NOT [[Michael Jackson]] like you said. Did you know that? Same with that one you said is [[Wikipedia:Ken (Street Fighter)|Ken]] from Street Fighter."
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*[[Email FAQ]] — It states that, "That drawing of Homestar in the fan section is NOT [[Michael Jackson]] like you said. Did you know that? Same with that one you said is [[Wikipedia:Ken Masters|Ken]] from Street Fighter."
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*Email [[dangeresque 3]] — "The pipes are broken!" is Homestar trying to say "[[Wikipedia:Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku|Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku]]" a move from Street Fighter II usually called the Hurricane Kick in U.S. versions of the game. The name is changed because the characters' voices in Street Fighter II are hard to understand (due to low-quality recordings), and sound like they are saying something else. He says this because the kick is the same as [[Wikipedia:Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]]'s and Ken's hurricane kick in the games/movies.
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*Email [[dangeresque 3]] — "The pipes are broken!" is [[Homestar Runner]] trying to say "[[Wikipedia:Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku|Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku]]", a move from Street Fighter II usually called the Hurricane Kick in western versions of the game. The name is changed because the characters' voices in Street Fighter II are hard to understand (due to low-quality recordings), and sound like they are saying something else. He says this because the kick is the same as [[Wikipedia:Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]]'s and Ken's hurricane kick in the games/movies.
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**[[Decemberween Dangeresque]] — Homestar's character, [[Stingy Relenque]], does a spinning kick saying "Ze pipes... zey are broken!"
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**[[Decemberween Dangeresque]] — Homestar's character, [[Stingy Relenque]], does a spinning kick, saying, "Ze pipes... zey are broken!"
*[[Stinkoman 20X6]] — [[1-Up]]'s spin-kick is similar to the Street Fighter move "Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku".
*[[Stinkoman 20X6]] — [[1-Up]]'s spin-kick is similar to the Street Fighter move "Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku".
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*[[Sample of Style Too]] - Matt can be seen mimicking the [[Wikipedia:Street Fighter#Hadouken|Hadouken]] move from ''Street Fighter'' while performing the motion capture for [[Marshie]].
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*[[Sample of Style Too]] — Matt can be seen mimicking the [[Wikipedia:Street Fighter#Hadouken|Hadouken]] move from ''Street Fighter'' while performing the motion capture for [[Marshie]].
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*[[Strong Badia The Free]] — One of the Algebros from [[Math Kickers]] is named Ryu.
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*[[Strong Badia the Free]] — One of the Algebros from [[Math Kickers]] is named Ryu.
*[[8-Bit Is Enough]] — Homestar says his lucky quarter got him out of some tight jams, including Street [[Mashing|Masher]], Street Masher II, and Street Masher II: Slightly Different Costumes Edition.
*[[8-Bit Is Enough]] — Homestar says his lucky quarter got him out of some tight jams, including Street [[Mashing|Masher]], Street Masher II, and Street Masher II: Slightly Different Costumes Edition.
*[[Hremail 2000]] — The music that plays in the [[Easter egg]] is similar to [[Wikipedia:Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]]'s theme from Street Fighter 2.
*[[Hremail 2000]] — The music that plays in the [[Easter egg]] is similar to [[Wikipedia:Ryu (Street Fighter)|Ryu]]'s theme from Street Fighter 2.

Revision as of 01:59, 30 March 2020

"The pipes are broken!"

Street Fighter is a series of fighting video games which became popular in the early 1990s. The Brothers Chaps reference it in several of their cartoons, especially Street Fighter II.

Appearances

  • Main Page 17 — The 20X6 Marzipan's pose is nearly identical to Chun-Li's victory pose from Street Fighter II (and all of the later Street Fighter variants and spinoffs). "Yatta!" is a Japanese word which means "I did it!", or "All right!" in English.
  • 20X6 vs. 1936 — The kicking attack that Stinkoman practices bears a strong resemblance to Chun Li's lightning kick attack from the Street Fighter II series.
  • 3 Times Halloween FunjobThe Poopsmith dresses up as M. Bison, the final boss of Street Fighter II.
    • The flaming maneuver the Poopsmith does when clicking on him is M. Bison's Psycho Crusher attack from Street Fighter. The move was known in earlier versions of Street Fighter II as the "flaming torpedo". Hence, the reference to a "flaming Poopsmith".
  • Email FAQ — It states that, "That drawing of Homestar in the fan section is NOT Michael Jackson like you said. Did you know that? Same with that one you said is Ken from Street Fighter."
  • Email dangeresque 3 — "The pipes are broken!" is Homestar Runner trying to say "Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku", a move from Street Fighter II usually called the Hurricane Kick in western versions of the game. The name is changed because the characters' voices in Street Fighter II are hard to understand (due to low-quality recordings), and sound like they are saying something else. He says this because the kick is the same as Ryu's and Ken's hurricane kick in the games/movies.
  • Stinkoman 20X61-Up's spin-kick is similar to the Street Fighter move "Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku".
  • Sample of Style Too — Matt can be seen mimicking the Hadouken move from Street Fighter while performing the motion capture for Marshie.
  • Strong Badia the Free — One of the Algebros from Math Kickers is named Ryu.
  • 8-Bit Is Enough — Homestar says his lucky quarter got him out of some tight jams, including Street Masher, Street Masher II, and Street Masher II: Slightly Different Costumes Edition.
  • Hremail 2000 — The music that plays in the Easter egg is similar to Ryu's theme from Street Fighter 2.
  • @StrongBadActual (28 Mar 2020) — While playing Axe of Rage, Strong Bad refers to a green enemy as Blanka.

See Also

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