Late November, the Thanksgiving shopping frenzy had just subsided.
At Nintendo of America's Redmond headquarters, the office buzzed with near-boiling joy.
Minoru Arakawa gripped the transoceanic phone, his face twitching with barely contained excitement, trying to steady his voice.
On the other end, in Kyoto, was his father-in-law, Hiroshi Yamauchi.
"Yes, Father! NES sales are soaring!" Arakawa's voice brimmed with irrepressible confidence, each word proclaiming victory.
"Based on channel feedback and sales data, we're confident we'll easily surpass one million units by year-end!"
One million units.
In a North American market still reeling from the Atari crash, wary of video games, this was a mythical milestone.
It declared that Nintendo—more precisely, Arakawa's Nintendo of America—had triumphantly brought gaming back to American living rooms.
Arakawa was no mere figurehead riding Yamauchi's coattails; he was the rightful NOA president with tangible achievements.
A brief silence followed on the line.
Yamauchi's low, authoritative voice came through, devoid of much emotion. "Good."
"What about Sega? Any notable moves in North America?"
The question itself revealed Yamauchi's unrelenting vigilance toward his old rival.
Arakawa was prepared, his tone light with a trace of subtle disdain. "Sega? Same old story. Besides their Tetris handheld still selling and Hang-On in arcades, they're barely worth mentioning."
"Hm," Yamauchi grunted, unsurprised.
"Then focus on our work. Meet any challenge head-on. They can't stir much trouble."
"Like Tetris, their new game, no matter how good, is just one title. It won't shift the big picture."
Meanwhile, in Tokyo's Ota Ward, Namco's headquarters.
The atmosphere was heavy.
Masaya Nakamura eyed sales reports for Namco's other Famicom games.
The numbers weren't bad.
But the blank slot left by the delayed Pac-Man Famicom version stung like a thorn in his heart.
Nintendo's dominance and high-handedness loomed like a dark cloud over the industry, suffocating yet inescapable.
Yamauchi's "hold the console core" strategy, while thriving in North America, ruthlessly squeezed competitors' space in Japan.
The market was never kind to challengers.
Mid-December arrived quietly.
While Nintendo—and even some at Sega—assumed "K" project's animation promotion wouldn't hit until spring, a bombshell dropped.
Fatal Fury's anime was set for January's new season.
And its first trailer (PV) was released.
This wasn't a cheap, rushed teaser.
Edited by Masaki Ohba, "drafted" from Tatsunoko Studio by Takuya Nakayama, the trailer was a masterpiece.
Ohba, later famed for his distinct style, was in a creative peak.
With the project's ample budget, he used high-quality completed animation clips.
His signature editing birthed a trailer bursting with power and speed.
Sharp line cuts.
Rapid camera switches.
Explosive close-ups of character actions.
Exaggerated perspectives.
Unique character shaping.
The prototype of "Ohba's One-Strike Flow" shone, perfectly capturing street fighting's brutal aesthetics and the characters' wild charisma.
The trailer was strategically aired during late-night anime slots popular with teens and featured in gaming and anime magazines' ad pages.
In 1985, when animation trailers were often static images with text due to tight budgets, this high-spec, high-impact, information-packed trailer was a depth charge in a calm lake.
It instantly seized viewers' attention.
"Holy crap! What's this anime? The animation is insane!"
"That blond foreigner is so cool! His moves are fierce!"
"Is this adapted from that Fatal Fury manga? Feels even wilder!"
"No, it's a game adaptation!"
"Can a game have moves like that?"
"January must-watch!"
The buzz spread like wildfire, far exceeding expectations.
The "K project" veil lifted slightly, its hype spilling from core gamers to broader teen anime fans.
At Sega's Third Development Department.
Fatal Fury's balance tweaks neared completion.
After heated debates, clashes, and Takuya's subtle guidance, Group Leader Shimizu and Yuji Suzuki's grasp of fighting game design evolved beyond mere number tweaks.
They considered strategic depth, character distinctiveness, and player psychology in every detail.
Most character stats and move sets were finalized, ready for stable internal testing and external demos.
Team members smiled, watching smooth character animations onscreen.
Suzuki felt immense growth; Takuya's ideas on "player experience," "strategic counters," and "easy to learn, hard to master" opened new design horizons, elevating his understanding.
Takuya was pleased with the team's progress.
Entrusting final tweaks to Shimizu and Suzuki, he shifted focus.
He closely monitored the trailer's market ripple effects, collecting magazine reader feedback, TV ratings, and street chatter among teens.
The first step—igniting public hype—succeeded as planned.
But this was just the beginning.