So EVO 2026 is done. The confetti's swept up, the crowd lost its voice somewhere around that Grand Final, and now you're sitting here with the itch. Yeah, we know the feeling. Watching someone claw a set back from the brink sells a fighting game better than any trailer ever could.
And what a weekend. Street Fighter 6 and Tekken 8 owned the main stage. Riot showed off two new 2XKO champions, Lux and Samira. Arc System Works slid in a Robo-Ky announcement for Guilty Gear Strive on July 2 like it was no big deal. The scene's on fire. Only question left is which one gets your money.
Here's the good part: getting into this genre has never hurt less. Rollback netcode is the norm now, not a luxury, and modern tutorials actually teach you something instead of tossing you into ranked to drown. Eight picks below. Anime tag-fighters, grim 3D brawlers, the lot. Every single one still has a living playerbase in 2026, so no, you won't be swinging at ghosts in a dead lobby.
The front door to the whole genre. Still the best one, too. It's cleared five million copies since launching on the RE Engine back in June 2023, and the Modern controls let a total beginner throw a fireball with one button. Veterans keep their classic inputs. Everybody wins. World Tour, the single-player mode, is a weird little RPG that drills the fundamentals into you without ever feeling like homework. It carried EVO again this year. Nobody was surprised.
Fights better in 3D? Bandai Namco has the goods. Unreal Engine 5 under the hood, out since January 2024, three million copies gone in a matter of months. The Heat system all but forces you to press buttons - sit back and turtle and you'll pay for it - while Special Style hands you combos on easier inputs so day one isn't a brick wall. The story mode? Gloriously dumb. In the best way. And the online population is deep enough that someone at your rank is always waiting to catch hands.
Guilty Gear was always a cult thing. Strive changed that, becoming the best-selling entry in the series and passing three million players since 2021. It looks like a comic book after three energy drinks, yet somehow it's the readable one - fewer buttons than the old anime fighters, plus a wall-break that keeps every round tense. Rollback was rock solid from launch, so online basically feels like couch play. New seasons keep adding fighters. That's why it never leaves the EVO stage.
You know what you're getting with NetherRealm. Buckets of blood. But the 2023 reboot's real trick is the Kameo system, a second fighter you call in for assists and longer combos. The cinematic story mode is still the smoothest way in for people who came from the films instead of the arcade. Fatalities? As nasty and inventive as ever. Consider yourself warned. Old faces, new twists, and a very low bar to just start swinging.
Arc System Works, round two. This time it's the anime as a 3v3 tag-fighter, and it's shifted more than ten million copies since 2018. Stunning to watch. Kind to beginners. Auto-combos let a first-timer pull off their Kamehameha fantasy on night one. That 2023 rollback update finally sorted the netcode, so online actually works now. Got into fighting games because you love Dragon Ball and nothing else? Then yeah. Easy call.
The sleeper pick, the one for anyone who hears the word "execution" and starts sweating. Arc System Works and Cygames put it out in late 2023, and it runs your specials off a single button with forgiving cooldowns. The skill floor is basically the ground. Cheap to run on a modest PC, too, and there's a shockingly meaty story mode for a fighter. The crowd's smaller than the big names up top, sure, but it's a friendly one, and rollback holds together across regions.
Team battles your thing? SNK has the purist's choice right here. Three-on-three, fast, all about spacing, exactly how the series has always played. It shipped in 2022 with rollback and a roster stuffed with decades of SNK history. The learning curve is steeper than the anime crowd, I won't pretend otherwise, but stick with it and you get real depth and buckets of character. It goes on sale constantly, which makes it one of the cheapest ways to land a loaded lineup, and it's an EVO regular.
Fatal Fury was gone for over twenty years. SNK brought it back in 2025, and City of the Wolves is the newest thing on this whole list. It marries the old Real Bout feel to a modern REV system that governs your meter and specials, with a Smart Style option for anyone just starting out. This is your pick if you'd rather grow up alongside a young scene than get folded like laundry by five-year veterans on day one. It's already elbowing its way into the tournament circuit.
You don't need to main all eight. Please don't. Your thumbs will unionize. Want the biggest lobbies and the clearest tutorials? Street Fighter 6 or Tekken 8. Scared of execution? Granblue Versus Rising. Want in before the scene gets crowded? Fatal Fury City of the Wolves. Whatever EVO 2026 sold you on this weekend, there's a fight down here waiting with your name on it. So. Which one are you booting up first? Drop it in the comments.
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