< Mortal Kombat
Mortal Kombat/Trivia
The series as a whole
- Fan Nickname: Noob Zero/Sub-Noob/Sub Saibot, due to his Armageddon ending where his original Sub-Zero persona comes to claim control over their soul, and the two, being unable to best the other, fuse into "a being that was neither Noob Saibot or Sub-Zero, but something new..." These nicknames can also be used to differentiate Noob from his brother.
- No Export for You: In Japan, only the first three games and Trilogy were released there on home consoles (since the series is American-made).
- The Other Darrin: Hoo boy...
- Liu Kang (Ho Sung Pak in the first two games, Eddie Wong in the third)
- Johnny Cage (Daniel Pesina in the first two games, Chris Alexander in Trilogy)
- Kitana, Mileena and Jade (Katalin Zamiar in Mortal Kombat 2, Becky Gable in Ultimate)
- Sonya Blade (Elizabeth Malecki in the first two games, Keri Hoskins in the third)
- Shang Tsung (Ho Sung Pak in the first, Dr. Phillip Ahn in the second, John Turk in the third, Richard Divizio in Mythologies)
- The Ninjas (Daniel Pesina in the first two games, John Turk in the third game, Ultimate and Trilogy)
- Sleeper Hit: Mortal Kombat was not intended to be the tentpole franchise for Midway, but only to fill a gap in their arcade schedule. The game was developed by a team of only four members (programmer Ed Boon, artists John Tobias and John Vogel, and sound guy Dan "Toasty" Forden) in a 10-month dev cycle. Due to not being an overly important project, the team had green light to do what they wanted, which meant they had a lot of freedom to make the game stand out via Rule of Cool. The rest is history.
- Stopped Numbering Sequels: The first three sequels were numbered (II, 3 and 4), but every game afterward (when the series no longer had arcade releases) used subtitles instead (although the Deadly Alliance logo does have a huge "V").
- Teasing Creator: Ed Boon. Let out a hefty laugh worthy of Shao Kahn's wrath.
The first game
- Fake Nationality: Chinese-born Liu Kang was portrayed by Korean-born Ho Sung Pak.
- Hey, It's That Guy!: This game's Shang Tsung was played by Ho Sung Pak, also known as Superstar.
- Port Overdosed: Ported to every contemporary platform, including handhelds, and re-released many times since then in compilations and as a downloadable.
- Urban Legend of Zelda: Too many to count, many of which would became Ascended Memes:
- Nudalities. The rumor was Sonya's, not the males', since Most Gamers Are Male.
- "Additional" Fatalities. This may have played a part in future games giving characters multiple Fatalities.
- There were also rumors you could play as Goro. (You could on the home consoles with the help of a Game Genie, but not in the arcade. He is playable in the Game Boy port if you enter a secret code after beating the game)
- Probably the most famous example is Ermac. To elaborate, an early version of this game had a statistic in its DIP menu reading "Ermacs" (short for Error Macros) and sometimes it was said a glitch could turn Scorpion or Sub-Zero into a red-clad ninja fans named "Ermac".
- What Could Have Been:
- Originally, Scorpion being a Palette Swap of Sub-Zero was meant to be an in-universe Take That; Scorpion donned a yellow version of Sub-Zero's uniform to mess with him. Said plot element seems to have been retconned though.
- Sub-Zero's original name was going to be "Tundra".
- Originally, a character named Kurtis Stryker was supposed to appear in Mortal Kombat. This character was replaced by Sonya Blade. The character that was supposed to be Stryker would appear in Mortal Kombat II as Jax. A different character under the Kurtis Stryker name would appear in Mortal Kombat 3.
- Liu Kang was originally going to be called Minamoto Yo Shin Soo. He was a Japanese mythological character, but John Tobias stated that they could not deal with the name. The fact that it's a misspelling ("Yoshitsune" - and also not Chinese) also likely helped prompt the change.
- There's an unused character design based on Cynthia Rothrock but that was never used, although Sonya's original design is said to owe a lot to Rothrock.
- Rumor has it the game was originally intended to have Jean-Claude Van Damme in it, and he was to be the hero of the story. Midway was unable to secure his services, however, so the story was retooled to center around Liu Kang, and Van Damme's character was retooled into Johnny Cage.
- Network play was in test before DSL and cable internet were in wide availability. The test games used T1 Lines.
- Raiden was originally thought to fight using a staff, but it was difficult to fit the weapon into the game's mechanics. The staff does appear in Mortal Kombat 4, which has a system designed with weapons in mind, but he doesn't actually fight with it until Deadly Alliance.
The first film
For stuff belonging to Mortal Kombat Annihilation, head this way.
- Actor Allusion:
- This isn't the first time that Christopher Lambert played an immortal.
- Chris Cassamassa and Hakim Alston were already fighters in a TV show.
- Hey, It's That Guy!:
- Christopher Lambert (Connor MacLeod) plays Raiden.
- Linden Ashby ends up hooking up with Alice, Claire Redfield, Carlos Oliveira, and LJ.
- Robin Shou tried to hijack Tina Armstrong's boat... with less than stellar results. Later on, he would end up taking Chun-Li under his wing.
- Tony Jaa was Robin Shou's stunt double in the second film.
- Cary Hiroyuki-Tagawa would become the head of the Mishima clan.
- Chris Casamassa and Hakim Alston (Red Dragon and The Machine) are Scorpion and one of Liu Kang's rivals.
- Kwang and Lupe Lamora are Shang Tsung and Kitana, respectively.
- Mic Brumby is Kano.
- Hey, It's That Voice!:
- As one of his earlier works of voice acting, Kevin Michael Richardson (now the announcer of the 2011 MK game) provides the main voice of Goro, though voice acting legend Frank "Megatron" Welker provides many of Goro's vocal effects.
- Speaking of Welker, he sneaks in a voice role as Shao Kahn himself at the end of the first film.
- Fake Nationality: Japanese-born Cary Hiroyuki-Tagawa as Chinese-born sorcerer Shang Tsung. The more famous example is Trevor Goddard.
- Real Life Writes the Plot: The fight scene between Reptile, Johnny Cage and Liu Kang was added after test audiences were dissatisfied with the other fights in the movie. Linden Ashby wouldn't have been on set.
- Throw It In: Liu Kang was supposed to duplicate the acrobatic flips of Sub Zero's down the ramp during the fight, but Robin Shou couldn't pull it off successfully. After a few takes, instead of the acrobatics, he just ran down into the ramp yelling like a maniac. That's the shot that got used.
- What Could Have Been:
- Jason Scott Lee, Phillip Rhee and Russell Wong auditioned for the role of Liu Kang. Robin Shou got the role.
- Cameron Diaz was originally cast as Sonya, but in training for the movie she injured herself, with Bridgette Wilson-Sampras stepping in.
- Brandon Lee (son of Bruce) was set to play Johnny Cage. After his untimely death, the role was passed down to Linden Ashby.
- Apparently, they originally wanted Ron Livingston to play Goro. Yes... they wanted Peter to play Goro.
- Michael Jai White was slated to play as Jax. He declined, because he was already working on Spawn. He does end up playing Jax in Mortal Kombat: Legacy.
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