In video games Geese first appears as the final boss of
Fatal Fury: King of Fighters. Backstory material reveals that he and fellow martial artist Jeff Bogard trained together under
Tung Fu Rue, but he became jealous when Tung chose Jeff as his successor, leading him to murder Jeff in front of his adopted sons
Terry and
Andy. The central plot of the game centers around the Bogard brothers returning ten years later to avenge their father by defeating Geese in his "King of Fighters" tournament. After the player defeats Geese, he falls from the top of the building, being declared dead during the game's ending. While Geese does not appear in
Fatal Fury 2, the plot revolves around his half brother
Wolfgang Krauser seeking out the Bogard brothers to test himself against Geese's killers. Geese returns in the revised version of the game,
Fatal Fury Special, where it is revealed that he survived his fall at the end of the first game.
Fatal Fury 3: Road to the Final Victory centers around Geese's attempt to return to power by collecting the "Sacred Scrolls of Jin", which is said to give their holder great power. In the next game,
Real Bout Fatal Fury, Geese is once again the final boss in the single-player tournament, confronting the player atop Geese Tower. In either, Terry's or Andy's ending, Geese falls off his tower once again, refusing to accept help from either of the Bogard brothers, leaving Terry to later raise Geese's young son,
Rock Howard. Although this game was developed with the intention of featuring the character's death, Geese's popularity resulted in him still appearing in the next titles. Geese appears in the subsequent game which does not feature a plot,
Real Bout Fatal Fury Special, as a hidden final boss named Nightmare Geese. He also appears as a regular character in
Real Bout Fatal Fury 2, as well as
Wild Ambition, a remake of the first
Fatal Fury game. In
Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves, Nightmare Geese initially appeared as non-playable boss character before being made playable via
downloadable content. The story reveals that before his death, Geese ordered the Sacred Scrolls destroyed due to being descended from the Jin family through the Stroheims, hoping to prevent himself and Rock from inheriting the scrolls' curse, and willingly distanced himself from his wife and son to protect them from his enemies. Geese also makes an appearance in the second game in the
Art of Fighting series.
Art of Fighting 2, which is set a decade before the first
Fatal Fury, features a younger Geese Howard as the corrupt police commissioner of Southtown. Geese is revealed to be
Mr. Big's boss and the mastermind behind the events of the previous game such as the kidnapping of
Yuri Sakazaki. If the player wins every match against all the previous computer-controlled opponents without losing a round, the player's character will face Geese Howard as a hidden final boss. In the non-canon crossover video games
NeoGeo Battle Coliseum and the
SNK vs. Capcom series, Geese appears as a playable character; in the latter he commonly appears as a boss character. Geese also appears in a few games in
The King of Fighters series, which does not follow the continuity established by the
Fatal Fury and
Art of Fighting games, despite sharing many characters and plot elements. In ''
The King of Fighters '96, Geese serves as the leader of the "Boss Team" along with former subordinate Mr. Big and rival Wolfgang Krauser, seeking to find the Orochi power. Geese would appear again in a non-playable role as the sponsor of the "Special Team" in The King of Fighters '97, which is composed of Billy Kane, Blue Mary, and Ryuji Yamazaki. The team would reappear in The King of Fighters 2003 renamed "Outlaw Team", with Mary (now part of the Women Fighters Team) replaced by Gato from Mark of the Wolves
. Geese also appears in The King of Fighters 2000 as a striker, in the Xbox version of The King of Fighters 2002 and The King of Fighters XI as a selectable character, as well as in The King of Fighters '98: Ultimate Match, which brings back the Boss Team from '96
. He is also a playable character in The King of Fighters 2002 Unlimited Match
, alongside his "Nightmare" variant. The younger version of Geese from Art of Fighting 2
also appears as a boss in The King of Fighters Neowave. He also returned in The King of Fighters XIV'' as a playable character alongside Billy and his butler, Hein. In the ending, Geese reveals he has not unlocked the secrets of the Jin scrolls yet but these scrolls predicted the events of the tournament. Outside the main
The King of Fighters game, he has been present in the spin-offs. In
The King of Fighters Kyo he appears in South Town where he antagonizes the Bogard brothers as well as the protagonist,
Kyo Kusanagi. In
The King of Fighters EX: Neo Blood Geese organizes a new tournament in order to obtain the power from the participant
Iori Yagami. After Iori is defeated, Geese will act as a boss character. In
KOF: Maximum Impact 2 and
Regulation A, Geese is playable under the name of Nightmare Geese. His normal persona appears in the mobile phone game
The King of Fighters All Star as well as
98 Ultimate Match Online. His
Art of Fighting persona is also available in
Kimi wa Hero. Geese appears as a playable guest fighter in
Tekken 7 as downloadable character. He also appeared in Nintendo's
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate as a background character in the King of Fighters Stadium stage and a spirit.
In other media Geese Howard also appears in a trilogy of animated films based on the
Fatal Fury video games, where his voice is provided by
Hidekatsu Shibata in the original Japanese versions and
Ward Perry in the English dubs. The first two installments, 1992's
Fatal Fury: Legend of the Hungry Wolf and 1993's
Fatal Fury 2: The New Battle, both aired in Japan as TV specials on
Fuji TV, while the third film, 1994's
Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture, was a theatrical film. The English adaptations of all three films were released on home video by
Viz Communications. The first two films loosely follows the storyline of the games and both feature Geese as a major character, establishing him and Wolfgang Krauser as half-brothers who share the same father, a plot element which was used in the video game series with
Fatal Fury Special. Geese makes a cameo appearance in the third film. In addition to appearing in
manga adaptations of the
Fatal Fury,
Art of Fighting and
The King of Fighters games published in
Japan, Geese Howard was also the subject of a single-volume manga published in 1996 titled
The Geese Howard Story by Etsuya Amajishi, adapting the character's fictional history from the
Art of Fighting and
Fatal Fury games. It was followed by a single-volume sequel in 1997 titled
Geese in the Dark, by the same author. Geese also appears in many CD dramas and stars in his own character image album. He also sings in a number of
image songs. In the CGI adaptation of
The King of Fighters, Geese reprises his role from
Fatal Fury with one episode showing his background and how he met Jeff Bogard, Terry and Andy's father. ==Critical reception==