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Quite popular to the point where it has it's own dedicated subculture that runs tournaments all around the world. This summer's EVO tournament in Vegas had about 8k attendees with 9 featured games (including the newest Mortal Kombat, MK11), along with many side tournaments for older or less popular games. The Twitch stream had a peak concurrent viewership of 250k as well.

Besides those dedicated enough to fly to tournaments and compete with the best, FGs still seem to be generally popular among the mainstream; SFV sold 6.6m copies, MK11 sold 12m, and GG Strive sold 1m. The 2010s were a total revival of the genre, which had a bit of a dead period in the early aughts.



It's funny reading this stuff. I played in what would become "EVO", way back in 1992.

There were around 40 people there, about ten of them competing. It was held at an arcade that was downstairs in the La Jolla mall in San Diego.

This was the first worldwide Street Fighter II tournament, that later evolved into the EVO tournament.




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