Street Fighter Alpha 2 cover art

Street Fighter Alpha 2 Saturn

Average Sale Price £65.31 ▼ 5.7% this month
Price Range £31.90 – £179.99
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Price History

Date Avg Price Low High Sales
2026-04-05 £65.31 £31.90 £179.99 10
2026-04-04 £69.27 £32.49 £179.99 10
2026-04-03 £65.40 £12.94 £179.99 10
2026-04-02 £68.56 £32.49 £179.99 10
2026-04-01 £68.56 £32.49 £179.99 10
2026-03-31 £69.19 £32.49 £179.99 10
2026-03-30 £69.37 £32.49 £179.99 10
2026-03-29 £69.54 £34.99 £179.99 10
2026-03-28 £69.54 £34.99 £179.99 10
2026-03-27 £69.54 £34.99 £179.99 10
2026-03-26 £69.54 £34.99 £179.99 10
2026-03-25 £66.31 £9.99 £179.99 10

Game Info

Developer
Capcom
Publisher
Capcom
Platform
Saturn
Release Year
1996

Screenshots

Street Fighter Alpha 2 screenshotStreet Fighter Alpha 2 screenshotStreet Fighter Alpha 2 screenshot

Game History

Street Fighter Alpha 2 was developed and published by Capcom, arriving on the Sega Saturn in 1996 as part of the arcade-to-console conversion wave that defined the Saturn's early library. The game was ported by Capcom's internal teams, who worked to translate the arcade hardware's capabilities into the Saturn's architecture.

The Saturn version launched in Japan in 1996, following the arcade release earlier that year. It subsequently came to North America and Europe, though exact regional release dates varied. The game represented Capcom's early commitment to supporting the Saturn with high-quality arcade conversions, a strategy that helped establish the console's fighting game reputation.

Street Fighter Alpha 2 on Saturn received positive reception from critics and fighting game enthusiasts. The port maintained the arcade gameplay and character roster while delivering competitive performance on home hardware. The Saturn's arcade-like controller support and processing power allowed for a faithful conversion that satisfied fans wanting to play the game at home.

Today, Street Fighter Alpha 2 holds significance for collectors for multiple reasons. The Saturn library remains highly sought after, particularly early Capcom releases that demonstrated the console's technical capabilities. CIB (complete in box) copies command premium prices in the collector market, especially Japanese versions with original packaging and manuals. The game exemplifies the early-to-mid 1990s arcade-to-console conversion era that collectors actively pursue.

An interesting aspect of the Saturn's fighting game library is that Capcom's early support for the platform helped establish it as a serious contender against the PlayStation in Japan, where arcade ports held particular cultural weight. Street Fighter Alpha 2 was among the titles that gave fighting game enthusiasts reason to choose Saturn, contributing to the console's strong arcade game library legacy that endures among retro gaming communities.

The game remains playable and enjoyable today, preserving the Alpha series' unique mechanics and visual style from that era of fighting game design.