Capcom announced on Monday that the game would be getting a TMNT crossover, which would include new costumes, accessories, emotes, stamps and more.

At the time of the announcement Capcom neglected to including pricing information, but now that the new content is available in the game its various costs are clear.

Players can buy four full Turtle costumes for their in-game avatar, with each costing 750 Fighter Coins, which are the game’s premium currency. If they just want the coloured Turtle masks for their avatar, those cost 250 Fighter Coins each.

The game also includes sticker sets (priced at 100 Fighter Coins), taunts (250), in-game camera frames (100) and in-game device wallpapers (100), at a total cost of 1300.

In all, then, the total cost of all the TMNT content is 5300 Fighter Coins. While these can be earned, they’re mostly bought with real money.

Fighter Coins are sold in bundles of 250, 610, 1250 and 2750. Assuming a player has no Fighter Coins, then, the cheapest way to buy all the TMNT content would be to buy two bundles of 2750 Fighter Coins.

This has a total cost of $99.98 / £79.96, significantly more than the full game’s price of $59.99 / £54.98.

A player wishing to buy a single Turtle costume at 750 Fighter Coins would have to buy a bundle of 1250, costing $23.99 / £18.98. It costs $100 to unlock all of Street Fighter 6’s TMNT content

It should be noted that these costumes aren’t new playable fighters – instead, they’re skins for the player’s avatar, who’s mainly used in the game’s World Tour mode.

In comparison, when the TMNT were added to Warner Bros‘ DC fighting game Injustice 2, the fighter pack cost $19.99 / £15.99 and contained all four Turtles as separate, fully-fledged fighters, as well as two extra fighters, Atom and Enchantress.

The Street Fighter 6 collaboration is designed to tie in with the release of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, the latest TMNT feature film, which is currently in cinemas.

It should be noted that these costumes aren’t new playable fighters – instead, they’re skins for the player’s avatar, who’s mainly used in the game’s World Tour mode.

In comparison, when the TMNT were added to Warner Bros‘ DC fighting game Injustice 2, the fighter pack cost $19.99 / £15.99 and contained all four Turtles as separate, fully-fledged fighters, as well as two extra fighters, Atom and Enchantress.

The Street Fighter 6 collaboration is designed to tie in with the release of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, the latest TMNT feature film, which is currently in cinemas.

51 points
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100% pure greed and shitty monetization once again to fleece gamers.

Woof, lots of corporate water holders here. But yeah, let’s ignore the facts and studies that shows all of this preys on the psychological gaps in our armour and the fact that when cosmetics have issues when they prey on the fact that these ‘only cosmetics’ literally prey on the whole want for status with these types of online games.

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-9 points

Yes, but these are all entirely optional cosmetics that don’t effect gameplay right?

It’s not made for people to feel the need to buy all of it.

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9 points

Can you defend the 750 coin price when you can only buy 650 or 1250 coins

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-20 points

how is this fleecing anyone? Do you not want anything sold for money?

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-23 points

Competitive gaming is the worst thing that happened to fighting games. Now they’re all going to be like this, geared towards that group of people who are willing to pay for all this bullshit.

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27 points

Their greed and bullshit has nothing to do with competitive gaming.

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15 points

Evo and other tourney scenes are not the reason behind these mtx schemes

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11 points

Competitive gaming is the worst thing that happened to fighting games.

Wasn’t…competitive gaming pretty much always part of fighting games? I mean, what’s the alternative, playing them purely single-player?

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1 point

You know what I mean. Playing Street fighter in a stadium, surrounded by dorks watching you play.

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6 points

you guys dont even know what you’re complaining about anymore. this is cosmetics, how on earth does it target competitive players?

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2 points

There is an argument to be made that competitive players will be more invested in the game so will be more inclined to purchase this stuff. I think that’d be a stupid argument, but it could be made.

The real issue is that this kind of thing has become a plague on gaming. You can’t just buy a game anymore (with a rare few exceptions, like Baldur’s Gate 3) and get all the content. They nickel and dime you for anything you might want. I wish we could go back before Pandora’s Box was opened, but we can’t. We can try to reduce the damage by not participating in this and calling it out for being particularly bad.

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43 points
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Man, I am so burned out on the AAA gaming scene. From exclusive content, to microtransactions, to premium currencies, to lootboxes, to pre-order bonuses, to endless DLC, to battle passes, to live service nonsense, to kernel-level anticheat, to it becoming normal for games to launch in a broken state, to NFTs, to absurd pricing/unwarranted price increases, and all the while these companies are treating their employees like shit, crunching, covering up sexual harassment cases internally, and union-busting.

It’s nuts to think that when I was growing up, I knew that if a game was made by EA, or Square Enix, or Blizzard, or Activision, that I was in for a good time. Now I avoid all of them, or at least wait for reviews, patches, and sales. I miss the days of going to a shop, buying a cartridge or disc, coming home, and playing the game–end of transaction.

I guess what I’m saying is, thank god for indie devs.

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4 points
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Well said. It saddens me that people are still buying it. For every good AAA release there are like 10 horrible ones. I guess it keeps the indie scene alive.

We’re long past the point of video games being developed and financed by true passionate of the craft. From the very top, investors and executive, down by the designer and to the developers, you have entire stacks of people who don’t give a shit about the game they’re making, or video games in general. It stopped being the case almost 2 decades ago when big money realized gaming r.o.i potential.

That being said, AAA games are so easy to ignore. We can almost pretend gaming has never been this good based on indie games alone.

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3 points

And here I am still playing Minecraft 🤷 no problems here

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2 points

FOMO was the last straw for me

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1 point

That why I’m so happy to see how well Baldur’s Gate 3 is doing. It shows that if you make a good game and you don’t treat your players like idiots and don’t nickel and dime the then you’ll be successful. Elden Ring did the same thing last year. I’m happy to buy those at launch to support doing things correctly. The rest of the garbage, I’ll pass. There’s too many indie games and things I can play instead.

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17 points
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Removed by mod
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0 points

Anyone buying this shit is way more mentally challenged than an actual handicapped person.

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15 points

Yeah, I’m not buying a game that’s gonna cost more than the SSD it’s installed on

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2 points

Shiiiiet. That’s a very good point. Capcom can go fuck themselves haha.

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13 points

Looking at SF5 with it’s DLC and their attempts to put advertisements before matches, I said SF6 would turn to shit.

I didn’t think it would be this fast.

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