Well on the NES Cabal played with the directional buttons. You could either move left or right and roll in either direction or move the gun cursor on the screen if you pressed the fire button. It was the same as the arcade, minus the trackball of course, but same controls. And one button was for the machine gun, while the other was for the grenades.
Virtual Fighter was never my forte.
![Meh :blah:](./images/smilies/blah.gif)
I am not sure why, but it always seemed overly complicated and you could "virtually", no pun intended...
![Suspicious :suspicious:](./images/smilies/suspicious.gif)
lose with in a matter of seconds on two or three long string combos. Strangely enough I did enjoy the Tekken series, although I have not played anything past the third installment and I still prefer the second myself. I remember playing Fighting Vipers in the arcade as well, ehhh... Dead or Alive with the code for super bouncy on the PS1 was always nice...
![Joking :jester:](./images/smilies/jester.gif)
And Soul Blade (Original game.) and Soul Caliber were of course good as well. I liked Killer Instinct as well.
SEGA with it's Saturn and Dreamcast were more or less home arcade machines than anything else. They had practically perfect arcade ports. Only other console to do that and was arcade perfect was Neo-Geo, but that SOB was expensive, not to mention the games!
Sadly pinball is no longer around. Oh you might find a machine from time to time, but most of those are some how made to lean a certain way and purposely make you lose or worse yet it does not work properly, such as usually a weak flipper or something.
I have not researched it enough, but obviously the arcade should of come out first, where they racked in from the sells of the arcade machines and then sold the games months later after the charm ran out and could be played at home unlimited. But even still, nothing beats going to the arcade and playing on a machine, usually a fighter or sports (I hate sports, but I know others who played the heck out of them, especially NBA Jam.) and play against a multitude of opponents. Until the invent of games to be played online, such as on the original XBOX and Virtual Fighter 4 or 5... you could only play with friends and or family at a get together. But you know how each person plays after a while. In the arcade environment you never know unless it is the exact same players over and over again, but you know what I mean.
And some games can only really be properly played at the arcades, usually the larger light gun games, race games and anything with unique bell and whistles that can not be easily done with a standard controller. But arcades around these parts suck usually. Just a few old games, screens half can not be seen or joy sticks suck. And most arcades in malls anyway usually are catering to ticket machines for children. Besides I think Main Event and or Buster Daves there really are not good arcades around.