![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() MK3 skins for Kitana, Jade, and Skarlet I believe were Aftermath pre-orders or DLC, so you have to pay for them. You'll get results from launch which may not be applicable anymore. Originally posted by jaywolfenstien:Google actually isn't very helpful. The biggest thing is going to be waiting for that specific set of rewards to show up. Mileenas MK3 stuff at KP2 release was hard to get because so many people were trying to get her skins, but I imagined that's died down by now. It's really not that hard to come in the top 5%. Just make sure you play Towers that yield points. Each week, the top 5%, 10%, etc earn special rewards for playing. Mileena's MK3 outfits show up in the shop for some colors and also Race Against Time for the other colors. There's like 3 sets of MK2 skins per lady (slightly different colors.) Play through Story Mode, Krypt, Training, Towers and you should have plenty Time Crystals. It might just be awhile before they show up because only 2 character bundles are available at a time and they cycle through bundles every couple days. You can rack up a LOT of Time Crystals playing for the first time. Mk2 skins are bundles in the shop which you pay for in Time Crystals. You actually might be in luck with MK2 skins. Given Tekken 7's staying power, however, it's probably not going anywhere any time soon.Google actually isn't very helpful. Numbers are pretty much always going to be high in a big game's first month or two, so it's going to be most telling and interesting to see how Tekken 8 continues to perform moving forward throughout the year and beyond. Interestingly, our readers also recently responded that a slight majority of them are playing Tekken 8 on PC over PlayStation 5 (and leagues ahead of Xbox). Under Night In-Birth II Sys:Celes launched just before Tekken 8 and has only reached a peak of 2,165 players though it was probably also hurt by the Steam version releasing with some severe issues that weren't present on other systems.Īt least every game is at least averaging 1,000 or more, which is not something we could have said about the top 10 last month. The only other time we've seen higher numbers was for the launch of the MultiVersus open beta that reached a staggering 144,132 concurrent users in 2022 as a free-to-play title, so it'll be interesting to see how the platform fighter performs when it presumably comes back this year.Īlthough the PC base for fighting games is growing, we can see by looking at our chart that things are still skewed at the very top considering we have three games above 15,000 while the rest are below 2,500. Street Fighter 6 managed to hold onto its record, however, for highest player count in a paid fighting game considering it hit 70,540 back in June of last year - and had basically held that top position moving forward until Tekken 8 came along. If we go by those average numbers, then Tekken 8 has almost more players combined than the rest of the top 10 fighting games on Steam including Street Fighter 6 and Brawlhalla though it doesn't quite edge out the combination of those two when looking at just the past day.Įven said average is nearly double of Tekken 7's all-time peak count of 18,766 concurrent users all the way back in 2017.Īnd speaking of peaks, Tekken 8 held down a whopping 46,139 active users upon release, which puts it just ahead of Dragon Ball FighterZ's highest number of 44,234 as well as Guilty Gear Strive, Brawlhalla, Mortal Kombat 1 and Mortal Kombat 11. At the time of reporting, Tekken 8 has a 24-hour peak of 33,043 concurrent players according to Steam Charts' data along with a similar average of 33,838 users at any given time. ![]()
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