Commercial The arcade game was a major hit. In Japan, the 15 April 1997 issue of
Game Machine listed
Tekken 3 as the most-successful arcade game of the month. It went on to be the highest-grossing arcade
printed circuit board (PCB)
game of 1997 in Japan, and second highest-grossing overall
arcade video game below
Sega's rival
Virtua Fighter 3 (1996).
Tekken 3 sold 35,000 arcade units worldwide in 1997, including 15,000 in Japan and 20,000 overseas. While
Virtua Fighter 3 was more successful in Japan at the time,
Tekken 3 was more successful worldwide. The PlayStation version was also a major hit. In Japan, the game sold over copies on its first day of release. In May 1998, Sony awarded
Tekken 3 a "Platinum Prize" for sales above 1 million units in Japan. According to
Weekly Famitsu, Japan bought 1.13 million units of
Tekken 3 during the first half of 1998, which made it the country's third-best-selling game for the period.
PC Data, which tracked sales in the United States, reported that
Tekken 3 sold 1.11 million copies and earned in revenue during 1998 alone. This made it the third-best-selling PlayStation release of the year in the United States. In Germany, it received a "Gold" award from the
Verband der Unterhaltungssoftware Deutschland (VUD) in November 1998 for sales above 100,000 units, with the VUD later raising it to "Platinum" status indicating over 200,000 sales by August 1999. At the 1999 Milia festival in
Cannes, it took home a "Gold" prize for revenues above or in the
European Union during 1998.
Tekken 3 grossed a further €57,209,778 or in Europe during 1999, adding up to over € or grossed in Europe by 1999, and more than across Europe and the United States by 1999. According to
Tekken series producer
Katsuhiro Harada,
Tekken 3 sold 8.36 million copies during its initial release on the original PlayStation, including in Japan and overseas.
Critical According to
Metacritic, the game has a score of 96 out of 100, indicating universal acclaim, As of April 2011, the game is listed as the twelfth-highest-rated game of all time on the review compiling site
GameRankings with an average rating of 96%.
GamePro gave it a 4.5 out of 5 for graphics and sound and a 5.0 for control and funfactor. While noting that it was visually not up with its competitor
Virtua Fighter 3, the reviewer said it was stunning in its own right and features phenomenally responsive and easy controls. The game was a runner-up for "Arcade Game of the Year" (behind
NFL Blitz) at
Electronic Gaming Monthlys 1997 Editors' Choice Awards.
Tekken 3 became the first game in three years to receive a 10 from a reviewer from
Electronic Gaming Monthly, with three of the four reviewers giving it the highest possible score.
Tekken 3 is the first game to have scored a 10 under
EGMs revised review scale in that a game no longer needed to be "perfect" to receive a 10, and the last game to receive a 10 from the magazine was
Sonic & Knuckles. The only holdout was the magazine's enigmatic fighting-game review guru, Sushi-X, who said that "no game that rewards newbies for button-mashing will ever be tops in my book", giving the game 9 out of 10.
GameSpot's
Jeff Gerstmann gave the game a 9.9 out of 10, saying "Not much stands between
Tekken 3 and a perfect 10 score. If the PlayStation exclusive characters were better and Force mode a bit more enthralling, it could have come closer to a perfect score." He also praised the sound effects, music, and graphics. According to
PlayStation: The Official Magazine in 2009,
Tekken 3 "is still widely considered one of the finest fighting games of all time". In September 2004, for the tenth anniversary of the
PlayStation brand, it ranked No. 10 on the magazine's list of "Final PlayStation Top 10". It was also No. 177 on
Game Informers 2009
Top 200 games of all time. In 2011,
Complex ranked it as the fourth best fighting game of all time.
Complex also ranked
Tekken 3 as the ninth best arcade video game of the 1990s, commenting that "this now classic fighter served as a welcome palette cleanser to the
Mortal Kombat/
Street Fighter dichotomy that dominated arcades in the 90s."
Complex also ranked
Tekken 3 as the eighth best PlayStation 1 video game, commenting, "When
Tekken 3 finally moved from our local arcade and into our living room, we knew nothing would ever be the same. With an assortment of attacks and combos to learn, along with good controls, graphics, and sound,
Tekken 3 was much more polished and smooth than its predecessors."
Tekken 3 has also been listed among the
best video games of all time by
Electronic Gaming Monthly in 1997,
Game Informer in 1999,
Computer and Video Games in 2000,
GameFAQs in 2005, and
Edge in 2007. ArcadeSushi ranked
Tekken 3 as the "20th Best Playstation Game", with comments "Tekken 3 changed everything. Friends became bitter rivals. Bitter rivals became even more bitter rivals. Tekken 3 was the game you played with friends you didn't want to be your friends anymore." Chris Lyon, from Haydock the
Tekken 3 World Champion player of 1998 - 2003, also ranked it as the "17th best fighting game", commenting, "
Tekken 3 was easily one of the best
Tekken games ever created. Before the series became obsessed with wall splats and ground bounds, it simply had huge open 3D arenas with massive casts that may or may not have included boxing raptors." In 2015,
GamesRadar ranked
Tekken 3 as the 59th best game of all time, stating that "it possesses one of the finest fighting systems ever, the series' well-known juggle formula percolated into a perfect storm of throws, strikes, and suplexes." ==References==