This M.U.G.E.N like most of the ones before it is compatible with most characters and stages that where built to the M.U.G.E.N standards. Multiple Resolution Setting and Auto Scaling.This is a quick list followed by a more detailed summary of each item. Initial Release Date: September 21st, 2009 *.For the default motif of the same name, see M.U.G.E.N 1.0 (motif). This hack added the ability to create and use high-resolution stages, a feature which would not become standard in the official engine until the release of M.U.G.E.N 1.0.īrokenMUGEN HR/HD Main article: BrokenMUGEN (engine) M.U.G.E.N 1.0 M.U.G.E.N 1.0 redirects here. This leaked version of the engine, dubbed "WinMUGEN", became the de-facto standard version of the engine at the time, and was subsequently modified and hacked to add a variety of features in Elecbyte's absence.Īlthough these builds have since been officially succeeded by M.U.G.E.N 1.0 and the M.U.G.E.N 1.1 beta, WinMUGEN builds are still used by the cheapie community due to the presence of various glitches and quirks that were removed in future versions of the engine, such as the Null overflow glitch additionally, though to a lesser extent, some creators continue to use WinMUGEN due to the freqmul parameter for the PlaySnd state controller, which is nonfunctional in newer versions of the engine.Īn unofficial hack of WinMUGEN was released in 2007, under the name "WinMUGEN Plus".
In private tester circles, a version of Version 2002.04.14 Beta compiled for use with Windows was released, which was leaked to the public at an unknown date. The last build, Version 2002.04.14 Beta, was the final release of M.U.G.E.N before Elecbyte entered a long hiatus.
These versions also had a notably different parser most versions of M.U.G.E.N are incompatible with characters created for these versions, including Elecbyte's own Kung Fu Man.
This started with the very first known public build, 9X.07.27, and continued up until 9X.10.19, after which the scheme switched to "yyyy.mm.dd".Īlmost all versions of M.U.G.E.N from this point were designed exclusively for MS-DOS, and as a result cannot be ran on modern operating systems without the use of emulation or a virtual machine. The scheme started as "9X.mm.dd", with 9X standing for the 1990s, and the other four digits representing a month and day respectively. The earliest releases of M.U.G.E.N, often referred to collectively as "DOS M.U.G.E.N", followed a naming scheme that represented the time that particular version was compiled and released. 3.1.2 Multiple Resolutions and Auto Scaling.