Mortal Kombat X
Mortal Kombat X is the most cinematic and brutal game in the famous fighting series. It pushes the limits with different characters, interactive arenas, and a story that spans generations of fighters. The PS3 version was eventually canceled because of hardware limitations, but RPCS3 brings new life to the franchise’s PS3 peak—Mortal Kombat Komplete Edition—unlocking 4K resolutions and locked 60 FPS for PC players who want that classic gore-soaked action.
The Gripping Storyline of Mortal Kombat X
Mortal Kombat X takes place 25 years after the terrible things that happened in the last game. It mixes flashbacks with chaos in the present. Two years after Shao Kahn’s defeat, the fallen Elder God Shinnok leads a brutal invasion of Earthrealm with an army of Netherrealm demons and corrupted revenants. These are revived warriors like Scorpion, Sub-Zero, and Kitana who have been brought back to life by Quan Chi’s dark magic. Johnny Cage, Sonya Blade, and Kenshi are fighting for their lives at Raiden’s Sky Temple. Johnny uses his hidden powers to protect Sonya, which lets Raiden trap Shinnok in his amulet. They chase Quan Chi into the Netherrealm, where they bring back to life fallen heroes and make uneasy alliances that will lead to more fights in the future.
Twenty years later, a new generation rises: Cassie Cage (Johnny and Sonya’s daughter), Jacqui Briggs, Takeda Takahashi, and Kung Jin form an elite Special Forces squad in the middle of Outworld’s brutal civil war between Emperor Kotal Kahn and rebel Mileena, who has Shinnok’s amulet. There are a lot of betrayals when Kotal’s advisor D’Vorah, who is secretly loyal to Quan Chi, steals the artifact. This lets Shinnok corrupt the Jinsei life force of Earthrealm. The young heroes, with the help of Scorpion’s Shirai Ryu and Sub-Zero’s Lin Kuei, storm the tainted temple in an epic finale. They purify the Jinsei and behead Shinnok, but a corrupted Raiden signals that war is coming.
Masterful Gameplay Mechanics in Mortal Kombat X
Core combat improves the series’ 2.5D formula by adding an Energy Meter that powers fluid chains of punches, kicks, and specials. These moves are stronger, break combos, and do bone-crunching X-Ray attacks that slow down to show internal damage. A Stamina Meter controls dashes, runs, and moving between the foreground and background, which makes positioning more strategic. The game-changer: each character has three different moves, like Scorpion’s teleporting Ninjutsu, Hellfire that spits fire, or Inferno that calls minions, which makes players have to come up with new strategies and play the game again and again with 24+ fighters.
Finishing moves make things more brutal. Classic Fatalities come back, along with new Brutalities (simpler, variation-specific executions), Quitalities for people who want to quit, and Faction Kills for people who are part of online alliances. Environmental hazards shine: throw enemies into spikes, grinders, or acid pits, and Stage Fatalities turn arenas into deadly playgrounds. There are a lot of modes to choose from, including Story Mode, endless Living Towers with modifiers, first-person Krypt exploration to unlock things, and strong online modes like Faction Wars for world dominance.
Ultimate Playing Experience: Mortal Kombat on RPCS3
RPCS3 brings the PS3-era classic Mortal Kombat Komplete Edition up to date with buttery 60 FPS at 4K, sharper textures, and no original stutters. This lets Scorpion’s “Get over here!” spear every enemy in stunning detail, which is great for fans who miss MKX’s intensity on older hardware.
Mortal Kombat X Review Video
Final Verdict: Mortal Kombat X’s Enduring Fury via RPCS3
Mortal Kombat X sets a new standard for fighting games with its deep story, new variations, and nonstop violence. RPCS3 makes sure that the series’ best PS3 version lives on on PC, making Komplete Edition the perfect way to get ready for MKX’s brutal, bloody fights.